Category Archives: Bulletin Board

Canadian student charged with incitement to mutiny for shouting slogan in India

PRESS RELEASE

 

Montreal 3 September, 2018

 

We write with alarm and concern at the arrest of Ms Lois Sofia, an MSc (graduate research) student in Mathematical Physics at the Université de Sherbrooke in Quebec by the Indian police yesterday. Ms Lois was on a flight back to her hometown of Tuticorin in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu when she found herself sitting behind Dr Tamilisai Soundararajan, the president of the state unit of the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), the party currently in power nationally. Her crime seems to have been that she shouted “BJP’s fascist government down down.” Dr Sounderrajan reported her to the police, who charged her with sections regarding public nuisance, public mischief and causing armed forces to mutiny under the Indian Penal Code, the Tamil Nadu Police Act, and the Code of Criminal Procedure. A local court has remanded Sofia to 15 days of judicial custody. 

 

Ms Sofia’s arrest for a quite minor expression of opposition is not an isolated incident. It follows last week’s arrests of five eminent democratic rights defenders on unfounded charges of being supporters of “terrorist” organizations, and is part of a larger pattern of criminalization and suppression of dissent by the BJP, an ethno-nationalist party committed to making India into a “Hindu” nation. The party has used agencies of the state to attack and arrest, and encouraged social vigilantes, hate trollers, and lynch mobs against Muslim and Christian minorities, Dalits (oppressed castes) and adivasis (indigenous people), as well as writers, artists, journalists, lawyers, academics, and others who speak out in defence of civil liberties and democratic rights.

 

We ask that Ms Sofia be released and all charges against her be dropped. The expression of opposition and dissent is a fundamental right in a democracy. The criminalization of the exercise of this right suggests that democracy itself is under threat in India.

 

CERAS (Montreal)

Dolores Chew: Phone

 

India Civil Watch-Canada

Feroz Mehdi: Phone

 

South Asia Network for Secularism and Democracy (SANSAD, Vancouver)

South Asia Left and Democratic Association (SALDA, Toronto)

 

https://scroll.in/latest/ 893033/tamil-nadu-student- arrested-for-shouting-anti- bjp-slogans-inside-flight

 

 

Advance of Hindutva fascism in India

SANSAD news release August 31, 2018

Stand Up for the Human Rights Defenders

South Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy (SANSAD), an organization of South Asian diaspora in Canada affirming the unity of people in South Asia across synthetic national boundaries, joins its voice to the chorus of outrage in India and in the Indian diaspora against the latest episode in the determined march of India toward Hindutva fascism, the construction of an authoritarian-populist state identified as a Hindu nation.

On August 28 the Maharashtra police simultaneously raided the homes of human rights and civil liberty activists, including journalists, writers, poets, academics, lawyers, and priests in Bombay, Delhi, Hyderabad, Goa, and Ranchi. They arrested under the draconian Unlawful Activities (Prevention)Act and other provisions of the Indian Penal Code Gautam Navlakha, journalist, writer, and former president for People’s Union for Democratic Reforms; Sudha Bhardwaj, a civil liberties activist who had renounced her US citizenship acquired by birth 30 years ago to work among the oppressed Dalits and unorganized workers in the mines near the steel plant at Bhilai and has worked tirelessly for three decades to organize labor and, as a lawyer to defend the Adivasis against illegal land acquisition and denial of their forest rights, and who currently teaches at the National Law University in Delhi; Varvara Rao, a renowned poet and activist; Arun Fereira, a civil rights activist and lawyer based in Bombay, who has already spent five years in jail on false charges that were dismissed in court; and Vernon Gonsalves, a human rights activist.

The police also raided the homes of management and data analysis specialist, academic, prolific writer, and public intellectual Anand Teltumbde, who delivered the Dr. Ambedkar Memorial Lecture at Simon Fraser University (Surrey) and University of British Columbia (Vancouver) in 2016; Susan Abraham, civil liberties lawyer and member of the Committee for Protection of Democratic Rights; Father Stan Swami, priest, teacher, and Adivasi rights activist; K. Satyanarayana, Head of the Department of Cultural Studies and Dean of Interdisciplinary Studies at the English and Foreign Language University in Hyderabad; and Kranti Tekula, human rights activist.

