PCFS, APC condemn Maharashtra state terrorism, call to release Indian political prisoners
JOINT STATEMENT // 15 June 2018
The People’s Coalition on Food Sovereignty (PCFS) and the Asian
Peasant Coalition (APC) strongly denounce the attacks against Indian
activists and people’s rights defenders in connection with the state
terrorism being perpetrated by the Maharashtra government.Our Coalitions
are enraged by the arrest of five Indian activists on 6 June 2018 on
the basis of trumped-up charges for their “provocative speeches” that
“incited” the violence on 1 January 2018 in Pune during the Elgar
Parishad, the 200th anniversary commemoration protest of the Battle of
Bhima Koregaon. These prominent Dalit rights activists who were among
event organizers, namely Sudhir Dhawale, Surendra Gadling, Shoma Sen, Mahesh Raut, and Rona Jacob Wilson,
were also red-tagged and accused as sympathizers of the insurgent
Naxalites plotting the assassination of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Prior to the arrests, offices and homes of activists and people’s rights defenders including the mentioned were raided in April.
We are infuriated that the Maharashtra state is making use of this conspiratorial narrative to cover up its terrorism and legitimize the crackdown against activists and people’s rights defenders critical of its rule. The Elgar Parishad, which was organized by the Bhima Koregaon Shaurya Din Prerana Abhiyan coalition comprising 260 mass organizations, gathered thousands of India’s historically marginalized peoples – Dalit castes, Muslims, indigenous Adivasi, and “other backward classes” (OBC) on 31 May 2018. The peaceful assembly remembered the victory of the hundreds of lower-caste Mahar Dalits, albeit under the British rule, over the thousand forces of the higher-caste Peshwa Brahmins in the 1818 war. It was also a timely assertion, given India’s contemporary political context, of their struggle against oppression and discrimination by the reigning Brahmanical Hindutva regime of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led alliance.
We are infuriated that the Maharashtra state is making use of this conspiratorial narrative to cover up its terrorism and legitimize the crackdown against activists and people’s rights defenders critical of its rule. The Elgar Parishad, which was organized by the Bhima Koregaon Shaurya Din Prerana Abhiyan coalition comprising 260 mass organizations, gathered thousands of India’s historically marginalized peoples – Dalit castes, Muslims, indigenous Adivasi, and “other backward classes” (OBC) on 31 May 2018. The peaceful assembly remembered the victory of the hundreds of lower-caste Mahar Dalits, albeit under the British rule, over the thousand forces of the higher-caste Peshwa Brahmins in the 1818 war. It was also a timely assertion, given India’s contemporary political context, of their struggle against oppression and discrimination by the reigning Brahmanical Hindutva regime of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led alliance.
We
slam the collusion of the Maharashtra government with the right-wing
organizations that actually instigated the riot, which incurred one dead
and several injured. State police have targeted the organizers of Elgar
Parishad in response to the cases filed by these groups, while their
leaders who perpetrated the violence – Sambhaji Bhide of Shiv
Pratishthan Hindustan and Milind Ekbote of Hindu Ekata Aghadi – are at
large carefree despite the public clamor for their arrest.
Our Coalitions condemn Maharashtra state and these right-wing groups
for exploiting the outdated draconian Unlawful Activities Prevention Act
(UAPA) as a convenient ground to charge and jail activists and people’s
rights defenders based on fabricated links to Naxal rebels. This was
already done in March 2017, when wheel-bound GN Saibaba and five
others were sentenced for their alleged involvement with the Naxals in
conspiring a war against the government. In reality, these personalities
are vocal critics of the military’s Operation Green Hunt, the
anti-Naxal campaign that has already incurred more than 2,000 civilian
deaths since 2009.
We express concern that more arrests and harassment of Indian activists and people’s rights defenders will follow in the coming days. These people are always at the forefront of the struggles of India’s marginalized peoples, who suffer from the unequal social relations distinctive in Indian society. They stand for food sovereignty, among other people’s demands, versus the corporate control over agriculture and food production, advancing the interests and welfare of the majority who remain landless and have no access to adequate food.
We challenge the Maharashtra state to uphold Scheduled Castes and Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act 1989 and Rules 1995 and hold Bhide and Ekbote accountable for their crimes. More importantly, we demand to stop the crackdown against Indian activists and people’s rights defenders. In particular, we urge for the immediate and unconditional release of Dhawale, Gadling, Sen, Raut, and Wilson.
PCFS and APC call all food sovereignty advocates to condemn state terrorism, in India and in other parts of the world, as a tool of states and corporations to preserve themselves and persist in their forceful takeover of our farmlands and natural resources. We urge them to take part in local and international campaigns demanding justice for state-perpetrated crimes and human rights violations. We call our members and networks to voice our support to the marginalized peoples of India, echoing their demand to repeal UAPA, release their political prisoners immediately and unconditionally, and stop the crackdown. ###
We express concern that more arrests and harassment of Indian activists and people’s rights defenders will follow in the coming days. These people are always at the forefront of the struggles of India’s marginalized peoples, who suffer from the unequal social relations distinctive in Indian society. They stand for food sovereignty, among other people’s demands, versus the corporate control over agriculture and food production, advancing the interests and welfare of the majority who remain landless and have no access to adequate food.
We challenge the Maharashtra state to uphold Scheduled Castes and Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act 1989 and Rules 1995 and hold Bhide and Ekbote accountable for their crimes. More importantly, we demand to stop the crackdown against Indian activists and people’s rights defenders. In particular, we urge for the immediate and unconditional release of Dhawale, Gadling, Sen, Raut, and Wilson.
PCFS and APC call all food sovereignty advocates to condemn state terrorism, in India and in other parts of the world, as a tool of states and corporations to preserve themselves and persist in their forceful takeover of our farmlands and natural resources. We urge them to take part in local and international campaigns demanding justice for state-perpetrated crimes and human rights violations. We call our members and networks to voice our support to the marginalized peoples of India, echoing their demand to repeal UAPA, release their political prisoners immediately and unconditionally, and stop the crackdown. ###
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