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Abduction of a photojournalist
Bihar is not an exception
I HAD barely got up on the morning of December 28 when the coach attendant
handed to me a copy of the Dhanbad edition of the Hindustan Times. I was
stunned to read the report of the abduction of Ashok Karn, a staff
photographer of the HT at Ranchi. The report said he and his wife were
kidnapped from their ancestral home in Nalanda district. She was released
after a few minutes with the instruction to make arrangements to pay a
ransom of Rs 10 lakh for his release. The newspaper carried several reports
from Patna and Ranchi quoting journalists and political leaders on the
sensational incident.
It was beyond my comprehension why the kidnappers chose Ashok Karn. How
could his wife raise such a large sum? These were the questions that nagged
me as I continued my journey to Bhubaneswar. After all, Ashok was my
colleague for 10 years and we knew each other very well. I still remember
him proudly showing me his first Nikon SLR camera. He had not yet become a
full-fledged news photographer. For his livelihood, he depended on
occasional assignments from newspapers and news magazines, which were
notorious for cheating freelancers.
When it came to making payments, even big newspapers were no better. The
first time we collaborated was when the Malayala Manorama gave me an
assignment to do a story on the toilet revolution brought about by
Bindeshwar Pathak's Sulabh movement in Patna. Ashok went around Patna's
Gandhi Maidan for a few days to take some eye-catching photographs. He was
to be paid Rs 25 for every published photograph. The toilet story was the
lead item in the Sunday magazine of the Manorama. Ashok was thrilled to
find several of his photographs appearing in the newspaper along with my
story.
One day, out of compulsion, he asked me for payment and I settled his
account. The payment had not come from the Manorama. When it finally
arrived, it was a princely sum of Rs 150, which was roughly the payment I
had made to Ashok. That left me a net loser. But the satisfaction that my
parents were able to read my dispatches egged me on to contribute to the
Manorama as and when occasion demanded. I did several stories for the
Malayalam daily and the photographs were invariably Ashok's.
We travelled together in Bihar doing several stories for the Hindustan
Times. On most of these visits, he was my guide, navigator and interpreter.
Once on a visit to Nalanda, he showed me the village where he was born. For
some reason he did not show any interest in taking me to his ancestral home
where his brother, an Inspector in the Bihar Police, stayed. It was from
this village that he was kidnapped.
Ashok is a born journalist. I vividly remember that day when he virtually
ran up the stairs and barged into my room on the first floor of the HT
office on Budh Marg in Patna. He put his heavy camera bag on my table and
began telling me the breathtaking story he had brought from Bhagalpur. It
was literally breathtaking! The heavily panting and perspiring lensman, who
had covered innumerable incidents of death and destruction, could not
control his emotion as he narrated what he saw in the city of weavers.
Obviously, he was conscious of what he had brought from the riot-hit area -
a story that will forever be etched in the memory of all those who had
anything to do with one of the worst-ever communal riots in the country.
Since the deadline for the first edition was fast approaching and most of
our staff had assembled in my room to listen to him, I asked him to cut his
story short and, instead, get me the photographs he had brought.
Among the gruesome pictures he brought - of corpses of men, women and
children, burning houses and shops and destroyed looms - the most poignant
was that of an army jawan pulling out a girl from a dirty pond so full of
weeds that water was invisible. "It was from this pond that several bodies
were recovered. They had all been hacked to death and dumped there," said
Ashok.
In the morning as an army vehicle passed by, the jawans heard a human sound
emanating from the pond. They stopped their vehicle, got down and looked
around. The sound was feeble. There she was, a girl - 15 or 16 - gasping
for breath. One of the jawans stretched out his hand to pull her out of the
lake but there was no response from her. She had lost her consciousness.
The jawan did not give up. He stepped into the pond full of slime and
excreta, clutched her hand and pulled her on to the shore.
Then they realized why she was there. One of her feet had been cut off and
blood was still flowing from the joint. Had she remained in the pond for a
few more minutes, she could well have been one among the dozen or so bodies
that were recovered from the pond. It was a grand betrayal that landed them
in the pond on October 28, 1989. Twelve years had passed since the horrific
incident when I met her at Sadaruddin Chak under Habibpur police station in
Bhagalpur but Malka Begum remembered even the minutest details of that
betrayal.