These arrests and raids come on the heels of similar arrests after violence broke out following a rally in Pune held by Dalits on December 31, 2017 to celebrate the victory of Dalit soldiers of the British colonial army over the upper caste Marathas in the Battle of Bhima Koregaon. A day after the rally upper caste Hindutva forces attacked the Dalits and a Dalit was killed. Two Hindutva leaders were identified by eye witnesses. Miland Ekbote and Shambhaji Rao Bhide, were arrested but released. Instead, Shoma Sen, professor, Nagpur University, Surendra Gadling, human rights lawyer who has been defending the paraplegic professor G. N. Saibaba, Sudhir Dhawale, editor of a magazine, Rona Wilson, member of the Committee for the Protection of Political Prisoners, and Mahesh Raut, prominent anti-displacement activist were arrested under various sections of the IPC and the blanket Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

These events show a clear pattern. While lynch mobs and assassins freely go about their business, with those who are arrested for murders being not only released but garlanded by government ministers, policemen who rape, torture, and engage in custodial murders, code named “encounters,” enjoy impunity and are often rewarded, those who stand up for the oppressed and downtrodden and defend the rights granted to citizens by the Indian Constitution are thrown into jail to prevent their “unlawful activities” or harassed to intimidate them and others against speaking up.

The arrests and raids of Aug 28 are no doubt immediately motivated by the need of the BJP Hindutva nationalist government to counter the social disaffection that has been generated by its organized mobs in their killing of Muslims and the recent assaults on a revered secular Hindu scholar like Swami Agnivesh of the reformist Arya Samaj. It is also motivated by the need to deflect attention from the economic failures of the government, and most immediately by the need to distract from the exposure that Hindu terrorist group Sanatana Sanstha and its affiliate Janajagruti Samiti had prepared plots and collected arms and explosives for attacks on crowds in festivals and that they were linked to the murder of journalist and editor, Gauri Lankesh in 2017 and to the earlier murders of scholars, rationalists, and activists Govind Pansare, Narendra Dhabolkar, and Prof. Kulbargi. Seeking fascist powers through electoral means, the BJP government needs to both distract from the fallout of the acts of its non-state agents and to create an enemy to unify people. Hence the creation of the labels, “anti-national” and “urban Naxal”.

The oppression of Adivasis, Dalits, peasant, and workers in India is not new. But this has taken on an unprecedented intensity under the neo-liberal agenda that was initiated by the Congress and has been taken up with extreme vigor by the current BJP government, who have added to it the toxic fervor of religious nationalism. The defenders of human rights expose the resulting oppression and enable resistance to the illegal operations of the state. As such they are a roadblock to the neo-liberal agenda allied to and powered by the drive to recreate a glorious Hindu Rashtra of a mythic past. The defenders of human rights and civil liberties are named “anti-national” and “urban Naxals” because by such naming the party, with its Hinduva ideology, its government, and its corporate allies are made to stand for the nation that must be defended. “Naxal/Maoist” is the most powerful label for the enemy that the previous prime minister, Manmohan Singh declared to be the greatest internal threat to Indian security when initiating counter-insurgency in the forests of Chhatisgarh and other areas where Maoists were leading the Adivasis to fight back.

While the Muslim as enemy, potentially uniting Hindus, is the domain of violence by the non-state brigade, the “Naxal/Maoist” whether in the jungles of Chhatisgarh or as a bogey in its urban form, whether Adivasis defending their lands, waters, and forest rights or middle- class activists speaking on their behalf in civil society and the courts is the domain of state repression. It is a most convenient label for the suppression of democracy and freedom in the interest of predatory capital. It is not surprising that the corporate media, owned by big business houses act as the mouthpiece of the government in propagating this anti-democratic rhetoric. Such combined use of propaganda, mob action, and the state machinery for the realization of its ideological goal of Hindu Rashtra by the BJP puts India well on its way to Hinduva fascism.

We demand that all these human rights defenders arrested on false charges and under colonial era repressive legislation be immediately and unconditionally freed and all material confiscated in various related raids be returned to the owners. We urge all democratic people to write to their elected representatives to oppose the development of fascism in India.

