The Hindu – Riot victims will not get justice under Modi: Zakia

Washington, 5 December 2012. Victims of the Gujarat riots will not get any justice if Narendra Modi becomes India’s Prime Minister, the wife of a former MP killed by a violent mob in Ahmedabad a decade ago told US lawmakers, urging the Obama administration to continue denying visa to the Chief Minister.

“If he (Modi) succeeds to become the Prime Minister, my hopes for justice, along with the hopes of hundreds of thousands of Gujarat victims will be lost. I hope and pray that never happens,” Zakia Jafri, wife of the former MP, Ahsan Jafri, said at the Capitol Hill on Tuesday.

“Your denial to change his (Modi’s) persona non grata status is very vital to keep my hopes alive,” Ms. Jafri said in her statement which was read out by her son-in-law Najid Hussain, while she was standing by his side.

Speaking on behalf of the Gujarat riot victims, Ms. Zakia and her daughter Nishrin Hussain urged both the US lawmakers and the Obama Administration not to grant Mr. Modi a US visa.

“I also know Indian justice system may be slow, but it is robust. Had Chief Minister Modi resigned, or was removed from the office… the wheels of justice would have moved freely and swiftly.

“But instead of leaving the office, he doubled up on his grip on power and has done everything to obstruct and deny justice to the victims like myself,” Ms. Jafri alleged.

Recounting the tragic hours of the day when her father was killed by the violent mob, Nishrin Hussain, who now is a US citizen, said, “I applaud the initiative of the Congresspersons in ensuring that the ban on Mr Modi’s visa continues to stay in place.”

“Maintaining the longstanding US policy on Narendra Modi’s visa is important for the ongoing struggle for justice in Gujarat,” she said.

Speaking on behalf of Coalition Against Genocide, Hyder Khan, said the recent conviction of a sitting member of the Gujarat Legislative Assembly, Mayaben Kodnani and indictment of Gujarat Minister Amit Shah, is actually a damning indictment of the Modi administration.

“Barring a handful of convictions, the hundreds of perpetrators who roamed the streets of Gujarat in February and March of 2002, killing, raping and destroying property continue to evade the law,” Mr. Khan alleged.

Shaik Ubaid, one of the founders of the coalition said, “The revocation of Modi’s visa by the US is the biggest impediment in Modi’s grandiose plans for himself including becoming the prime minister of India”. (PTI)

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/riot-victims-will-not-get-justice-under-modi-zakia/article4166257.ece

The Hindu – Contempt notice to Gujarat government

Special Correspondent

Ahmedabad, 15 February 2012. The Gujarat High Court on Wednesday issued a contempt notice to the State government for

not complying with its orders on compensation to some victims whose shops in Ahmedabad were damaged or destroyed

during the 2002 communal riots.   A Bench of Justices Akil Kureshi and C. L. Soni asked the District Collector to file his reply by March 14 explaining why

contempt proceedings should not be initiated against the government.   The order was issued on a petition filed by 56 victims, whose shops in the Rakhial locality in old Ahmedabad were burnt down

in the post-Godhra riots. The shopowners applied for compensation after the Centre had announced an additional relief

package for the victims in February 2008.

The shopowners, through the Jan Sangharsh Manch, filed the petition as they failed to get any response from the Collectorate

on their applications for compensation. In September last, the court directed the Collector to examine the applications and do

the needful.   However, the applicants said, earlier this month they received a communication from the Collector’s office that all 56

applications had been examined and their claims dismissed by the government in August 2011 itself.

The shopowners returned to the High Court with a contempt petition against the Collector and the State government. The

petitioners contended that the Collector’s office did not provide the court full facts of the case during the earlier hearing, as

their applications were claimed to have been disposed of even a month before the court’s order asking the government to examine the applications.  

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article2896006.ece

Keywords: The Hindu, 2002 Gujarat pogroms case, victims’ compensation, contempt notice, Narendra Modi government,

India

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