What about Bombay 1992?

Aug 14, 2007
Munna Bhai Controversy

Like most people in the Indian subcontinent, I grew up on a heavy dose of Bollywood. Sanjay Dutt never left a mark on an impressionable mind though. For the people of my generation, born and brought up in the age of Amitabh Bachchan, no other star appeared bright enough to bedazzle us.

Nevertheless, the spectacle of a distraught Sanjay Dutt desperately clinging on to his sisters and waving nervously at the throng of fans and onlookers was curiously moving; decidedly more touching than the emotional scenes from some of his .

No one ever accused Sanjay Dutt of being an exceptionally gifted actor even though he carries a formidable legacy on his shoulders as the son of two celebrated Bollywood legends.

But is he an equally bad human being? It was rather disconcerting to see the actor, one of the highest paid stars of the world’s biggest film industry, being paraded like a common thug.

This is not to argue that Dutt deserves a special treatment because of his celebrity status. A crime is a crime, no matter who has committed it, right? And if the actor has indeed committed the crime he has been accused of, he has to pay for it. Simple as that.

In fact, all those responsible for the 1993 blasts that killed more than 200 innocent people deserve the punishment, if they indeed had a role to play in the attacks.

The Indian and the state of Maharashtra deserve kudos for going after those who targeted and all that it represented as the financial and cultural capital of the country.
We are indebted to the state and the judiciary, especially, P D Kode for "bringing the terrorists to ," as president Bush would have it. It only goes to show how efficient ’s enforcement agencies are. The proverbial long arm of the eventually catches up with the criminals no matter how long it takes.

The conviction of a hundred people including Dutt after 15 long years proves is eventually done in the world's biggest . Wheels of may take their time to move but they do move.

And since the perpetrators of the March 1993 attacks have been brought to , one assumes that those responsible for similar carnage at a much larger scale only a couple of months earlier –- in December 1992 to be precise –- have been brought to too.

In case we have all forgotten, the month-and-half long pogrom following the demolition of Babri Masjid on December 6, 1992 killed more than 2000 Muslims in alone, in addition to destroying the homes, businesses and economic infrastructure of the minority community.

The marauding mobs led by Shiv Sena thugs unleashed a reign of terror on the city that is rightly celebrated as the microcosm of .

Muslims, grieving over the destruction of the mosque that had come to symbolise their very future in the country, were butchered like animals for more than a month by the Shiv Sena gangs and their other saffron cousins. And Prime Minister Narasimha Rao, ’s answer to Nero, who had presided over the destruction of the mosque at Ayodhya, continued to fiddle with the characteristic diligence.

The federal never stirred out of its reverie to pull up the state of Sudhakar Rao Naik who was busy settling old scores with his rival Sharad Pawar.
And Pawar, the minister of defence and a contender for the top job in the land, with his eye on both and , played his own games.

Meanwhile continued to burn –- with its utterly helpless and defenceless Muslims. And the Nero in continued to fiddle. The dance of raged on for weeks leaving permanent scars on and its once fabled cosmopolitan people. So it’s just as well that Shiv Sena chief Thackeray decided to change the city’s name to Mumbai. After all, he played a critical role in turning into Mumbai.

So today as ’s enforcement agencies are patting themselves for finally bringing the perpetrators of 1993 to , it is only fair to ask where are those who planned the of 1992? Have the killers who raped and mutilated the of 1992 been made to pay for their crimes?

The question is relevant because what took place in in January 1993 is inextricably linked to what happened in in December 1992. It is hardly a secret now that the seeds of 1993 attacks –- despicable and totally indefensible as they had been –- were sowed in 1992. It’s the same hoary principle of ‘cause and effect’ that is at work in the whole universe had been at work here as well.
In fact, Sanjay Dutt’s implication in the 1993 blasts case is seen as a retribution for the courageous role his father Sunil Dutt played in helping Muslim victims during the 1992 . Sunil Dutt, may bless his soul, a Congress MP and truly liberal face of , risked his own life to protect the besieged minority community.

As the Sri Krishna Commission, headed by a conscientious judge, concluded, there was a direct link between the ‘minority response’ and ‘majority ’. It was the of the Hindutva brigade and the Indian state’s failure to stop it that led to the terror attacks for which Kode has just punished nearly hundred people.

Interestingly, the Sri Krishna Commission was mandated to examine both the anti-Muslim pogrom of December 1992 and terror strikes of 1993. Sri Krishna –- may his tribe grow –- presented his findings to the state two years ago despite the obstacles that were put in his way and the harassment he suffered at the hands of the Shiv Sena-BJP in Maharashtra.

While the political establishment has acted resolutely in meting out to those responsible for the outrage of January 1993, it has been enigmatically silent on the original sin of December 1992? So where is the Sri Krishna Commission's report? Whatever happened to its recommendations? Why aren’t they implemented? And why are the governments of Maharashtra and — both headed by the Congress party — silent on this?

I have always been proud of my as an Indian, just as I take pride in my Muslim profile. I take pride in the fact that Muslims during their thousand year-long association with have toiled and shed their blood with their Hindu brethren to make this land a great country to live in. The Muslims have as much at stake in as everyone else. Regardless of what Hindutva zealots have to say, we this country as much as we our .
And we would like to believe that this great land, fabled for its traditions of tolerance and , wouldn’t tolerate two standards for — one for the majority and one for the minority.

There can’t be two criteria of . While Dutt has been jailed for six years for merely keeping a gun at his home to protect himself, those responsible for the killing of two thousand helpless people continue to roam free.
Next door, in Gandhiji’s , Narendra Modi remains in power despite being condemned by the world community as the architect of another anti-Muslim pogrom. Modi continues to ridicule ’s traditions of , peaceful co-existence and respect for all faiths.

Getting back to , action against those responsible for the 1993 outrage is welcome, even if it’s done under a draconian like Tada under which you are guilty under proven innocent; and even if questions have been raised about the justness of the system under which they have been prosecuted.

But bring those responsible for the shame of 1992 to account too. You do not have to look far to find them. They are right there in (I can never bring myself to call it Mumbai!) and everyone, including the powers that be, knows them. For , as Eleanor Roosevelt argued, cannot be for one side but must be for both.
And if you fail to administer , you create new opportunities for injustice. For injustice is always followed by greater injustice. Like night follows the day.