Volume 2, No. 8, August 2001

 

Avenge Death Sentence in Bihar

— Pranab

 

The recent judgment in Bihar makes it clear that the poor can never get justice in these courts of law. In early June 2001, the Gaya District and Sessions Court-cum-Special TADA Court passed the death sentence on four activists of the Maoist Communist Centre (MCC) and life imprisonment on a number of others. They were accused for the killing of 35 Bhumihars in Bara village of Gaya district almost nine years ago, in 1992. All those sentenced to death are Dalits.

In a travesty of justice, the earlier Barsimha carnage, where landlords of the Sawarna Liberation Front massacred seven dalits, is yet to come for trial. In fact the Bara killings was a retaliation for the Barsimha carnage. Defacto the judges have shown their bias and venom towards the poor and oppressed and leniency for the rich landlords. In fact, for these nine years the landlords have been granted bail and allowed to roam freely, while the MCC activists have been denied bail and have already served nine years in jail.

While not agreeing with the tactics of the MCC of mass massacres of the upper castes, the judgment is to be strongly condemned. Such mass killings only consolidates caste divisions in an already caste-polarised society. Instead of attempting to win over the poor from amongst the upper castes and isolating the criminal landlords (and annihilating their most notorious elements) such tactics help the landlords maintain their social base amongst the poor of their caste. Yet, notwithstanding these incorrect tactics, it is essential that all democrats and revolutionaries strongly oppose this fascist judgment.

It is time to infact try these so-called judges themselves in people’s courts. Hidden behind a cloak of black robes, fed by money from the rich and powerful, such judges are nothing but criminals who dispense ‘justice’ based not on evidence but on money-power. The death sentence passed on dalits, who merely seek to assert their self-respect against the terror of the feudal upper caste landlords, amounts to nothing but judicial murder. Already, fear and panic has gripped the landlords of villages around Bara. The judge and public prosecutor has been given high security. The people will, no doubt, avenge this judgment.

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