Murukesh Krishnan
The
execution of Afzal Guru on February 9 this year has invited rave and frenzied
responses from across the nation. Activists, political democrats, human rights
fundamentalists, bureaucrats and rationalists all over the country have been
seeking answers from the Government on such a sordid and inextricable move,
that too in the heat-up to the coming general elections due next year. This,
undoubtedly, raises a plethora of questions: Was Guru given a fair trial?
Why was he executed before the assassins of Beant Singh and Rajiv Gandhi, who
were also sentenced to death? Why
wasn’t his family members informed prior to the execution? Did the government conduct the execution in
a hurry? After ten long years of his
sentencing, why such a sudden move?
Is this just another “political gimmick” that the government has played to
strengthen its position and gain the peoples’ trust before the 2014 elections?
Terror
originating in Jammu and Kashmir has ceaselessly been a matter of concern for
the Indian government as well as the Indian Army. But, has anyone tried to test
the waters of that region and analyse as to why J & K has been a violent
and unstable state in the country? The extremists say there’s no one to listen
to their plight and this is the only way they can draw the attention towards
them. I’m sure there are hundreds of Gurus there waiting to revolt and root
many more such terrorist attempts against the system.
There were strong and legitimate reasons behind
several groups standing up against the execution and that Guru was used as a
scapegoat to pacify other extremist groups. Afzal’s several letters, statements made
by Tabassum, his wife, and a host of human rights
activists show that Afzal was a Kashmiri militant who surrendered to the BSF in
1993; thereafter, fighting odds stacked against surrendered militants, he
started his own business in surgical equipments in Kashmir. Seeing him do well,
the Jammu and Kashmir Special Task Force and even sections of the Indian army started
harassing him for money.
He was picked up and tortured on several occasions;
one such instance saw him shelling out Rs. 100,000 to hold off the tortures;
the pressure on him -as on all ex-militants- was that he should become a
Special Police Officer (SPO) or an informer of the Indian army.
These facts were highlighted only after the Delhi
High Court condemned Afzal to death. Around the time his appeal came up before
the Supreme Court, it became evident that Afzal had no lawyer during the entire
trial court phase. None of the 80 witnesses produced by the prosecution
identified Afzal as a Jaish-e-Mohammad militant. Officers from the J&K STF
came to the sessions trial in Delhi and threatened Afzal with dire consequences
to him and his family if he did not toe their line.
On 20th December, 2001, the Delhi Police Special
Cell organized a totally illegal media trial in which Afzal was made to confess
his crime under duress.
This very well draws the whole issue towards this
conclusion that Afzal Guru was a mere victim of the political duplicity of our
government and he was used as a scapegoat to conceal their drawbacks and
inadequacies. After all, someone had to get sacrificed, right?!
Hahahaha as I expected.You to become a Communist Follower and upcoming So called Sickular Human right personality.
ReplyDeleteIt's not about being a communist follower or a human rights activist...It's just that I find it my responsibility to tell people the truth and show them the true picture of what exactly has happened or rather, shouldn't have happened!
Deleteyet a comment..
DeleteDidn't get you, Neha!
DeleteHey man you are going great guns...
ReplyDeleteThank you so much...I'll definitely try to improve and live up to your expectations!
DeleteCheers!