Dr Subramanian Swamy files complaint against Soniya Gandhi on Communal Violence Bill
From:
Dr Subramanian Swamy , President of Janata Party, A-77, Nizamuddin East, Sector 18, Rohini, New Delhi-110013:
To:
SHO/Insp: D.P. Singh, Sector 18, Rohini, Crime Branch, New Delhi.
Re: Registering of FIR u/s 153A & B, 295A & 505(2) of Indian Penal Code.
Dated: October 24, 2011.
1. In public interest I am sending by Courier service a
complaint in my name against Chairperson Ms. Sonia Gandhi of National
Advisory Council, which has its office at 2 Motilal Place, New
Delhi-110011, Tel: 23062582, and also against unnamed other members of
the said NAC for committing offences of propagating hate against the
Hindu community of India by circulating for enacting as law a Draft Bill
described as PREVENTION OF COMMUNAL AND TARGETED VIOLENCE BILL OF 2011.
This Draft Bill has been posted on the NAC official website, is dated
July 21, 2011 and sent for adoption by Parliament. That this 2011 Draft
Bill is mischievous in content of targeting the Hindu community,
malafide, unreasonable and prejudicial to public order, is apparent from
the second section of Explanatory Note [Annexed herein] to the Draft
Bill titled “Key Provisions of the Bill”, thereby inciting crimes
against the Hindu community with impunity, and thus committing offences
u/s 153A & B, 295A and 505(2) of the Indian Penal Code.
2. The UPA Government in December, 2005 had introduced earlier a Draft Bill [2005] in the Parliament described as THE COMMUNAL VIOLENCE (PREVENTION, CONTROL AND REHABILITATION OF VICTIMS) BILL (2005).
3. The Draft Bill however did not find favour with any
Party. Leaders of several political parties felt that the Draft Bill
provided sweeping powers to the Central Government thus undermining the
authority of the State Governments. But the most vocal opposition to
this draft Bill came from the Muslim, Christian and so called secular
quarters. Their contention was just the opposite of what the political
leaders were saying. The view of Muslim and Christian groups was that
the 2005 Draft Bill was “completely toothless”. They demanded that the
powers of managing communal violence be vested in non-government actors
and make governments and administration at all levels accountable them
for communal violence.
4. The All India Christian Council was in the forefront of
this campaign against the 2005 Draft Bill as being “too weak”. In a
letter written to the Prime Minister, Ms Sonia Gandhi, herself a
Christian, through the AICC had conveyed to the PM the Christian
Council concerns about the 2005 Draft Bill, and then revised the same
as the 2009 Draft Bill.
5. The Muslim bodies too joined in the protest campaign
against the draft as being too weak. They wanted provisions to make
police and civil administration and state authorities “accountable” to
public bodies. The Joint Committee of Muslim Organizations for
Empowerment (JCMOE) made the demand on behalf of these organizations.
JCMOE also urged the government to convene a meeting of leaders of
“targeted communities” to note their views on the Bill as follows:
“The Bill does not make police or administration or state authorities
accountable and provide for timely and effective intervention by the
National Human Rights Commission, if the communal violence spreads or
continues for weeks, or by the Central Government under Articles 355 and
356 of the Constitution, duly modified. On the other hand, ironically,
the Bill grants more power to the local police and administration,
which, more often than not acts in league with the rioters by declaring
the area as ‘communally disturbed area’ JCMOE statement said.
6. It is interesting to note that these two statements, the
Muslim and the Christian, come at around the same time as though they
were premeditated. They probably were.
7. From their arguments in opposition to the Draft Bill, it
is clear that they wanted a Bill that would consider only the Christians
and Muslims as the “generally targeted” victims of communal violence;
and that the word ‘communal violence’ be re-defined in such a way that
only the Muslims and Christians are treated as victims and Hindus as
predators, and that the local police and administration, including the
State administration, considered hand-in-glove with the perpetrators of
violence. Hence the Bill should empower the Central Government to invoke
Art. 355 and 356 of the Constitution against any state in the event of
such communal violence.
8. Since the Prevention of Communal Violence Bill (2005) does
not discriminate between the perpetrators and victims of communal
violence on religious grounds and also it does not envisage the State
administration as committed in preventing such violence, these groups
wanted the Bill to be withdrawn.
9. The National Advisory Council (NAC) was re-constituted in
2009 by the UPA Government again under the chairmanship of Ms. Sonia
Gandhi. The UPA Government promptly handed over the re-drafting of the
Bill to the newly constituted NAC and asked it to come up with a fresh
draft.
10. The basic communally provocative premise of the re-drafted
Bill is that: a) there is a non-dominant group in every State in the
form of religious and linguistic minority which is always a victim of violence; b) the dominant majority (usually Hindus) in the State is always the perpetrator of violence; and c) the State administration is, as a rule, biased against the non-dominant group.
11. The object of the re-drafted Bill thus was the basic
premise of the NAC that the majority community – read Hindus – are the
perpetrators of communal violence in India and the minority – read
Muslims and Christians – are the victims, clearly is incitement of
religious strife.
12. What is more important is to conclude is that in all cases
of communal and targeted violence, dominant religious and linguistic
group at the State level is always the perpetrator and the other the
victims. Similarly the conclusion that the State machinery is
invariably and always biased against the non-dominant group is a gross
misstatement of the sincerity and commitment of millions of people who
form State administration in the country.
13. This dangerous premise is the incitement of communal strife in this Bill.
14. One can safely conclude that the script writers of this
Bill are themselves blinded with religious biases. In India communal
violence happens mostly because of politico-communal reasons. In many
instances, as documented by several Commissions of Inquiry, it is the
so-called minority group that triggers the trouble. We hence need laws
that can prevent such violence irrespective of whoever perpetrates it.
