Showing posts with label Bajrang Dal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bajrang Dal. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

4th anniversary of Kandhamal anti Christian violence


At last, a token of hope amid injustice
But Christians still face an uphill struggle

By John Dayal
New Delhi:
In the continuing gloom of injustice, broken promises and misadministration in Kandhamal, the birth of the new parish of Pakari has come as a token of hope and light for a Christian community still living with the memory of brutal attacks in December 2007 and August 2008 and with the ensuing “structural violence”.

The two young priests in charge of the parish, Fr. Bimal Nayak and Fr. Cassian Pradhan, a Panos Dalit and a Kondh tribal, are hopeful that it will invigorate the almost 5,000-member local church. They hope that in a few years, they will see the birth of another parish in the remote region of Orissa.

The church building is still just a design on a piece of paper, broadly resembling the church in Brahminigaon, which is getting the finishing touches on reconstruction after its destruction on Christmas Eve, 2007. The new parish will have a hostel and perhaps even a school, as well as the presbytery for the parish priest and his assistant, and a few rooms for visiting bishops and clergy.

One school may not be enough to challenge the success of the Sangh Parivar in spreading its hate ideology to the young.

Surveys by several groups, including mine, the All India Christian Council, reveal a massive effort by the Hindu nationalists to penetrate every village in the region. By this summer, the Sangh had set up an estimated 500 “Shishu mandirs,” or formal schools, and as many as 500 additional “Ekal vidyalayas,” or one-teacher schools, in remote villages.

Neither the government nor the church comes anywhere close to these numbers.

Observers have also noted changes in the tactics of the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, the main cadre of the Hindutva Parivar in the villages. The presence of Maoists in Darringbadi and other blocks has made the Sangh focus on areas where the Maoists are absent, or present only in small numbers. No major attacks have been reported this summer against Christians.

But the absence of violence brings little joy for much of the Christian community. In interviews and affidavits, residents speak of extreme economic hardship, particularly in remote areas, because of a lack of employment and ongoing economic boycotts of Christians.

In the villages of Tikabali, Adasapanda and Mujhlimandi, Christians are not being employed as labor in the fields or in the local markets.

Worse, many Christian men and women have been kept out of the government-run Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, which is supposed to provide 100 days a year of paid employment on official projects such as roads, bridges and water conservation works.

Government agencies are still harassing tribal Christians, forcing them to get a recommendation from the political outfit Kui Samaj when they come to get their “caste certificates” which are needed for scholarships, jobs and other “benefits” from the state and union governments. This is of course illegal, but the practice goes on despite Christian activists and lawyers notifying the District Collector.

There is also no government initiative as yet to give land to the landless tribals.

The cumulative impact of these situations is the migration of tribals and Dalits first to Phulbani, the district capital, and Baliguda, the only two major towns in the district, and then out of Kandhamal and even out of Orissa.

Recent surveys have confirmed that as many as 10,000 of the 56,000 people impacted by the violence have not returned to their homes in the villages.

With the justice process in the two fast-track courts showing no progress, Christian groups have once again petitioned the Supreme Court for re-investigation of the murders committed during the August 2008 violence. There have been just two convictions in more than 30 cases accepted by the government, after a death toll of more than 90. The Supreme Court is expected to take up the writ soon.

In another major initiative, the National Human Rights Commission is being approached by victims and their representatives who are seeking a comprehensive justice and rehabilitation package such as the ones victims of the anti-Sikh violence of 1984 and anti-Muslim violence in Gujarat in 2002 won after interventions by the Supreme Court and the National Human Rights Commission.

The comprehensive application points out that thousands of children continue to be without education, and men and women without jobs. Both individuals and the church have been denied adequate compensation for the destruction of property during the riots, because of deficiencies in government surveys and irrational systems of calculating the loss.

Christian activists have taken great heart from the recent Supreme Court judgment holding two BJP politicians guilty of murders in Gujarat’s Naroda Patiya area, and NHRC decisions in similar cases.

This has been reflected in the mass rallies that have been held in Phulbani and Bhubaneswar on August 25. Police gave permission at the last moment for Christians to mark the fourth anniversary of the violence. Berhampur Bishop Sarath spoke to about 4,000 people about the need for justice and rehabilitation.

The RSS held its own rally on August 23 to commemorate the murder, by Maoists, of Vishwa Hindu Parishad vice president Lakshmanananda Saraswati. Several hundred RSS activists shouted slogans asking for the arrest of the “real” murderers of Saraswati. Seven Kandhamal Christians have been rotting in jail for four years as suspects, their bail applications routinely denied by the courts.
[First published in Ucan News, 12 September 2012, New Delhi]

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

A cry from Uadaigiri

KUIDINA FORUM FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE
AT-NUA SAHI (KUPANAJU), G.UDAYAGIRI, KANDHAMAL, ORISSA, PIN-762100

Letter No. – 1132/2009 Date – 22.10.2009

To

Sj. Justice R.K. Patra,
Chairperson,
Orissa Human Rights Commission,
Bhubaneswar.

Sub:- Prayer for independent enquiry of case No.472/2009 by OHRC, Bhubaneswar.

Sir,

We express our deepest gratitude for patient hearing of the esteemed members of the Bench on dt.22.10.09 in relation to our case No.472/2009 in the office of the OHRC, Bhubaneswar

That, “Kuidina Forum for Peace and Justice” is a local peoples initiative mostly led by the indigenous women of Kandhamal committed to restore peace and justice and also have been sincerely engaged in peace building processes in almost all the past so called communal violences.

On the petition of “Kuidina Forum for Peace and Justice” dt.28.03.2009, the commission had given a direction to the District Administration for the joint enquiry on the negligence and lapses in the investigation in providing life protection and security arrangement in relation to the victims vide the order dt.05.05.2009 in a joint bench of Hon’ble Justice R.K. Patra, Justice Himadri Mohapatra and Dr. R.N. Bahidar and report back within eight weeks.

Even today after 22 months of major violence took place in Dec. 2007 and the 14 months after the incident took place in the month of August 2008, the victims are still living in a fear of insecurity and terror without any adequate livelihood support system and no enquiry has been made so far to give immediate relief and justice to the victims.

In spite of clear direction of OHRC to give protection to Debendra Nayak of Lingagada vide Case No.549, dt.04.08.08 failed, Issac Digal, G.Udayagiri, Co-ordinator of the Forum was brutally attacked on dt.03.09.09. Karpura Digal, Shankarakhole has not received due compensation for her murdered husband. Attempt to rebuild damaged houses in Dadingia and Gressingia was disturbed due to further attacks as reported (communicated to OHRC on dt.07.09.09). Sumabati Pradhan, Dakedi and Bhabanti Nayak, Godabisa approached His excellency Governor of Orissa but did not get adequate security assistance to return back by the admn. And still facing further attacks. Most of the victims in the petition are facing continuous attacks, threatening and humilitation in different forms even for last seven months since the petition submitted to OHRC. District Administration is very busy in taking up many formal peace initiatives sincerely but the said responsibility seems to be an additional burden.

