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A Round Table on the ‘Alternative
Guidelines Regarding Encounter Deaths’ and Strategies of Resistance
Jamia Teachers’ Solidarity Group invites you to a Round
Table on the ‘Alternative Guidelines Regarding Encounter Deaths’ with
special focus on the extra-constitutional powers given to Special Forces
and Strategies of Resistance keeping in mind the present context where
the naked brutality of the police and armed forces have unleashed a
reign of terror not only on the Muslim population residing in the
country in the states of Kashmir, Delhi, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Kerala
but also in the North-eastern states of India particularly Manipur. The
logic of countering terrorism/armed resistance might have different
contextual specificities but the laws used for ‘encounter’ and the
manner in which the same is executed flouting all human rights
guidelines is a major cause of concern today. The petition filed by
Peoples’ Union of Liberties, Maharashtra and the alternative draft
submitted to the Supreme Court and the favourable hearing it has
received has strengthened the voices of alternatives across the country.
While the Batla House encounter on 19th September has been
the centre of our activities, it is necessary to link it to wider
political struggles going on in the country as the incident is hardly an
isolated one. In Delhi itself we have witnessed several encounters along
with bomb blasts that keep happening like a ceremonial ritual giving the
much needed masala for the media houses to run, elsewhere we read
reports or view open terrorist activities of minorities being lynched
and tortured to death by the self-proclaimed votaries of the Hindu
majority and feel ‘protected’ by the distance that separates us from the
event that might be a prime time show. The question is no longer
confined to minority communities alone since it is not only religious or
racial/ethnic scape-goating that is happening, but also in a calculated
manner all voices that question the State and its institutions get
throttled one way or the other. Civil rights movements therefore
necessarily assume a kind of defensive role – challenging the powers
that be after an incident of violation has taken place. With the recent
revelations of the CBI regarding the role of the Special Cell and the
booking of criminals in saffron perhaps the tide is turning where an
offensive campaign may be mobilized to instill policy changes in law
that might be yet twisted to protect the rights of the people vis-à-vis
the interests of the State.
The panel of initiators for the discussion are –
Prashant Bhushan –(Human Rights Lawyer) – Defence
Counsel for the PUL petition in Supreme Court regarding alternative
guidelines on encounter deaths;
Sufian Siddiqui – (Supreme Court Lawyer), Bimol Akoijam – (JNU)
The discussants for the Round Table are -
Gautam Navlakha – (Human Rights activist), Nirmalangshu
Mukherji – (Dept. of Philosophy, DU), Tripta Wahi – (Dept. of History,
DU), Vijay Singh – (Dept. of History, DU)
Date: 28 November 2008
Venue: Dayar-e Mir Taque Mir, Jamia Millia
Islamia (near the Vice Chancellor’s office) Time: 3.00. p.m. |