To argue that since the administration is always biased in favour of the
dominant group we need acts that are biased in favour of the
non-dominant group is imprudent and puerile.
15. The final Draft is available on the NAC website now. One
is not sure when the same will be placed before the Parliament.
However, a close scrutiny of the Draft is essential to understand the
serious implications of and threats from it to our national integration,
social harmony and Constitutional Federalism.
16. This Bill when it becomes an Act will apply to whole country except
the State of Jammu and Kashmir. Note that J&K is one of the two
States in India (excluding the North East and other tiny UTs) that has
Hindus as minority – the ‘non-dominant group’ according to this Bill.
Punjab is the other State where the Sikhs constitute the majority, while
in the rest of the entire country it is the Hindus who constitute
‘dominant group’ and by implication the perpetrators of communal
violence, according to this Draft Bill.
17. The mischief in the drafting primarily lies in the
‘Definitions’ part contained in Art.3 of the first chapter. Art. 3 (c )
defines Communal and Targeted Violence as under:-
“Communal and targeted violence” means and includes any act or series
of acts, whether spontaneous or planned, resulting in injury or harm to
the person and or property knowingly directed against any person by
virtue of his or her membership of any group”.
18. The mischief is centered round the word ‘Group’. Art 3(e) defines what constitutes a ‘Group’.
“Group” means a religious or linguistic minority, in any State in the
Union of India, or Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes within the
meaning of clauses of the Constitution of India;
19. Having thus established that the individual member of the
Minority community is always considered a part of the Minority group the
Draft Bill goes on to add several detrimental clauses subsequently.
Art.3 (f) defines ‘Hostile environment against a group’ thus:
“Hostile environment against a group” means an intimidating or
coercive environment that is created when a person belonging to any
group as defined under this Act, by virtue of his or her membership of
that group, is subjected to any of the following acts:
(i) boycott of the trade or business of such person
or making it otherwise difficult for him or her to earn a living; or
(ii) publicly humilitate such person through exclusion
from public services, including education, health and transportation of
any act of indignity; or
(iii) deprive or threaten to deprive such person of his or her fundamental rights;
or,
(iv) force such person to leave his or her home or place
of ordinary residence or livlihood without his or her express consent;
or
(v) any other act, whether or not it amounts to an
offence under this Act, that has the purpose or effect of creating an
intimidating, hostile or offensive environment.”
Note the Clause (v) – ‘Any other act, whether or not it amounts to an
offence under this Act’. The intention here seems to be to make
anything and everything an offence, even if it doesn’t come under any
definition of an offence. It is clear that the entire definition of
‘hostile environment’ is malafide.
Clause (k) defines who is a ‘victim’. Here the draft makers are very explicit:
“victim” means any person belonging to a group as defined under this
Act, who has suffered physical, mental, psychological or monetary harm
or harm to his or hr property as a result of the commission of any
offence under this Act, and includes his or her relatives, legal
guardian and legal heirs, wherever appropriate;
“Victim” can only be belonging to a ‘group’ as defined under this
Act. And the group as defined under this Act is the Minority – the
‘non-dominant group’. That means this act will consider only the
Minority as the victims. And he or she will become a ‘victim if he or
she has suffered physical, mental, psychological or monetary harm….’
Now, physical harm is measurable, mental harm is difficult to gauge, but
how on earth can anyone define ‘psychological harm’? The Bill does
not define it. Then how can be so-called ‘psychological harm’ be one of
the reasons for victimhood?
Similarly, Art. 4 (a) states as follows:
4. Knowledge. – A person is said to knowingly direct any act against a
person belonging to a group by virtue of such person’s membership of
that group where;
(a) he or she means to engage in the conduct against a person he or she knows belongs to that group;
20. Art 7 of the draft Bill defines ‘sexual assault’. It is by far
the most widely covered definition that is very much needed to protect
women from becoming targets of sexual violence as part of communal
violence. But against the problem is that this definition is applicable
to the women belonging to Minority group and women of the Majority
community cannot benefit from it. Secondly, it also states that in a
case of communal violence sex by consent also can be construed as a
crime.
21. Patriotic Indians now realize that the present draft Bill
is a standing proof that neo Jinnah-ism – the belief that the minority
is perpetually oppressed in India by the Hindu majority – is still
poisoning our minds even today by mischievous minds..
22. The present Draft Bill will only promote disharmony. With
these kind of laws the LeTs and Hujls across the border need not have to
promote terrorism in our territory anymore. All that they need to do
is to encourage a minor communal riot and they can achieve what they
want – huge rift between the Majority and Minority communities.
23. Hence, the NAC, with Ms Sonia Gandhi as Chairperson, and
other members have jointly committed offences under IPC Sections 153A
& B, 295A, and 505(2).
24. It is significant that even well known persons of secular
credentials have condemned this Bill as divisive. The Tamil Nadu Chief
Minister Ms. J. Jayalalitha has in a Press Release dated July 29, 2011
[Annexed] has concluded that “the remedy sought [in the Draft Bill] to
be provided against communal and targeted violence is worse than the
disease itself”.
25. Therefore, this complaint be taken as a basis to register an
FIR and conduct investigation into the communal mentality of the NAC
chairperson Ms. Sonia Gandhi and other members and take necessary action
under the law to prosecute the offenders under the cited sections of
the IPC.
( SUBRAMANIAN SWAMY )
Dr Subramanian Swamy files complaint against Soniya Gandhi on Communal Violence Bill
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Congrats Mr. Swami for taking right courageous step.Be careful since opponent belongs to a Mafia dominated country
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