Large number of complaints are yet to be converted into formal FIRs and even in the justice delivery system Criminals are getting acquitted due to the weaknesses in the investigation and prosecution. There is greater need of protection for the complainants and witnesses in the process. So far 95 persons are acquitted and 24 persons convicted.

The real criminals, the third force, who practically led the violence, supplied all the required financial resources, managed the looted property, supplied explosives, arms, weapons, petrol and cooking gas etc. are still in the dark, not arrested and moving freely to create further violence in future under the defence mechanism of different political parties and organizations, with their predominant, sectarian and divisive attitude.

Though the Govt. has declared the closer of all the relief camps withdrawing the CRPF by the end of August 2009 and claims that the situation in Kandhamal is peaceful and normal, the indigenous women leaders allege that the victims are still not in a position to return back to their native villages, construct their damaged houses and avail the due compensation. The victims are leading a miserable life under the impending fear of death and future attacks deprived of proper security arrangement, Govt. relief and staying in their self managed temporary tents and shelters. 40% of the total agricultural activity has been dropped due to the prevailing chaotic situation and social unrest.

Non-transparent and non-inclusive peace building and rehabilitation process has made the situation more complicated and critical as many agencies and organizations not much familiar with the local egalitarian culture, long standing, symbiotic relationship, traditional non-hostile animistic faith and most importantly the entitlements and the protective constructional provisions and the related rules of all the indigenous forest dwelling communities have started intervening in the process. Resource seems to be mismanaged and underutilized.

The Forum pray your kind self for an appropriate intervention, particularly conduct the enquiry independently through OHRC and advice the concerned authority for an inclusive people based process and due recognition of the voice of the local community leaders without giving further scope to the divisive elements as life of the poorest of the poor is equally important and also requested for displacement of all the officials with sectarian and biased mindset for the greater public interest.


Sd/- Sd/-
(Keshamati Pradhan) (Hemant Naik)
Co-convener Convener
Contact Phone- 9437645267


Dear friends,

Kindly find in attachment the Petition submitted to Orissa Human Rights Commission for intervention in the Peace and Justice restoration process.

Kindly take the necessary action in this regard to strengthen the process collectively.

Yours in solidarity,

Hemant Naik,
Keshamati Pradhan,
Sumabati Pradhan,
Issac Digal,
Debendra Nayak.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

US panel puts India on Watch List for anti Minorities violence

India Chapter

Addition to the 2009 Annual Report of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom

August 2009

USCIRF 2009 Annual Report –Chapter on India

India

The Commission views India as a critically important country in terms of religious freedom, given its experience with democracy following its colonial past. India is the world’s largest democracy, is home to a multitude of religious communities that have historically coexisted peacefully, occupies a key geopolitical position, and enjoys increasing stature on the global stage even as it faces violent acts of terrorism on its soil. Nonetheless, several incidents of communal violence have occurred in various parts of the country, resulting in many deaths and mass displacements, particularly of members of the Christian and Muslim minorities, including major incidents against Christian communities within the 2008-2009 reporting period. Because the government’s response at the state and local levels has been found to be largely inadequate and the national government has failed to take effective measures to ensure the rights of religious minorities in several states, the Commission decided to place India on its Watch List

The Commission grew concerned about religious freedom conditions in India in 2002 after observing a disturbing increase in communal violence against religious minorities associated with the rise of organizations with Hindu nationalist agendas, including the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), one of the country’s major political parties. Under the national leadership of the BJP, whose term heading the government ended in 2004, the Commission found the Indian government’s response to violent attacks against religious minorities to be inadequate. In response to severe riots in the state of Gujarat and elsewhere, the Commission recommended that India be designated a “country of particular concern” (CPC) in 2002 and 2003.

Following the election in 2004 of the Congress Party, the Indian government espoused an inclusive platform and has repeatedly pledged its commitment to religious tolerance. This commitment was reiterated by the Congress Party in the 2009 general elections for the Lok Sabha, or lower house of Parliament, in which the Congress Party emerged victorious. Although the BJP retained a strong presence in certain states, including Gujarat, some viewed Congress’s victory as a repudiation of the BJP, and other analysts claimed that the surprisingly large margin by which the Congress Party won is statistically attributable to decreased support for “Left Front” parties, rather than decreased support for the BJP. Despite the Congress Party’s commitment to religious tolerance, communal violence has continued to occur with disturbing results, and the government’s response, particularly at the state and local levels, has been largely inadequate. Following incidents and reprisals at and after Christmas 2007, the murder of an influential Hindu leader in August 2008 sparked a prolonged and violent campaign targeting Christians in the state of Orissa. Over several weeks, at least 40 individuals were killed, the vast majority of whom were Christians, church properties and thousands of homes were destroyed, and an estimated 60,000 or more Christians fled their homes, seeking refuge in the jungle or in government relief camps. The inadequate police response failed to quell the violence, and early central government intervention had little impact.

Mass arrests following the Orissa violence did not translate into the actual filing of cases. Also In June 2009, USCIRF requested to visit India to discuss religious freedom conditions with officials, religious leaders, civil society activists and others, but the Indian government did not issue visas to the USCIRF delegation. Nor did the Indian government offer alternative dates for a visit, which the Commission requested. Efforts continue to lag to prosecute the perpetrators of the 2002 Hindu-Muslim riots in Gujarat, in which over 2,000 were killed, the majority of whom were Muslim.

India is a multi-ethnic, multi-religious, multi-lingual democracy of more than a billion people that boasts the vibrant representation of all the world’s major religions. In this majority Hindu country with one of the world’s largest Muslim populations, the current, two-term Prime Minister is Sikh, the past president is Muslim, and the national governing alliance remains headed by a Catholic. India is the birthplace of Buddhism, the current host country to the Tibetan government-in-exile, and home to small Jewish and Parsi (Zoroastrian) communities that have lived for centuries without persecution. Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Muslim, Sikh, and Parsi holidays are recognized as public holidays. Nevertheless, despite this remarkable pluralism and general commitment to religious freedom, Hindu nationalist organizations retain broad popular support in many communities in India, in part because some provide needed services or function as community social organizations. Many of these organizations exist under the banner of the Sangh Parivar, a “family” of over 30 organizations that includes the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), Bajrang Dal, Rashtriya Swayamsevaks Sangh (RSS), and the BJP. Sangh Parivar entities aggressively press for governmental policies to promote their Hindu nationalist agenda, and adhere in varying degrees to an ideology of Hindutva, which holds non-Hindus as foreign to India.

