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Breaking news! Youngest Maoist nabbed!

Check out the murderous rage on his face!

Check out the hand that has bludgeoned many heads!

Check out the strained forehead that explain his years committed to bloodshed!

 
Citizen's Interviews of S.P., Dantewada

Final Two Parts Of The Interview With SP Dantewada, Amresh Mishra on the 4th of Jan regarding the whereabouts of Sodi Sambo.

 
The tribal ‘Ruchikas’ of Dantewada

Operation Green Hunt to flush out the Maoist rebels from central India may have begun only last November, but the hapless tribals of Chhattisgarh’s Bastar region have been at the receiving end of official hostility for years before that.

 
Police State, Visitors, Anthropology

Ujjwal Kumar Singh, Professor of Political Science, Delhi University and I have just returned  (January 1st) from a visit to the police state of Chhattisgarh.

 
Talking with S.P. Dantewada

Priyanka: I am a journalist and I need to speak to you about Sodi Sambo? Where is she now? Why was she illegal detained last night?

 

Interviews

Home News Appeals for release
Set Binayak Sen free now PDF Print E-mail
Siddharth Varadarajan
27 April, 2009
The Hindu
http://www.hindu.com/2009/04/27/stories/2009042755510900.htm

Alongside the arming of private militias, the jailing of a human rights defender for two years on trumped up charges is proof that there is no rule of law in Chhattisgarh.

Every criminal case is unique but there is something truly peculiar aboutthe fate of Dr. Binayak Sen. While politicians, film stars, gangsters and businessmen accused or convicted of heinous offences like manslaughter, rioting and possession of firearms seem to have no trouble getting bail, the gentle doctor is considered such a dangerous criminal that he has been held in jail for two years on a far less serious charge.

Arraigned under Chhattisgarh’s draconian Public Security Act, Dr. Sen, who is also the national vice-president of the Peoples Union for Civil Liberties, has repeatedly been denied bail by the trial court and High Court. Regrettably, the Supreme Court too rejected his special leave petition for bail in December 2007. Binayak’s trial is now underway.

As per the original chargesheet, 83 witnesses were meant to depose against him. Of these, six were declared hostile by the state and 16 were dropped while the remaining 61 testified in court. However, none has corroborated the prosecution case that Dr. Sen delivered a letter from Maoist leader Narayan Sanyal, whom he used to visit in Raipur jail in his capacity as doctor and civil libertarian, to some wider Naxalite network.

Be that as it may, are there valid grounds for refusing Binayak bail? No.  For one, he is not a flight risk, a fact he demonstrated at the outset by turning himself in when he heard during a visit to Kolkata that the Chhattisgarh authorities were looking for him. The second reason bail is sometimes denied is the fear that an under-trial might use his liberty to influence witnesses. But there are no more witnesses left for Dr. Sen to suborn. Of course, sensing the collapse of its flimsy case, the police say they will produce more witnesses.

But it is evident that this is just a tactic to punish the victim through process since the evidence on the basis of which the original arrest was made was clearly insufficient to sustain a conviction.

If there are no valid reasons to deny bail, the fact that Dr. Sen in a heart patient who is being deliberately denied proper medical care at a facility in which he has confidence means any delay in his release may prove fatal to his health. In February, Dr. Sen noticed the onset of symptoms of heart disease but the authorities ignored his pleas for help. His wife, Ilina Sen, then asked the court to send him for treatment to a hospital of his choice, as envisaged by the Prisoners Act. Dr. Sen conveyed that he would like to be treated at CMC Vellore, where he had studied and in whose doctors he had full faith. On February 20, the trial judge ordered the prison authorities
to get the opinion of a medical board on Binayak’s heart condition.

Despite being examined at Raipur district hospital, no treatment was offered and Binayak had to move the court again. The judge subsequently ordered that he be examined in Raipur by any doctor he wanted, who, in turn, would decide on onward referral to CMC Vellore.

On March 25, Binayak was examined by a doctor of his choice in the presence of Ilina Sen. The doctor diagnosed him with Coronary Artery Disease and referred him to Vellore for an angiography to be followed by angioplasty or bypass surgery. A copy of the prescription was handed over to Ms. Sen but no action has been taken because the Jail Superintendent procured another note from the doctor in which he said angiography facilities were available in Raipur and that Vellore was mentioned only because Binayak wanted to go there. On the basis of this note, the authorities are insisting Binayak be treated in Raipur, something he is rightfully refusing since he has begun to fear the worst about the police’s intentions.

The Supreme Court is already seized with another grave matter from Chhattisgarh – the extra-legal depredations of the state-sponsored Salwa Judum in a PIL filed by Nandini Sundar and others. In their obiter, the learned judges have said it is not permissible for the state to arm private citizens to commit crimes like murder and arson.

More than one lakh adivasis have been displaced by the Salwa Judum. Far from heeding the apex court’s warning, the BJP, in its election manifesto, has promised “the ‘Chhattisgarh Model’ will be used for counter-Maoist operations” elsewhere in the country.

