Source: tribune.com.pk/story/ 428024/modis-murderous- minister
Modi’s Murderous Minister: What can be said of civil society in Gujarat when its woman minister for women and child welfare is convicted of conspiracy to murder women and children
Modi’s Murderous Minister: What can be said of civil society in Gujarat when its woman minister for women and child welfare is convicted of conspiracy to murder women and children
By Aakar Patel
29 August, 2012
What can be said of civil society in Gujarat when its minister for women
development and child welfare is convicted of rioting against women and
children?
On August 29, for the first time in India, a sitting MLA (what is called
MPA in Pakistan) was found to have instigated violence in the worst of
the 2002 incidents.
Twelve people testified to minister Maya Kodnani assisting and egging on
the rioters in the Ahmedabad suburb of Naroda Patiya. A total of 96
Muslims were killed that night, 34 children including a newborn, 32
women and 30 men. Kodnani supplied the killers with kerosene and swords,
according to testimony. Judge Jyotsna Yagnik found 32 people guilty of
the massacre. The fearsome Babu ‘Bajrangi’, the man accused of forcibly
undoing marriages of Hindu girls to Muslim boys, has also been convicted
in the case.
Kodnani,
a Sindhi, whose family migrated at Partition, was an MLA when she
participated in the violence and, despite the grave allegations against
her, was made minister by Narendra Modi later. When she was
charge-sheeted by an independent agency, she was dropped as minister but
retained her seat as MLA. She is a qualified doctor, a gynaecologist,
showing that higher education is no barrier to bigotry.
Though
she denied being present at Naroda Patiya when the killings happened,
Kodnani was proved to be there by her cell phone records. These had been
gathered and submitted by an exceptional officer in the Gujarat police
force. Shamefully, that officer, Rahul Sharma, from the elite Indian
Police Service, is being tried by Modi’s government for misconduct. His
crime was to have taken the initiative to get these phone records from
the various cell phone companies and hand them over to independent
investigators instead of the state. I think he did the right thing
because under Modi (who was and remains the state’s home minister)
investigations were so sloppy that the Supreme Court brought in an
outside agency to take over. Kodnani’s conviction is because of that
outside investigation team and not through the work of Modi’s
government.
The
phone records Sharma collected showed both Kodnani and Bajrangi in
areas where they claimed not to be. They also show that the then deputy
home minister, Gordhan Zadhafiya, was in the police control room. He has
been accused of directing the violence and ordering the police to go
easy on the rioters, though he also denied being there. Zadhafiya, who
like Bajrangi is from the peasant Patel community, is today a rebel
against Modi’s government.
The
cell phone records indicate that Modi’s office was in touch with the
rioters. Officers in the CMO — as the office is called — who phoned
those now convicted of rioting, include Tanmay Mehta, Sanjay Bhavsar and
Anil Mukim. When I visited Modi’s office a couple of years ago, I
remember Bhavsar and Mukim being there. The records also indicate that
phone conversations happened from the chief minister’s residence.
Modi
speaks often about the inability of the Congress to protect India’s
citizens from terrorist violence. He will not be able to deflect the
truth that his own minister was responsible for the killing of Gujaratis
easily. Modi’s record at protecting his citizens has been poor. Another
of his deputy home ministers, Amit Shah, is barred from entering
Gujarat today because of the charges he faces. Modi’s anti-terrorism
force chief, DG Vanzara, is in jail for murder, also the result of an
independent investigation.
It
is astonishing, given the failures, that Modi continues to keep the
portfolio of the home ministry. He has publicly attacked Teesta
Setalvad, the Gujarati activist whose persistence has been crucial in
bringing about all these convictions. But it is true that Gujaratis like
me, who are still ashamed for our conduct of 10 years ago, are today
proud of her and what she has achieved.
Aakar
Patel is a director with Hill Road Media and a former editor of the
Mumbai-based English newspaper Mid Day and the Gujarati paper Divya
Bhaskar.