Unlike many of the other countries of concern to the Commission, India has a democratically elected government with a tradition of secular governance dating back to the country’s independence. India also has an independent judiciary, an influential and independent media that is relentlessly critical of the government, and a dynamic civil society with numerous on-governmental organizations (NGOs) that act as government watchdog groups. In practice, however, India’s democratic institutions charged with upholding the rule of law, most notably state and central judiciaries and police, lack capacity and have emerged as unwilling or unable to consistently seek redress for victims of religiously-motivated violence or to challenge cultures of impunity in areas with a history of communal tensions.

The failure to provide justice to religious minorities targeted in violent riots in India is not a new development, and has helped foster a climate of impunity. In 1984, anti-Sikh riots erupted in Delhi following the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi by her Sikh bodyguard. Over 4 days, nearly 3,000 Sikhs were killed, allegedly with the support of Congress Party officials. Few perpetrators were ever held accountable, and only years after the fact. In April 2009, the Congress Party dropped Jagdish Tytler and Sajjan Kumar from its roster of general election candidates over their suspected role in the 1984 riots. In the late 1990s, there was a marked increase in violent attacks among members of religious communities, particularly Muslims and Christians, throughout India, including incidents of killings, torture, rape, and destruction of property. Perpetrators were rarely held responsible. For example, there has been little justice for the victims of riots between Hindus and Muslims after the 1992 destruction of the Babri mosque at a contested religious site in Ajodhya. At least 900 people, mostly Muslims, were killed in Bombay in the 1992-1993 riots, but few have been successfully prosecuted. For instance, several high-profile trials that commenced over 10 years after the riots resulted in acquittals. A probe by India’s Central Bureau of Investigation into one high-profile act of riot violence was announced in February 2009, 16 years after the riots.

Gujarat Violence in 2002

In February 2002 in the state of Gujarat, a fire on a train resulted in the death of 58 Hindus returning from Ayodhya. Following this, 2,000 Muslims were killed across Gujarat by Hindu mobs, thousands of mosques and Muslim-owned businesses were looted or destroyed, and more than 100,000 people fled their homes. Christians were also victims in Gujarat, and many churches were destroyed. India’s National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), an official government body, found evidence of premeditation in the killings by members of Hindu nationalist groups, complicity by Gujarat state government officials, and police inaction in the midst of attacks on Muslims. In 2007, the investigative newsmagazine Tehelka revealed further evidence of state government and police complicity in the riots, including the complicity of Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi. Since the riots, Chief Minister Modi has been re-elected twice, and enjoys the support of the central BJP and numerous prominent Indian business leaders.

Court convictions since the Gujarat riots have been minimal. Efforts to pursue the perpetrators continue, albeit slowly, and human rights groups report that many cases will likely continue to be closed or result in acquittals, due to alleged lack of evidence or insufficient effort on the part of local police officials. Since there were many eyewitnesses to these public acts of brutality, this suggests that endemic impediments to justice exist within the police, the judiciary, and the state government apparatus. In August 2004, the Indian Supreme Court ordered the Gujarat government to reopen its investigation of the 2002 violence, criticizing the local police officials for poor investigative practices and inadequate follow-up. In July 2006, a report from a committee attached to the Prime Minister’s office again chastised the Gujarat government for failing to improve the situation for Muslims in that state, noting that a “state of fear and insecurity” still existed for many Muslims there. This was corroborated by the January 2009 report of the UN Special Rapporteur for the Freedom of Religion or Belief, Asma Jahangir, who visited India in March 2008 and noted the systemic, economic, and social marginalization of members of Gujarat’s Muslim community.

International human rights groups have named the VHP, RSS, BJP, and Bajrang Dal as perpetrators of the violence in Gujarat, as well as other acts of violence against non-Hindus.

After a controversial 2002 non-governmental organization report described links between a Maryland-based charity and India’s RSS and other “violent and sectarian Hindu organizations, “Silicon Valley companies Cisco and Oracle suspended matching company donations to the charity. India’s central and state police and judicial apparatuses have neglected to consistently or adequately examine evidence linking Sangh Parivar entities such as the VHP, RSS, BJP, and Bajrang Dal to acts of violence.

Orissa Violence in 2007 and 2008

Attacks on Christian churches and individuals, largely perpetrated by individuals associated with Hindu nationalist groups, continue to occur across the country, and perpetrators are rarely held to account. In December 2007 in Orissa’s Kandhamal district, violence between Christians and Hindus resulted in several deaths, dozens of injuries, the destruction of at least 20 churches and hundreds of homes, and the displacement of hundreds, many from minority religious communities. According to reports by India’s National Commission for Minorities (NCM), the tensions between the Christians, many of whom are from low-caste communities, and the Hindus, many of whom are from tribal communities, were well-known and longstanding.

According to Christian groups and news reports, the influential local VHP leader Swami

Lakhmanananda Saraswati played a central role in fomenting and encouraging the December 2007 violence against Christians.

In the wake of unresolved communal tensions from the December 2007 violence, the August 23, 2008 murder of Swami Saraswati in Kandhamal sparked a prolonged and destructive violent campaign targeting Christians in Orissa. Unlike the rest of the state, the Kandhamal district is 25-27 percent Christian and several of Kandhamal’s 2,500 villages are entirely Christian. Over several weeks, newspapers reported at least 40 individuals were killed, although some Christian groups report more; thousands of church properties and homes were destroyed; at least 20,000 fled their homes to government-run relief camps; and approximately 40,000 were driven into hiding in jungles, the majority of whom were Christian. The displaced persons reportedly lived in squalid conditions in the camps, and according to interviews with Indian Christian leaders; religious leaders and aid agencies were denied access by state and/or district officials to refugees in Kandhamal, the hardest-hit area. In January 2008, after the December 2007 violence targeting Christians, the Kandhamal District Collector also prevented religious organizations from conducting relief work. This disproportionately affected Christians, as those killed and displaced in the Fall 2008 riots were overwhelmingly Christian, though some Hindus were killed and displaced as well.

By March 2009, several state and central police units remained in Kandhamal, and at least 3,000 individuals were still in government camps, reportedly because of their inability to return to their homes unless they “reconvert” to Hinduism. Numerous press and NCM reports document widespread forced conversions of Christians to Hinduism in villages and relief camps in Orissa, following the Fall 2008 attacks. The Orissa state VHP chief declared on September 12 that the death of Swami Saraswati was an impetus to halt Christian conversions in Orissa. About two weeks later, a month-long series of so-called “reconversion” ceremonies and processions of the Swami’s ashes throughout Kandhamal was announced. There was no immediate police or state government reaction. Insecurity and the threat of harassment, property destruction, and/or additional violence allegedly have caused many Christians to partake in “reconversion “ceremonies. According to the NCM report, even retired high-ranking officials were “threatened with every sort of retaliation if they did not forthwith change their religion and embrace Hinduism.”