It should come as no surprise that violence and intolerance go hand in hand.  Salwa Judum is the most dangerous aspect of the ‘Chhatisgarh model’ but the persecution of Dr. Binayak Sen, the intimidation of the local media and the refusal to tolerate the opposition of adivasis to the land grabbing agenda of corporate giants are also part of this ‘model’. When the executive is bent on subverting rights guaranteed by the Constitution, the judiciary has an obligation to act. Putting a stop to Salwa Judum and releasing Binayak are two remedies that are urgently required.
 
Justice Krishna Iyer's appeal PDF Print E-mail
Krishna Iyer’s plea on behalf of Binayak Sen

Binayak Sen

The text of a letter written by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer, former Supreme Court Judge, to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, dated April 17, 2009:

http://www.hindu.com/2009/04/19/stories/2009041955680900.htm

I would like to bring to your attention a case of grave injustice which is a cause of much shame to Indian democracy: that of Dr. Binayak Sen, the well known paediatrician and defender of human rights.

This good doctor has been incarcerated in a Raipur jail for nearly two years now under the Chhattisgarh State Public Security Act, 2005. Among the charges against Dr. Sen, who is renowned worldwide for his public health work among the rural poor, are “treason and waging war against the state.”

Chhattisgarh State prosecutors claim that Binayak, as part of an unproven conspiracy, passed on a set of letters from Narayan Sanyal, a senior Maoist leader who is in the Raipur jail, to Piyush Guha, a local businessman with allegedly close links to the left-wing extremists. He was supposed to have done this while visiting Sanyal in prison both in his capacity as a human rights activist and as a doctor treating him for various medical ailments.

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Letter from Ilina Sen PDF Print E-mail
Dear friends,

I am writing to share some extremely distressing information that has just now come to light. We now have clear proof that the police in Chhattisgarh are actively interfering with Binayak’s need for health care. I will just go over the facts with you.

Binayak, hypertensive for many years, was diagnosed on 2003  with angina upon stress after he underwent cardiac assessment tests with Dr Ashish Malhotra, Raipur’s only doctor with a DM in cardiology, who practices in a private facility. The drug regime that he was on in 2007 and later was what was suggested by this doctor. He began to feel chest pain  upon exercise, tingling in the left arm etc sometime in December 0f 2008 and in January February of this year, when in prison. He informed the prison authorities of this, and when nothing concrete was done about it (the  jail hospital any way has no facilities), he informed the court about this.

An application was filed I court on his behalf on 17.2.09, requesting that he be allowed to  go for treatment to a properly equipped hospital of his choice, preferably CMC Vellore, citing section 39A of the Prisoners Act of 1894, according to which the jail Superintendent is empowered to send him for treatment to a facility of his choice, subject to the the prisoner or his family executing  a bond and abiding by such conditions as the Superintendent may prescribe. On 20.2.09 the judge (11th additional district and sessions judge BS Saluja who is trying the case) ordered the jail authorities to get the opinion of a medical board re  Dr Sen’s cardiac condition so that an appropriate decision on his application could be  taken.
 
Binayak was taken to the Raipur district hospital at some time between 20.2.09 and 17.3.09, where the doctors who saw him suggested that he needed an ecg anf echocardiography.

On 17.3.09 Binayak complained to the court that no action had been taken on his request for treatment, and was quite emotional when he said that it did not seem to matter to the court whether he lived or died. The judge who had built up this impressive correspondence was equally upset, and I personally met him after the evidence was over and the accused taken back to jail  to convince him that a medical situation demanded something more than just creating records. The judge seemed mollified and on the 18th of  March, asked  Binayak in court which doctor he wished to see in Raipur who could determine whether or not he needed an onward referral to Vellore , and upon Binayak naming Dr Ashish Malhotra,  passed an  order asking the jail to have Binayak shown to Dr Malhotra   in order to obtain a clear opinion about whether  such referral for further investigation was needed.

Binayak was shown to Dr Ashish Malhotra on March 25. On the basis of the court order of 18.3, the jail superintendent requested the police for providing  security guards  to take Binayak to see the doctor. Accordingly, an impressive busload of armed police  took Binayak to see Dr Malhotra around 10 am, and I got a call from Dr M around 10.30 asking me to go there along with the old records. I proceeded to do this, and thus was present for most of the consultation. On the basis of the letter from the jail superintendent asking for a clear opinion  on whether onward referral to CMC Vellore  was needed,  an ECG, Echocardiograph and treadmill test, he concluded that Binayak had Coronary Artery Disease (CAD), and referred him to VMC Vellore for Angiography for further assessment, to be followed by Angioplasty/ Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery (CABS). I kept a photocopy of the prescription for my own records, since I was asked to pay for the procedure.

I went to see Binayak in prison on the 26th, and to discuss what the modalities of travel to south India would be. I was shocked when the Jail Superintendent said categorically that Binayak would not be investigated/treated in Vellore but in Raipur. Sensing that something was amiss, I put in an application under the RTI act asking to see  all the correspondence between the jail and the doctors regarding Binayak’s treatment. It is this last lot of documents that has just come into my hands.