India’s unfulfilled promise

SANSAD statement on Aug 15, 2018

On 15th August, India’s Independence Day, we stand with our friends and comrades across Canada in solidarity with jailed Professor GN Saibaba and the India 5 arrested under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act on June 6, 2018. We believe that the incarceration of human rights activists and pro people intellectuals, like Prof. Saibaba, Adv Surendra Gadling, Prof Shoma Sen, Sudhir Dhawale, Rona Wilson, and Mahesh Raut is an attempt by Indian govt to invisibilize/ normalise the genocide of adivasis which is being carried out through military operations like the green hunt. Corporate plunder of Adivasis’s forest, land and resources is at the heart of these military operations and genocide, which is resolutely opposed by arrested activists, intellectuals, Dalits as well as Adivasis.

 

A week ago, on 6th August, just two days before the International Day of the World’s Indigenous People,15 Adivasis including seven children were murdered by police in Sukma district of Chattisgarh in the name of fighting Maoists. We salute Lingaram Kodopi, a committed adivasi journalist and activist who dared to visit these villages and met with the family members of the slain Adivasis. If not for Lingaram perhaps we wouldn’t have ever know the names of these fifteen innocent Adivasis murdered by the police. Today, on India’s Independence Day we remember these names to pay our homage and to bear witness.

1 Hidima Muchaki/Lakhma
2. Deva Muchaki/Hurra
3.Muka Muchaki/Muka
4. Madkam Hunga/ Hunga
5. Madkam Tinku/Lakhma
6. Sodhi Prabhu/|Bhima
7. Madkam Aiyata/Sukka
8. Madkam Hunga/Hunga
9. Kadki Hadma/Deva
10. Soyam Sita/ Rama
11. Madkam Hunga/Sukka
12. Vanjaam Ganga/Hunha
13. Kasavi Bami/Hadma
14. Madvi Hunga/Hinga
15. Vanjaam Hunga/Nanda

We are very well aware of the risks in being a Lingaram Kodopi, Soni Sori (both of whom were imprisoned on false charges and tortured), Dr Saibaba or the India five in India today or for that matter anywhere in the world. Just two days ago, on 13 August an attempt was made to assassinate student activist Umar Khalid, of Jawahar Lal Nehru University, at a venue which is merely half kilometer away from Indian Parliament in Delhi. Khalid was invited to a public discussion where relatives of victims of communal violence were scheduled to speak. In the recent past, four renowned intellectuals and activists, Dr Narendra Dabholkar, Comrade Govind Pansare, Prof Kalburgi and Gauri Lankesh have been assassinated for raising their voice against the brahminical hindutva homogenising project unleashed by the Hindu nationalists who now rule India. The India state is the instrument of crony capitalism and Brahminism to oppress adivasis, Dalits, minorities and working people of India.

On the day of India’s independence from colonial rule we demand freedom for the people of India to defend their lands, waters, forest rights, and ways of life against a predatory state serving the interests of national and global capital; we demand the democratic right of free speech and the right to defend the human rights of all who are subjected to the violence of the state; we demand freedom from the toxin of hate and division sowed and cultivated by the Indian government in order to transform India to a Hindu Rashtra. We demand that the promise of 1947 be fulfilled for the Indian people, that the rights enshrined in the constitution be upheld. We demand the right to struggle for justice and the right of minorities to live in peace. Inquilab Zindabad

 

Solidarity with Bangladesh students

SANSAD statement on Bangladesh student protest

July 6, 2018

South Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy (SANSAD) strongly condemns the repressive measures taken by the Government of Bangladesh against students agitating for road safety following the killing of two students by a speeding bus in Dhaka on July 29.

We utterly deplore the use of violence by the police and non-state actors aided by the police against peaceful demonstrators demanding the basic human right of the right to life on the streets of Bangladesh, where many thousands are killed by traffic every year. SANSAD stands in wholehearted solidarity with the students in Bangladesh in their just demand.

We deplore the violence of the non-state actors unhindered by the police against journalists and photographers, including the  molestation of a female journalist of the Daily Star, that has left several journalists injured.

We demand the immediate release from custody of photographer Shahidul Alam, who was arrested by Dhaka Metropolitan Police for reporting on the situation in Bangladesh in an interview on Al Jazeera yesterday.

We stand in solidarity with all students from Bangladesh in their struggle for justice. We stand in solidarity with all journalists and photographers who work to keep us informed so that we can struggle for democracy and a just world.