In both 2007 and 2008, inadequate police forces failed to quell the violence in Orissa, and initial central government intervention was largely inadequate. According to news reports, prior to the violence, only 500 police officers at 13 stations served Kandhamal’s population of

740,000. Inadequate police equipment and training for riot control also impeded an effective emergency response. As with the 2007 violence, the synchronization of some attacks across wooded and remote terrain suggests premeditation, as well as the awareness and perhaps assistance of local officials and/or police. While the violence was still ongoing, the Orissa state government permitted a funeral procession for Swami Saraswati to cover a distance of 150 kilometers across Kandhamal two weeks after his murder, despite calls from religious leaders that such a procession could further inflame communal tensions. According to news reports, some police prevented individuals from filing police reports, and other watched passively as violence occurred. Central government paramilitary forces did not arrive in Orissa until August 27, but were reportedly prevented from reaching the most sensitive areas because of the strategic felling of trees across key access roads. Mass arrests following the riots did not translate into the actual filing of cases, exacerbating the existing culture of impunity. According to the NCM, 187 people were arrested and 127 cases were registered following the December 2007 violence. By April 2008, only 14 individuals had been formally charged with a crime. In March 2009, the BJP nominated one of the main individuals accused in the anti-Christian violence for an assembly seat in the general elections. Despite remaining imprisoned for the duration of the elections, he won the seat. Also in March 2009, Orissa’s ruling party, the Biju Janata Dal (BJD), ended its 11-year coalition with the BJP, a decision fueled in part by the BJD’s repudiation of the BJP’s Hindu nationalist agenda, and the alleged support of some state BJP officials for the VHP, the Sangh Parivar entity implicated in riots. Several high-profile state and central government investigative teams have visited Orissa. Almost none of the dozens of recommendations for state reform offered by the NCM, the UN Special Rapporteur, and Indian Christian organizations have been implemented. Nevertheless, fears that violence would resume in Orissa on Christmas 2008 were assuaged by a series of preventative measures undertaken by the government, and the holiday occurred without incident.

Other Recent Incidents

On September 14, 2008, shortly after the outbreak of violence in Orissa, over a dozen prayer halls and churches in three Karnataka state districts were attacked by individuals allegedly associated with the Bajrang Dal, a Hindu nationalist organization. In one district, six individuals were injured after attacks on two New Life Church prayer halls. The New Life Church has been accused of distributing pamphlets denigrating Hinduism. Police cases have been registered following some, but not all of the incidents. Apart from this spate f violence, violent, sporadic attacks against Christians and church properties were also reported throughout 2007 and 2008 in Karnataka and in Chhattisgarh. For instance, in November 2007, a mob of 150 members of a Hindu extremist group attacked a church in the state of Chhattisgarh, destroying the church building, beating the pastor, and kidnapping a young member of the church, who was later found dead. Despite the fact that the police were provided with the names of the attackers, officials reportedly waited until the following day to file a complaint. In January 2008, also in Chhattisgarh, more than 80 people were injured in an attack on a large Christian meeting carried out by extremists. The attackers reportedly beat the Christian worshippers and vandalized the makeshift church structure. The State Department also reports communal clashes between Hindus and Muslims in several districts in Maharashtra and Gujarat in 2007 and 2008, causing injuries and the destruction of property.

The state response to these attacks has been inconsistent. Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yeddyurappa did not order additional state security for churches and prayer halls until over a week after the first attack. On September 19, 2008, Karnataka state leader of the Bajrang Dal, Mahendra Kumar, was arrested by state police after he publicly announced his group’s leading role in the attacks. However, in the aftermath of the attacks, Mr. Yeddyurappa attributed the violence to conversion activity.

Hindu nationalist groups have been implicated in attacks against Hindus as well. In January 2009, about 40 members of the right-wing Hindu nationalist group, the Sri Ram Sena, attacked a group of women at a pub in Mangalore, Karnataka, on the premise that the women’s behaviour violated Hindu values. The attacks sparked a national outcry from activists, and several arrests were made, although all were released on bail. In September 2008, a bomb attack in Malegaon, Maharashtra that killed seven and injured over 70 was traced to “Hindu extremists.”Eleven individuals were arrested by the Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad amidst a national debate regarding the contours of emergent “Hindu terrorism” and allegations of anti-Hindu bias by political parties seeking to appease minority electorates.

Responses to Terrorism and the Prevention of Communal Violence

India witnessed a wave of terrorist bombings in 2008, and unlike with the cases discussed previously, swift state and central government action followed to prevent communal violence. Calls for peace and calm by local religious leaders also followed many of the attacks. In May 2008, bomb attacks killed almost 100 bystanders in crowded markets next to Hindu temples in Jaipur. At least 45 individuals died in bomb blasts in November 2008 in Ahmadabad, the capital city of Gujarat. Severe casualties also resulted from 2008 bomb attacks in Delhi and Bangalore. The central government’s immediate appeals for calm and peace and the rapid response of state police helped prevent communal riots, despite varying religious undertones to the attacks, some of which occurred near places of worship, and/or were orchestrated by Islamic extremists. In November 2008, 163 people were killed in coordinated attacks on ten prominent Mumbai sites, including two luxury hotels and a Jewish center. These attacks were carried out by members of the extremist Islamic organization Lashkar-e-Taiba, a group active in Kashmir and widely believed to enjoy the backing of Pakistan’s intelligence agency. The attackers purposefully sought out an American-born rabbi and his Israeli wife residing in the upper floor of an apartment building as targets for their murder. This attack on Jews on Indian soil by foreign actors stands in marked contrast to the fact that India is one of the few countries in the world in which a Jewish minority has lived for centuries without persecution by its nationals. Threats and fear of terrorism in India, perpetrated or threatened by both domestic actors (including Maoists) and foreign, regional actors (particularly Pakistanis and Bangladeshis) remains high. This has been exacerbated by the July 2008 attack on the Indian Embassy in Kabul, in which 41 people were killed, and by persistent acts of violence along the India-Bangladesh border.

Legislative Climate

The Indian Constitution protects the right of citizens to change and propagate their religion. However, five Indian states, Chhattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and Orissa have controversial laws against “coerced” religious conversions. Laws restricting religious conversions in the states of Rajasthan and Arunachal Pradesh are pending further government action before implementation. The anti-conversion laws require government India officials to determine what is or is not a “sincere” conversion. These laws provide for fines and imprisonment for anyone who uses force, fraud, “inducement,” and in some cases, the threat of “divine displeasure” to convert another.