To conclude the treatment story before I come to this, the jail tried on the 31st of March, to take him to Escorts hospital in Raipur , and according to what we had discussed on my last jail visit, Binayak refused in writing  to go there, saying that he did not wish to be treated in any facility  in Chhattisgarh as directed by the  jail superintendent , as he feared that his life might be in danger. This reply of his with a covering note that Binayak was refusing treatment was presented to the court on the 31st itself, seeking further directions. The court referred this to the public prosecutor  asking him to file a reply within seven days. To the best of my knowledge, no such reply has been filed so far. Binayak has started on the new medication prescribed by Dr Malhotra (Atorva Statin) and reports some symptomatic relief.

To come now to the results of the RTI, I have now received Dr Malhotra’s original referral letter of the 25th, but also a second letter addresses to the Jail Superintendent, quoting a query from him  and dated 26th March, in which he gives his opinion that the facilities for angiography are available in Chhattisgarh  in Escorts, Apollo, Bhilai Main hospital, Ramkrishna hospital and two other places. He also writes that he referred Dr  Sen to Vellore because the latter asked him for it. The problems with this are as follows:

   - Why was this second query sent from the jail to Dr Malhotra ? If the jail superintendent sent such a letter, who was breathing down his neck  to do so?
   - This clearly constitutes total disregard for the court. The mandate  to Dr M as specified by the court  was to give a clear opinion about whether referral to Vellore was needed or not. The court did not ask Dr M about the length and breadth of medical facilities in Chhattisgarh.
   - Dr M lied when he said that he had referred Binayak to Vellore because the latter asked him to do so. In any case, what conversation he may or may not have had with his patient is supposed to be privileged  information.
   - If a doctor not  in the public sector payroll in anyway can be intimidated to this extent, what is one to say of doctors  in Escorts, Apollo etc which  are  private medical franchises set up in the medical    college  (great examples of public private partnership, in which all human resources are public, the brand name and the  option of onward referral are private)?
   - Under these circumstances, Binayak is absolutely right that his life may be in danger in any facility controlled by the state in Chhattisgarh.

In fact I am now worried that as  Plan A of the police / prosecution (discredit Binayak and convict him in the legal case) shows signs of coming apart, they are now trying to resort to Plan B ( bump him off while in hospital in Chhattisgarh by just asking someone to, for eg, inject air into an IV drip).

I would like to appeal to all friends to ensure Binayak’s physical safety, publicize this matter,  write about it, perhaps  appeal to higher courts/political leaders  ? It is urgent.

I want to end by saying that what we are asking for, treatment at a hospital of choice, is unknown in Indian judicial history. In fact even from Raipur Central Jail, the Shivsena leader Dhananjay Singh Parihar, in jail on a charge of murder, was sent at state expense to KEM hospital  Mumbai, Shankar Netralaya, Chennai and three other hospitals for an assortment of ailments in 2003 . The police  would like tp portray Binayak  as the biggest internal security threat  they perceive. Are we going to let them get away with this?

Ilina

Published in: http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/sen220409.html   
 
Letter from Amnesty International PDF Print E-mail

Amnesty International Press Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Thursday, April 23, 2009

Published in: http://www.amnestyusa.org/document.php?id=ENGUSA20090423003〈=e

Prisoner of Conscience Dr. Binayak Sen Completes Two Years in India Jail

Human Rights Organization Reiterates Call for Indian Authorities to Immediately Release Human Rights Defender

Contact: AIUSA media office, 202-544-0200 x302, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

(Washington) -- The Indian authorities should immediately and unconditionally release Dr. Binayak Sen, a human rights defender and pioneer of health care to marginalized communities, who has languished in jail for two years, Amnesty International said today.

Dr. Sen, 59, was arrested on May 14, 2007, when he was charged with facilitating armed Maoist violence and put on trial; this resumes tomorrow, April 24, 2009. If convicted, he could face a life term in jail.

Amnesty International believes that the charges and evidence against Dr. Sen are baseless and politically motivated.

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Letter to CJI PDF Print E-mail
To
Honorable Chief Justice of India
Supreme Court of India
New Delhi, India 
26 February 2009

It is now a long 19 months since Dr Binayak Sen, the well-known public health and human rights activist, was arrested by the Chhattisgarh police for allegedly “supporting” activities of the outlawed Communist Party of India (Maoist). In this period, during which he has been kept in Raipur Jail, Dr Sen’s pleas for bail have been refused by judicial institutions at all levels in the country, from the lowest to the highest. While the Raipur Sessions court rejected his bail application in July 2007,  the Chhattisgarh High Court denied bail twice (July 2007 and 2 December 2008).

We expected at least the Honorable Supreme Court of India to entertain the bail petition and grant bail but felt let down and betrayed when the petition was dismissed (10 December 2007). This dismissal encourages police personnel, not just in Chhattisgarh but all around the country, who are inclined to be high handed and falsely implicate genuine social activists working in defence of human rights.

We the undersigned strongly feel that a colossal injustice is being done to Dr Sen and the refusal to grant bail to him is undermining the credibility of the Indian justice system and Indian democracy. This is especially so in a national context where the courts have provided bail in much shorter time to known criminals- ranging from plain murderers to those involved in organising and provoking large-scale sectarian violence- who have been arrested on harder evidence.

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