Sitting Ducks : A Beemapalli reflection
It
is with the utmost hesitation that I write this. Hesitation because I
think I have not understood, nor have many others who have written
about the May police firing in Beemapalli. Not that there is any
ambiguity in anybody's (who has visited the place) mind about the
specific incidents that took place on 17th of May this year. As a part
of a small fact finding team trying to tie up its report, I'd rather
use this space to raise contextual questions about the police firing
that have been haunting me since I heard the first reports of the
firing.
At the outset, I need to assert as a human rights lawyer
(and independent of the socio-economic realities of Beemapalli) that
what happened on May 17th in Beemapalli is one of the worst possible
crimes - where lives of 6 people were taken by forces of the state,
without following the procedure established by law - in other words
extra-judicial murders - and calling it by any other name is as
offensive as the incident itself. In my mind, the incident involves the
police allegedly firing 50 rounds of bullets at a gathering in a
coastal village. The facts are that 43 people were injured and 6 died
in the police firing. The fact is that all the people who died and were
injured were Muslims. The fact is that there is no credible evidence
shown that the crowd fired at was violent or provocative. The fact is
that there is no damage reported from the police side. The fact is that
the police bypassed the usual procedures that need to be adopted before
a firing. Having made that assertion, let me move on to the first set
of concerns that have been haunting me.
Silent Media, Silent Opposition
The
first of these is the general social and political reactions to
Beemapalli firing. In fact one of the factors that led me to take the
initiative in organising a fact-finding was the deafening silence that
followed the violence in Beemapalli. It looked like that only "Muslim"
organisations were interested in taking up the issue. Even the
political opposition did not seem like wanting to capitalise this
serious lapse in governance. When I tried prying into the possible
reason, a newspaper report lauding the media for acting sensibly by
maintaining silence and thereby averting a communal issue was literally
thrown at my face. (The report was titled,
Signs of a Mature Media, Opposition).
But
was this violence communal to start with? The victims of the violence
did not seem to think so - despite all of them belonging to one single
community!!
Interestingly apart from the high profile Lavalin
case, the national and Kerala media was filled with stories of racist
violence in Australia around this time. Then how did such gruesome
violence fail to capture collective social imaginations? The only
plausible answer that comes to my mind is the identity of those killed
and injured in Beemapally - they were all from fish worker Muslim
community - and do not have messiahs touting their cause.
There
are other reasons as well for my arrival at this hypothesis. The first
being that in the past couple of decades state violence in all its
manifestations is being directed against traditionally and structurally
marginalised groups. Formal expressions were demonstrated in Muthanga,
Chengara and now Beemapalli. Insidious and subtle expressions through
changes in reservation structure, discourse on terror used to
de-legitimise communitarian political expressions and so on.
Dangerous Activities
Interestingly
Beemapalli, being a Muslim ghetto has figured many a time in police
narratives on terror. It would take another full essay to analyse this.
It is in this context that couple of weeks after the firing, an
intelligence report dated before the firing was leaked to the press.
This report warns the state police of dangerous and illegal activity in
Beemapalli and Malappuram. Much to my amusement, what the newspapers
omitted was that this "dangerous" activity is the trade in pirated
CD/DVDs that Bheemapally is notorious for. Interestingly, this has been
subsequently used to close down this trade and increase police presence
in Beemapalli. One of the speculations that was aired as a reason for
the extreme violence from the police firing was to gain a foothold into
this lucrative terrain.
Claims on Coastal Resources
The
next reason is rooted in the socio-economic conditions prevailing in
coastal areas generally and Beemapally specifically. The Indian coast
has been a simmering pot of discontent for sometime now - aggravated
especially after the
tsunami. This discontent is rooted in
multiple contestations for coastal resources and fish-worker resistance
articulated through their right to the coast as a common property
resource. I have been witness to a number of concerted efforts to
divide the coastal community during the tsunami rehabilitation process.
Some of these experiences have been documented as well. These
contestations are grounded in the fact of the vulnerability of the
coastal communities and Dalit and Muslim communities amongst these are
even more vulnerable. Beemapally violence needs to be seen in this
context as well. Portrayal of the police violence in Beemapally as
communal riots instigated by a Beemapally mob by the police and a
section of society including segments of the Catholic church subtly
fails to acknowledge that the neighbouring hamlet Cheriyathura is
inhabited by Latin Catholics. This reading is inherently dangerous as
it pits two similarly placed vulnerable communities against each other.
Two Beemapallis and a Free Run
Further,
Magalene, a fish worker leader confirms my suspicion that social
indicators in Beemapalli are much worse compared to neighbouring
fishing hamlets. She points to the fact that there are two Beemapallys
in existence - one glossy Beemapally made of the DVD/CD trade and the
other fish-worker hamlet which lacks even basic hygiene and sanitary
requirements. She also points to the abysmal female literacy and
empowerment in this hamlet in support of her claim. This also perhaps
points to a hegemonic social apathy towards people that are forced to
live on the fringes - a certain lack of value for their lives. This
also could have contributed to the unchallenged free run that the
Police is having with their version of the violence and attempts to
portray their violence as a communal clash.
My next set of
concerns is regarding the impunity with which the Police framed a
community as communally volatile and in all probabilities is getting
away with it. In his report to the government, DGP Jacob Punnose claims
that the police fired 50 rounds and there are 43 injured and 6 dead -
indicating that police fired to hit. This also dispels claims that
several rounds were fired in the air. Of course there are other
unsubstantiated claims in DGP Punnose's report. But what gets my nerve
is the shoddy framing that the police has indulged in, without having
done any homework whatsoever - is this born out of a confidence that
the Police force would get away with murder since the people killed are
fishing Muslims? The confidence of the police seems to be bolstered by
the collective silences and framing of Bheemapalli as a dangerous area
mentioned above. It needs to be remembered that DGP Punnose is
spearheading the demand for Police reforms and reducing political
control over the police. In the process many vital questions remain
unanswered, including questions that would legally place the violence
as cold-blooded murder within criminal jurisprudence.
The
silence on Beemapalli violence opens many cans of worms - including the
deeply hegemonic nature of Kerala's responses to its marginalised,
latent communalism within the administration and media and so on and so
forth. The responses to Beemapalli has left me perplexed, especially
after having visited the place. But, having spend considerable time and
energy on conflict situations, my sense is that Kerala might be sitting
on a social time bomb, if it continues this lackadaisical attitude
towards its marginalised population.
I believe
Beemapalli calls for a classical "secular" response and honest peace
building exercises that would instill a sense of confidence in
Beemapally residents that they are not being persecuted - but that
might be a difficult job and would call for extreme commitment.
Bobby Kunhu
http://community.eldis.org/myshkin/Blog/