To date, there are few, if any, reports of persons having been arrested or prosecuted under these laws. According to the NCM, there have been no cases of forced conversions registered in the Kandhamal district of Orissa, the locus of violence between Hindus and Christians in 2007 and 2008, in the 40 years of the Act’s existence in that state. No action has been taken on the two formal requests for “permission for conversion” that have been filed in the past 10 years. Nevertheless, these laws can create a hostile atmosphere for religious minorities, particularly given that they exist in states in which attacks by extremist groups are more common—and often happen with greater impunity—than elsewhere in India. For example, a June 2006 report by the NCM found that in the state of Madhya Pradesh, which remains headed by the BJP after the 2009 elections, Hindu extremists had frequently invoked the state’s anti-conversion law as a pretext to incite mobs against Christians. The NCM report also found that police in Madhya Pradesh were frequently complicit in these attacks. Similarly, the NCM report on the December 2007 violence in Orissa concluded that an important factor behind the attacks was the “anti-conversion” campaign carried out by groups associated with the Sangh Parivar. The UN Special Rapporteur has also expressed her concern over the impact of these laws on religious minorities and their inconsistency with international norms guaranteeing the freedom to change one’s religion, and has called for their repeal.

An additional factor exacerbating tensions between Hindus and Christians in Orissa — tensions that erupted into violence in 2007 and more prolonged rioting in 2008—is a quota scheme offering certain benefits to India’s most disadvantaged groups, the Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled Castes (also known as Dalits or “untouchables”). In Orissa, Hindus who are members Scheduled Castes receive job quota benefits, but Christians and Muslims from Scheduled Castes do not, as they are considered to have removed themselves from the caste system. Although affirmative action is not an internationally recognized right, the quota system, which was enacted because Scheduled Castes and Tribes represent a historically underprivileged and impoverished demographic, is oftentimes applied discriminatorily so that disadvantaged Christians and Muslims are excluded from benefiting. However, in many cases, the economic and social challenges facing this demographic do not appear to be eliminated by their religious affiliation. The UN Special Rapporteur has condemned this discriminatory system and called for the abolition of links between religion and caste or tribal status. After a central government-appointed panel, the Sachhar Committee, acknowledged in a November 2006 report that Indian Muslims face discrimination and other hardships, Prime Minister Singh pledged to do more to “address the imbalances,” although reports conflict about how many of the 22 recommendations have actually been implemented. In November 2007, the government adopted new rules enabling members of all religious communities to adopt children, ending a long period in which only Hindus were given this right. In January 2009, the government announced that madrassa degrees would be equivalent to university degrees.

However, the positive impact of these measures in the Muslim community may be mitigated by incidents of police profiling of Muslim youths in areas affected by recent bomb blasts, leading to allegations of harassment and detainment. At least 40 unarmed protesters were killed and hundreds were detained during weeks of violent protests and counter-protests in May 2008 regarding the Jammu and Kashmir government’s decision to transfer 100 acres of forest land to the government-run, Sri Amarnath Shrine Board for the lodging of Hindu pilgrims. The state government’s decision to transfer the property in the Muslim-majority state was seen by many Kashmiri Muslims as an expression of pro-Hindu bias and an attempt by the Indian government to increase Hindu religious tourism and skew state religious demographics. In January 2009, thousands of Muslims protested the death of two young Muslim men shot by police during a sweep following bomb blasts in Jaipur. In March 2009, at the urging of the Election Commission, BJP general election candidate Varun Gandhi of the Gandhi political dynasty was arrested by Uttar Pradesh state police under the National Security Act on charges of hate speech against Muslims during a campaign rally. After over two weeks in jail, the Supreme Court ordered Gandhi’s release on bail, pending his upholding of a commitment not to promote “disharmony or feelings or enmity, hatred or ill-will between different religion, racial, language or regional groups or castes or communities.” Varun Gandhi was elected to the lower house of India’s national parliament in the 2009 national elections but subsequently faced a legal challenge on the grounds that his alleged hate speech rendered his victory invalid.

Recommendations

The Commission notes that although the infrastructure for investigating and prosecuting cases of religiously-motivated violence or harassment exists in India, the capacity of the legal system is severely limited and is utilized inconsistently. These deficiencies have resulted in a culture of impunity that gives members of vulnerable minority communities few assurances of their safety, particularly in areas with a history of communal violence, and little hope of perpetrator accountability.

The Commission thus recommends that the U.S. government urge the government of India to undertake the following measures to make more vigorous and effective efforts to halt violent

attacks against members of religious minorities, as well as women and individuals deemed to be of lower caste, to conduct timely investigations and prosecutions of individuals alleged to have perpetrated violence, to hold state governments and officials accountable for violence and unlawful acts in their states, and to enact policies to encourage religious tolerance, in accordance with India’s rich history of religious pluralism and the peaceful coexistence of different linguistic, ethnic, and religious groups.

I. Strengthening Law Enforcement and the Judiciary

The Commission recommends that the U.S. government urge the government of India to:

Strengthen the ability of the state and central police and other law enforcement bodies to provide effective measures to prohibit and punish cases of religious violence, and protect victims and witnesses by

o ensuring that complainants are able to file “First Information Reports;”

o ensuring that cases relating to religious violence are processed in a timely manner, including by ensuring that a sufficient number of investigators and public prosecutors are supplied to districts in which acts of communal violence have occurred, and that

o providing protection for witnesses in danger of retaliatory violence;

o ensuring that all complainants are able to obtain legal representation, regardless of religion or caste status;

o ensuring that standardized procedures for documenting and collecting evidence are promptly followed in instances of communal conflict; and

o ensuring that trials at all levels of the justice system are impartial, including by investigating allegations of corruption or official complicity in any acts of alleged religious violence;

Strengthen the state and central judiciary by implementing measures to ensure that:

o cases involving religious violence or harassment are processed and resolved in a timely manner; and

o survivors of communal violence are made aware of their rights and avenues for legal recourse, for example by establishing free or low-cost community legal aid clinics in riot-hit areas;

Ensure that the state and central police and other law enforcement agencies have the training and resources necessary to avert future communal violence, including by sharing information among central and state law enforcement bodies about measures that successfully prevented outbreaks of violence in previous high-tension situations;

Provide training on human rights and religious freedom standards and practices to members

of the state and central police and judiciary, particularly in areas with a history or likelihood

of communal violence;

Ensure that the perpetrators of terrorist attacks are brought to justice, and the victims and their families are provided aid and counselling; and

Fulfill a pledge made in 2004 to enact a law criminalizing inter-religious violence.