Bihar was at that time in the grip of communal violence sparked by the
Ayodhya campaign the Vishwa Hindu Parishad had launched. Chanderi, a small
village on the outskirts of Bhagalpur and close to the Rajendra
Agricultural University, was one of them. In the Muslim locality of the
village lived Malka Begum with her parents, two brothers and two sisters.
Her father did sundry jobs to keep the hearth burning. Her elder brothers
also chipped in. Prosperity was never part of their life but contentment
was. Faith in Allah helped the family face financial and other crises they
periodically encountered. But this faith was rudely shaken when on October
27, 1989, a mob that included many recognizable faces attacked Chanderi and
butchered whoever it could lay its hands own. The bodies were dumped in a
ditch.
Mohammed Nihal, whom I met at Chanderi, told me that he lost his mother,
two uncles and two aunties. Some of them ran away to safety. Malka and her
family were among those who fled. They took shelter in the local mosque.
Next day, they were persuaded by some of their Hindu neighbours to come out
of the hiding with the promise that they would be given protection at least
till the Army arrived and the jawans moved them to a safer place. It was an
offer they could not turn down. But they had no clue then that they were
being taken for a ride. And many of them would pay for their folly of
accepting the offer with death.
Malka's story is similar to what Harsh Mander, a serving IAS officer,
narrates in his article, Hindustan Hamara: I Can Never Sing That Song Again
(The Times of India, March 20, 2002): "A family escaping from
Naroda-Patiya, one of the worst-hit settlements in Ahmedabad, spoke of
losing a young woman and her three-month-old son, because a police
constable directed her to safety and she found herself instead surrounded
by a mob which doused her with kerosene and set her and her baby on fire."
As Malka and others moved out of the mosque to what they thought was a
safer place, a mob set upon them. They were armed with swords, daggers and
sickles. She saw the mob hacking her parents. Most of them had the same
fate. Malka too was not lucky. In panic, she ran towards the pond, the same
pond into which the mob had thrown the bodies of her own parents. She was
about to jump when a sword-wielding man who stood on the edge of the pond
hit her with his sharp weapon. He had neatly hacked her right foot off her
ankle. His companion had a bamboo stick with a sickle attached to the end.
They tried to kill her with that extended weapon but she evaded it by
moving further and further into the pond till she reached its centre. She
was so panic-stricken that she did not even realize that she had lost her
foot forever.
The men could have finished her had they stepped into the pond. But they
did not want to dirty themselves. Malka has no memories of how she spent
the whole night in that pond till a strapping soldier saved her. Perhaps,
the weeds were strong enough to support her. "Providence has its mysterious
ways" she philosophized. Every newspaper worth the name carried Malka's
story. In fact, she symbolized the enormity of the tragedy that struck
Chanderi where a total of 67 people were killed. It helped the Press to put
a face to the tragedy. It was Ashok who first discovered her.
As I was on the move, I had no way of keeping myself abreast of the
kidnapping saga. It was, therefore, a great relief when I heard on All
India Radio that he had been released. The next day's newspaper had a
picture of Ashok narrating the incident to Laloo Prasad Yadav. What struck
me most was his comment, "How could I raise a sum of Rs 10 lakh when my
take-home salary is just Rs 8,000?" It is, perhaps, a measure of the
desperation of the kidnappers that they chose Ashok, instead of some
wealthy person.
I have no clue as to what forced the kidnappers to release him. Was it the
intervention of LalooYadav or the efficiency of the police or the belated
realisation of the kidnappers that Ashok was hardly in a position to cough
up Rs 10 lakh? In retrospect, I wonder whether the media would have given
so much coverage if the victim was an ordinary person with no connections,
political or journalistic, to boot.
There are people who blame Laloo Yadav for the kidnapping phenomenon. One
of them, Sankarshan Thakur writes in The Making of Laloo Yadav: The
Unmaking of Bihar (HarperCollins): "Kidnapping for ransom became an
institutional affair during the Laloo Yadav years. Someone was kidnapped,
phonecalls were made to relatives, the money was handed over, the victim
was freed. The police, or the state, played no role. Most of the time,
because they were themselves involved. In several cases, when affected
families happened to have influence among the powerful, they were able to
secure the release of their relatives using political influence. A senior
police official in Patna said, "Most of these gangs answer to people
sitting in the ministerial bungalows of Patna, the ransom money is shared.
