By Kashif-ul-Huda, TwoCircles.net,
Mahatma Gandhi started his satyagraha from Champaran district of
Bihar. This force of truth is what ultimately led to India’s
independence. After independence, India adopted "Satyameva Jayate"
[Truth Alone Triumphs] as its motto. A 23 year-old youth from Champaran
is testing India’s commitment to its truth and in the process showing
the mirror to the Indian republic and asking them the same questions
that Gandhi’s followers asked the colonial rulers.
Afroz Alam was born in Champaran district of Bihar in 1987. He is
acutely aware of the historical importance of Champaran in India’s
freedom struggle. Through Right To Information (RTI) Act, he has started
his own “satyagraha” for seeking out the truth. Since 2005, he has
filed thousands of RTI applications seeking information on local and
national issues but what has made him famous is his unprecedented
successes in finding truth of Batla House killings of Sept 19, 2008 that
was termed as encounter by Delhi Police and fake by the population
living in that area.
RTI activist Afroz Alam Sahil
Two years ago today, in Batla House area of Jamia Nagar, Delhi two
civilians Sajid and Atif, and a police officer Mohan Chand Sharma were
dead after some gun-shots were heard in the morning. What had happened
there in flat number L-18 that day that led to three deaths is not
clear. Afroz Alam Sahil, then a student of Mass Communication in Jamia
Millia Islamia and an RTI activist, filed around 40 applications seeking
more information about this “encounter” but has met by deafening
silence from all sides.
Getting information through RTI has never been easy but it has been a
special challenge to find out anything about the Batla House encounter
case. He has filed appeals after appeals with different departments but
without much success. He has filed RTI applications with the Prime
Minister’s Office, President of India, Union Home Ministry, National
Human Rights Commission (NHRC), All India Institute of Medical Sciences
(AIIMS), Delhi Police, and Delhi Minority Commission with little or no
response from most of these organizations.
But his dogged persistence has paid off when in March this year, NHRC
finally released the post-mortem report of Atif Amin and Mohammad
Sajid, two youth who were killed in Batla House encounter. The
post-mortem report, which AIIMS and Delhi Police still refuses to give,
revealed that both Atif and Sajid had injuries on their bodies which
occurred before their death. Delhi Police’s version of event had it that
no physical interaction happened with the youth and the police but then
how would one explain these injuries that AIIMS doctor clearly marked
as “ante-mortem” or before death.
http://www.twocircles.net/2010mar17/batla_house_post_mortem_report_confi
Just a few days ago, RTI officer at AIIMS again refused to give any
information about post-mortem reports of Batla House victims, thought it
has been already made public by the NHRC. The reason for refusal, cited
by the Central Public Information Officer (CPIO) is RTI act 8 (g) and 8
(h):
8. Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, there shall be no obligation to give any citizen,
(g) information, the disclosure of which would endanger the life or
physical safety of any person or identify the source of information or
assistance given in confidence for law enforcement or security purposes; (h) information, which would impede the process of investigation or apprehension or prosecution of offenders.
I would leave it to the readers to figure who will get hurt from the
information that is being refused to be given by various government
agencies and who benefits from this silence?
Though harassed along the way and humiliated by government officials,
Afroz has refused to give in. It was big news when in July 2009, NHRC
gave clean-chit to Delhi regarding their action in Batla House. "We are
clearly of the opinion that having regard to the material placed before
us, it cannot be said that there has been any violation of human rights
by action of police," the commission wrote in a report submitted to the
Delhi High Court. But a year later, in June 2010, NHRC finally admitted
that it never paid a visit to Batla House flat, where the encounter took
place, or talk to anyone involved in the case. In fact, India’s
statutory human rights body conducted the enquiry only after they were
ordered by the Delhi High Court and relied solely on Delhi Police
version and evidence, and that too uncritically. One might ask what is
the usefulness of NHRC if they will enquire only when ordered to do so
and then believe what police had to say about the incident.
But what Afroz Alam has seen so far leaves no doubt in this mind that
Batla House encounter was fake. And he finds it strange that though CBI
is enquiring encounters in Gujarat, where BJP is the ruling party but
not in Delhi, where Congress is in power.
Another unintended revelation from Afroz’s RTI activism was that
Muslim organizations have been totally ineffective in India. Muslim
youth in India were hunted down in the name of terrorism since 2001 and
Muslim organizations except for issuing statements have not been able to
do much in this regard. They were unable to convince the larger
population that various encounters were fake or work with the government
to get innocents released those that had been arrested and framed on
terrorism charges. The story of Afroz Alam Sahil is a matter of
inspiration and hope for Muslim youth and organizations- there are many
legal means of getting justice in India, though it may be a long and
frustrating journey but there is no other way to hard work and the truth
will prevail.