II. Reforming Existing Legislation That May Undermine Freedom of Religion or Belief

The Commission recommends that the U.S. government urge the government of India to:

Establish an impartial body of interfaith religious leaders, human rights and legal experts, and other civil society representatives to study religious conversion activity and any allegations of forced, induced, or otherwise illegal or improper conversions in states with legislation regulating conversions and to make recommendations as to if and how such laws should be changed to comply with international standards on the freedom of thought,

conscience, and religion or belief; and

Investigate job allocation and government benefit schemes for Scheduled Tribes and Castes to assess whether religion is used unfairly to provide or deny access to benefits.

III. Taking New Measures to Promote Communal Harmony, Protect Religious Minorities, and Prevent Communal Violence

The Commission recommends that the U.S. government urge the government of India to:

Call on all political parties and religious or social organizations, including entities of the Sangh Parivar, including, but not limited to the Bharatiya Janata Party, Rashtriya Swayamsevaks Sangh, Bajrang Dal, and Vishwa Hindu Parishad, to 1) publicly denounce violence against and harassment of religious minorities, women, and low-caste members, 2)acknowledge that such violence constitutes a crime under Indian law, and 3) communicate to all members and affiliates that acts of violence or harassment will not be tolerated, and will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law;

Take immediate legal action against any charitable, social, or political organizations, or individuals associated with such organizations, about whom evidence of participation in acts of communal violence is found;

Establish effective State Minority Commissions charged with the responsibility for examining minority affairs, including minority religious communities, issuing recommendations, and serving as a repository for minority grievances in those states that do not currently have such commissions, including Orissa, and ensure that these commissions are transparent, adequately funded, inclusive of women and minorities, and subject to periodic independent review; and

Establish measures to build confidence among religious communities in areas with a history

or likelihood of communal violence, including truth and reconciliation councils and social and cultural programming.

IV. Addressing Communal Violence in Gujarat

The Commission recommends that the U.S. Government urge the government of India to:

Continue to pursue, investigate, and lay charges against any individuals responsible for the deaths at Godhra, and the perpetrators of the killings, sexual violence, and arson in Gujarat in

2002;

Ensure that any efforts to bring a case against Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi are

allowed to proceed in accordance with the law; and

Send a central government investigative team to Gujarat to assess the security of individuals

displaced by the 2002 riots, and reports that such individuals are systematically economically and socially marginalized, and provide recommendations for improving communal harmony in Gujarat.

V. Addressing Communal Violence in Orissa

The Commission recommends that the U.S. Government urge the government of India to:

Initiate a Central Bureau of Investigation probe into the murder of Swami Lakhmanananda Saraswati and the ensuing violence.

Continue to pursue, investigate, and bring charges against the perpetrators of the killings and arson in Orissa, as well as any forced reconversions [see specific recommendations under 1. Strengthening Law Enforcement and the Judiciary];

Allow aid groups, regardless of religious affiliation, access to internally displaced persons

still unable or unwilling to return to their home communities;

Establish appropriate mechanisms to ensure that 1) all compensation schemes, including those promised by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh soon after the outbreak of the Fall 2008 violence, are carried out in a timely manner, and 2) any families unable to produce the body of an individual killed by rioters are not excluded from compensation schemes;

Take steps to ensure police access to Kandhamal district and other areas that may be prone to communal violence, including by improving road infrastructure and building capacity;

Mobilize the necessary security forces over the timeframe necessary to ensure that internally displaced persons residing in government relief camps or elsewhere are allowed to safely return to their villages, without the threat of violence or harassment;

Ensure that the use or threat of violence or harassment to bring about forced conversions or “reconversions” are prosecuted promptly under existing laws prohibiting harassment and violence; and

Recognize the unique link between poverty, tribal identity, and communal violence in Orissa, and implement development schemes to address poverty, disadvantages associated with tribal or caste status, the lack of economic opportunity, and the lack of adequate education and health infrastructure.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Report of Fact Finding Team investigating attack on Saoner Church; and a radical experiment in peacemaking

ALL INDIA CHRISTIAN COUNCIL

Plot No. 142, Telecom Colony, Kanajiguda, Secunderabad - 500015

040-2786-8907 www.christiancouncil.in

President Dr Joseph D Souza Secretary General Dr John Dayal

Secretary General’s Contacts; john.dayal@gmail.com, Mobile 0981102172

Unexpected hate violence against church, and an equally surprising guarantee of community peace

Report of the investigations into the attack on the Church at Saoner, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India on 19 April 2009

Fact-finding team led by Dr John Dayal, Secretary General, All India Christian Council with Mr. Vishal Lal, Open Doors and Mr. Prateek Tongra, All India Christian Council, Nagpur

[The Fact Finding Team acknowledges with thanks infrastructure and other assistance from Mr Nitin Sardar, Truthseekers International and Mr Vijaesh Lal, Open Doors Foundation, and the cooperation of Civil Society movements of Nagpur]

NAGPUR, 26 June 209

Preamble: The attack by some miscreants, owning allegiance to a cocktail of Hindutva outfits, on the outpost the Douglas Memorial Church in Saoner town, a dot on the highway from Nagpur to Bhopal, on Sunday, April 19, 2009 could not have been more unexpected as it took place in an otherwise somnambulant hinterland Vidharbha stretch of Maharashtra. Equally surprising was the mass response. The Other Backward Classes, [OBCs] members of some of which had been arrested in the attack, responded in a uniquely magnificent manner, publicly announcing that in future they, and not the police, would ensure peace, would guarantee religious harmony in the region, and would personally ensure the safety and security of the church, of the school, of the pastor and his family. This fact finding report was therefore deliberately delayed to see if the promise was fulfilled. At the moment of filing of this report, the experiment remains a success, with possibilities that it can be replicated elsewhere in the country where sporadic acts of violence take place against church groups. Engaging the local Dalit and OBC groups, together with the others, in a voluntary people-to-people peace accord would seem to hold out hope for lasting peace even when the sparsely deployed police force would be ineffective or just insufficient, and anyway too late in arriving on the scene.

THE FACTS OF THE CASE:

Other than scholars of Marathi literature interested in the works of the classic writer author Gadkari who was born here in the early part of the last century, not many people even in the state of Maharashtra had heard of Saoner, a dusty, hot township about 40 kilometres from the state’s northern capital city of Nagpur. It was known just as a point where the National Highway to Bhopal and New Delhi branches off to the coal-mine plateau of Chindwara 120 kilometres away. This is basically a small time trading post for forest produce, organic pulses and grain harvested with great difficulty in the plains of Vidarbha, the poorest and most deprived area of India’s most developed province.