If you have the right connections, you can breathe easier because the state
or the people running it are behind most of the kidnappings. "In eight
years since Laloo Yadav took over - later statistics are unavailable -
seventeen thousand people were kidnapped, most of them for ransom. "It was
very easy to kidnap and very profitable."
Sankarshan may indeed be right in his assertion but kidnapping as an
industry began in the state a long time before the advent of LalooYadav.
The first time it struck me as a journalist was when a Jesuit priest,
Father Thomas Chakkalakal, was kidnapped from his residence, Seva Sadan, at
Rathanpurva in West Champaran district on May 31, 1984. It was in this
district that Mahatma Gandhi began his non-violent struggle against the
British. Fr Chakkalakal's kidnappers demanded a huge ransom for his
release. They thought the Catholic Church would meet their demand. But they
had no idea what kind of a man Fr Chakkalakal was. He told them in plain
language that they were at liberty to kill him but they would never get
even a single rupee by way of ransom. Fr Chakkalakal had built a reputation
for sincerity, hard work and dedication. The word 'fear' was certainly not
in his lexicon as he worked among the people, making them conscious about
their rights. Small wonder that his biographer, Fr K.C. Philip, titled his
book, Champaran Ka Naya Gandhi: Father Thomas Chakkalakal (Patna Jesuit
Society, Patna)
As I write this, worse things have happened in Bihar. In one of the most
horrifying incidents, the police killed three young men in Patna.
Sub-inspector Samsher Alam who shot them believed they were criminals when
the only evidence he had against them was the dubious statement of a
shopkeeper. The Opposition parties have given a call for a Patna bandh on
January 3. Demands for the dismissal of the Laloo ministry are once again
heard. There is no way in which LalooYadav and his wife can absolve
themselves of the responsibility. Few will shed tears for them if they are
taken to task for their innumerable acts of omission and commission. But
are they the only ones to blame?
I have before me newspapers carrying pictures of Defence Minister George
Fernandes consoling the parents of one of the young men who was shot at
close range. This minister did not rush to Haryana when five Dalits were
killed for allegedly killing a cow. Or to Gujarat when the policemen in
Ahmedabad recently organised a fake encounter to bump off an undertrial.
While the trigger-happy sub-inspector who killed the young men deserves the
severest punishment, let us also hear what he had to say about the killing.
He thought they were criminals and he was doing a great service to the
nation when he eliminated them.
The point is the police have come to believe that the best way to deal with
criminals is to kill them. Instead of nipping this tendency in the bud, the
state has been encouraging it. We have seen how the police were given
freedom to do what they pleased in Punjab. Human rights violations by the
police take place routinely in Jammu and Kashmir and the Northeast. One may
dismiss what happened in Gujarat in the wake of Godhra as an aberration but
what about the Union Home Minister who proudly gives statistics of the
number of "criminals" and "terrorists" eliminated by the police? I wish he
had given statistics of the criminals and terrorists brought to justice.
Why is it that not even one terrorist involved in the recent attacks on
Parliament, the Akshardham temple in Ahmedabad and a shopping mall in New
Delhi was arrested? Their arrests could have helped uncover the conspiracy.
Instead, the police are feted for gunning down the terrorists. There is a
police officer in New Delhi who is known as the "master of encounters" as
he has killed the maximum number of "criminals" in encounters. Is it any
surprise that the police officer in Patna first took the gun when a
shopkeeper tipped him that "three criminals" were on the prowl in the city?
Sometime ago, the police killed an innocent businessman in a fake encounter
on Barkhamba Road in the heart of New Delhi. At that time, Mr Fernandes did
not visit the businessman's family. Nor did his party call for a bandh. Nor
did the Railway Minister facilitate the bandh by unilaterally withdrawing
trains from the state on that day.
Those who bay for Laloo Yadav's blood will do well to read Vijay Nambisan's
lines in Bihar Is In The Eye Of The Beholder (Viking): "Laloo is not an
aberration. Nor is Bihar. What is happening in Bihar is happening all over
India. But Bihar is a microcosm of the whole; a laboratory specimen, as it
were, most easily brought under the microscope of analysis. For there is
something going on in Bihar which is of great relevance to India's polity,
and perhaps not to India's alone. A study of Bihar as an organism, and not
merely of Patna as a stage, might provide a really radical, yet thoroughly
practical critique of our thusness - of premises we understand as
fundamental to our existence as a nation, particularly as a democratic
nation."
The writer can be reached at ajphilip@yahoo.com
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