On 20 April, 2009, Nagpur and the rest of India woke up to Saoner’s newfound notoriety as the latest in the increasing list of places of Christian prosecution at the hands of right wing Hindutva elements. Said the times of India in a small news report:

“Miscreants attack Saoner church

20 Apr 2009

Soumittra S Bose, TNN

Miscreants apparently belonging to Hindu radical groups attacked over 100-year-old church during morning mass on Sunday in Saoner, about 40 kms from city. Two worshippers, both women, were hurt as fanatics, allegedly from outfits like VHP and Bajrang Dal, stormed the premises of the Douglas Memorial Church at 10.40 am chanting ‘Jai Shree Ram, Jai Bajrang’. Both outfits, however, denied they had a hand in the attack but said it was done by Hindus angry over religious conversions in the area. Children present in the church too were intimidated. The intruders tore up holy books including Bible, ransacked the furniture, broke musical instruments, and damaged the altar. The attackers, chanting ‘Har Har Mahadev’, shattered window glasses of a school bus parked in the campus. The group of 20-25 attackers was armed with sticks, swords and swordsticks, and possibly had firearms too.”

Two days later, the Times of India reported again:

“Saoner minorities feel insecure now

22 Apr 2009 Soumittra S Bose, TNN

When the banner put up by a Muslim organisation during a festival recently was damaged, Saoner residents dismissed it as a one-off happening. After last Sunday’s church attack, the minority communities are afraid it indicates beginning of a new trend. Members of Muslim community, expressing their concern, said that their mind is now full of anxiety as fanatics have started targeting religious institutions. Police statistics show that 60% of around 40,000 population of Saoner town is Hindu while 30% is Buddhist, 10% Muslim and rest others including Christians. Most Christians are attached to the Douglas Memorial Church. “Today a church has been ransacked. Tomorrow another religious place would be destroyed. They created a ruckus during Muslim festival. Sooner or later, somebody will retaliate. We must ensure that a bunch of miscreants do not succeed in vitiating the feeling of harmony. So far, all communities have lived peacefully in friendly manner,” said Jabbir Shaikh who lives on bank of Kolar River. Kusumbai Jhorawane and Rekha Thoke, both regular worshippers at Douglas Memorial church, had witnessed the attack. They are still reeling under the fear. “We are petrified. They can also target us. We shall come here again but the memories shall keep haunting us,” said Thoke. “Though nobody was seriously injured, the attackers were aggressive. We are now feeling threatened,” said Jhorawane.”

The Fact Finding team was in Saoner on 24th and 25th April 2009. We interviewed the Pastor of the Church, a wide cross section of society, two other eye witnesses, police officers, local politicians including the member of the State Assembly from the constituency, and leaders of civil society at Nagpur who had come to Saoner for a public meeting on 25th April. We were also present at the public meeting.

The main narrative of the attack was obviously from the Pastor, Mark Madhukar Sakharpekar, who doubles up as the parish priest of his church, unpaid Principal of the High school run since 1978 from a new building built by him and his father, Pastor Madhukar who was priest between 1975 and 2003, on the compound of the Church which itself was built in 1832 and refurbished in 1902. The senior Madhukar, now very ill, was patently a popular man and his school has become the main high quality educational institution in the area, patronised by the rich and the powerful as also by civil servants, police officers and businessmen who send their wards to study here. In fact, there are less than half a dozen Christian children out of the student body of 700 in the school at any one time. The community is proud of the fact that this school has produced the first generation of English-knowing students who have then done well in colleges in Nagpur. Interestingly, the office of the Principal displays huge portrays of National leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, the mandatory Maharaj Shivaji, and surprisingly, portraits of several founders of Hindutva, including Savarkar. Asked about it, the Principal-cum-Pastor said it was on instructions from the Education Department of the Government of Maharashtra, currently in the control of the Congress party.

The heritage church, however, is in a shabby condition, but did have some wooded pews and a new music system of sorts. Pastor Mark succeeded his father – who was also the one who had ordained him in this independent church which owes allegiance to an Anglican faction headed by the current Moderator, Rev Chandrakant D Salve. The denomination break from the parent Church three decades ago was possibly a reason why senior churchmen from Nagpur maintained their distance from the Pastor even after the attack was so widely publicised in the media. Pastor Mark is married, and his parents, wife and small son live in the small parsonage next to the church and the school. A part of the church property is walled off, and is said to have been usurped some years ago by outsiders. The last baptism in the church took place as far back as 2001, apart from the baptism of Pastor Mark’s own son, Joshua. The large major Christian activity in the region was a Revival meeting by Brother Rajkumar, an Independent evangelist, in 2007.

According to Pastor Mark, the total number of Christians cannot be more than 500 in the administrative region of Saoner consisting of a population of 40,000 in 432 villages, and are served by a Catholic institution run by some Nuns, and an outreach programme of the Believers Church of Gospel for Asia mission. Politically, the region is basically loyal to the Congress or its breakaway factions such as the NCP of Mr Sharad Pawar. Sections of the people are tribals, and there are about three dozen families of South Indians, mostly government or private sector employees.

Our own investigations reveal that there has been increasing right wing activity since the split in the Mumbai based Shiv Sena and the attack launched by one of its factions against Hindi speakers and migrants from Madhya Pradesh and North India. Since Saoner has a large Hindi speaking population because of its location in Vidharbha region and its proximity to Madhya Pradesh, very many young men once loyal to the Shiva Sena found themselves suddenly without a strong and popular political base. Apparently, these Shiv Sena members were quickly mopped up, or constituted themselves into some groups aligned with the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh or the Bajrang Dal, the more militant faction of the Sangh Parivar. They had been flexing their muscles as the State was gearing up for the Lok Sabha parliamentary elections, which the State Assembly elections scheduled for later in the year.

There was nothing subtle about the attack, but apparently some amount of preparedness had gone into it as the assailants were quite large in number, armed, and very focussed. Pastor Mark narrated the sequence of events: There was a congregation of about 50 to sixty Christians at worship, most of them women, many of them Dalits. Even as the pastor was getting ready to give his Homily at about 10:45 a.m., a gang of about 30 young men armed with staves and clubs, several trishaws [steel tridents] and knives, broke through the main door and barged into the church shouting slogans “Jai Shriram,” “Jai Bajrang Bali” and “Har Har Mahadev.” They smashed the benches with the rods, focussed on the musical instruments and attacked the women in the front rows and on the sides of the aisle. A pregnant woman was among those who were manhandled. Pastor Mark said one threw the trident at him, but the man missed his target. The Pastor’s Bible was snatched and torn. The men abused the women and asked them to run away from the church and not to come back. They then came out and vented their ire on the school bus, damaging its windowpanes and windscreen. The violence continued for almost 20 minutes to half an hour. At one stage, the mob wanted to attack the family of Pastor Mark in the parsonage [the retired pastor who founded the school was at that time on his bed, as he is partially paralysed] the family was spared when Pastor Mark begged them not to harm his old parents and his wife and child. The Pastor defied one of the gang leaders as Sonu Baraiya, 35, who runs a cassette shop and is said to be the head of the local unit of the Bajrang Dal. The pastor said another man, Pandit Dube, a resident of the Water Tank area, had a pistol or revolver which he brandished menacingly. Dube was the one who ran to attack Pastor Mark’s mother as she came out of the parsonage after hearing the noise. Pastor Mark said he was repeatedly threatened by the pistol wielding Dube.

Pastor Mark’s narration was corroborated by an old Dalit woman who was in the congregation who gave her name as Mrs Pachhobai Ramnathji Kalse, a widow and a pensioner. Mrs Kalse said she told the attackers she had come of her own attack and there was no allurement or force by the Pastor. She said the attack would not stop her from attending church service together with others of the congregation.

The aggressors had apparently also gone to the local police station to complain that Pastor Mark was converting Tribals in his church. The police eventually came to the Church after the attack and asked Pastor Mark to come to the Police station where they recorded the statements of the Pastor and some other women.

.

The police eventually arrested ten persons and produced them in court.

But the arrests united the Sangh elements in Saoner and Nagpur. The Sangh Parivar and Bajrang Dal in particular had called a Bandh and a closure of markets on 25th in protest against the arrest of Bajrang Dal activists. A defence committee was also formed in Nagpur which retained high powered lawyers to defend the suspects whose bail petitions were dismissed by the local court. The fact Finding team was in the Saoner court on the evening of 24th April 29 when the Nagpur senior advocates argued that the police had failed to establish any charges to retain custody of the suspects. The advocates also repeated the charge that there was large scale conversion was going on in the church and that there were in fact more than 5 to 6 people in the church when the incident took place. Counsel charged that the violence was in fact the result of a class between people waiting to be converted and their own relatives who did not want them to convert and leave their culture. Counsel also charged that the police had not taken any action on applications which had been submitted to the local police two days before the violence accusing the pastor of large scale conversions by fraud and coercion. He said the police had not asked converts if they had converted by their own free will. The court did not agree with defence counsel to let all the eleven accused free, but it also rejected the police request for continued remand, or custody, so that they could carry on investigations to trace four leaders of the group who were still absconding. The suspects were remanded to judicial custody and sent to the local jail amidst high drama in the small court room and its courtyard which is close to the police station. There was a sizable police presence to keep a check on about a hundred people, apparently supporters of the arrested persons, who had gathered there.

Nagpur houses the headquarters the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, the mother organisation of which the Bharatiya Janata party is the political arm. The BJP’s local leadership had at first fully supported the attack on the Saoner church. The Bharatiya Janata party district Yuva Morcha [youth wing] vice chief Shashikant Singh was arrested on 22 April in a case filed against him under Section 153 (a )(1) and (2) for giving an interview to a news channel not only supporting the attack on the church but also giving a “warning” that the “agitation” would be expanded in future. He repeated the threats in statements to the media later in the day. He was sent to police custody till 24 April 29.

In their press statements, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad denied any role by any Hindutva group in the violence against the church. But Sangh-affiliated groups later called for a Bund or strike in Saoner on 25th April 29 and demanded that shopkeepers pull down shutters that day. Police was called in from neighbouring areas as a precautionary measure.

The Fact Finding team was in fact in the market on the eve of the bandh. It was a bustling day with Tribals from surrounding areas and small farmers occupying almost every available space in the market, all the way to the lane that leads to the Church, selling their produce. There was a talk that there would be a strike next day, but there was no palpable tension. At the same time, pamphlets were distributed in the market, to shopkeepers and prominent citizens that they should, instead of closing shops for the bandh not only keep the markets open but come for a peace meeting called by the town leadership to wash away this “sin” in Saoner by the attack on the church, and also to assure security to the tiny minority community on behalf of the entire people of the town.

The meeting by Saoner Nagrik Manch convenor Adv Jayant Khedkar was held at Bazaar chowk, Jay Stambh, and was chaired my Member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Sunil Kedar who had been elected as an Independent from the Saoner constituency, but later joined the Nationalist Congress party. The Association of local businessmen and traders not only ignored the call of a closure, or Bandh, by the Hindutva groups, but joined in the peace rally together with groups such as Truthseekers, All India Secular Forum, Bahujan Sangharsh Samiti, India Peace Centre, representatives of the local Muslim and Buddhist community, and several OBC groups. A prominent participant was Dr Suresh Khairnar of the All India Secular Forum who had led a civil society Fact Finding Team to Saoner after the violence.

The meeting lasted more than three hours. Almost every speaker expressed his shock that a church could have been attacked in Saoner. They denounced the attackers and said there was no way communal and violent elements would be tolerated in the region. The OBC leaders and members of the trading community were particular in associating themselves with assurances of peace. They volunteered that the church would be repaired at their cost and all damaged furniture and vehicle would be repaired and restored, or brought new.

There was but a small; group of local Christians in the large crowd that sat through the evening and late into the night. Some pastors had come from Nagpur to show their solidarity, but there was no senior church leader from Nagpur.

Church response. Nagpur is home to the headquarters of the major Protestant Churches affiliated to the national Council of Churches. It is also an important Archdiocese of the Catholic Church and has a resident Bishop of the Church of North India and another of the Believers Church apart from possibly as many as 700 independent pastors. It has several major and very popular Christian educational institutions. It was disappointing to learn that apart from some church officials sent to Saoner by NCCI general Secretary Bishop Das, and groups led by senior Truthseekers activists Nitin Sardar and others who were there from the second day after the violence, most senior church leaders chose not to go to Saoner to ascertain the facts for themselves, or in solidarity with the Pastor and members of the attacked church. A small protest was organised in Nagpur by some independent pastors and all church groups, and was well covered by the local media. In lessons learnt from Orissa, local church groups could easily have shown more solidarity. Church unity will be crucial in the Nagpur region in the future for vigilance against persecution and anti Christian violence.

Role of the media: The Marathi and Hindi Language media, which had given some coverage to the charges of large scale conversions made by the Sangh activists against the Saoner church, in fairness, also covered the Christian protests. No media however covered the major path-breaking peacemaking rally in Saoner on 25th April or the failure of the Sangh-called bandh. Their priorities, it sends, were the dog show held in the city the same day!

POSTSCRIPT: Rev Nitin Sardar of Truthseekers and Dr Suresh Khairnar told the fact Finding Team on 25 June 2009 they were keeping a watch on the situation. Peacemaking efforts were being sustained, and the police was being persuaded, according to Dr Khairnar, to see how wounds were healed and rifts in society closed. The point for the police was to catch the conspirators, but not to harass others. They said the OBC leaders are keeping their end of the bargain to maintain peace and communal harmony in the Saoner region.