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D E L H I
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A N A S S E S S M
E N T O F T H E S I T U A T I O
N
On
the morning of Ocober 31,1984, after Smt. Gandhi had been removed to
the AIIMS with bullet injuries and when she succumbed to them, there
was, as it were, a political vacuum. The Head of the State was away
from the country in Yemen Arab Republic . On his return , Shri Rajiv
Gandhi was sworn in as Prime Minister of India. By the time the mother
was injured by bullets, he was away somewhere in West Bengal and before
he returned she was dead. He had lost his brother four years earlier.
Now the mother was dead being killed by the people detailed to guard
her. He must have been indeed terribly shocked and it is difficult to
describe the type of mental agony he must have then been undergoing.
He was called in to shoulder the responsibility of Prime Minister of
India without any time to get mentally tuned to undertake the heavy
responsibility of that august office.
After
being inducted into the office of the Prime Minister, he made an effective
appeal to the nation through the T V at 9.50 P.M. where he said :
"
My dear Countrymen, On this the saddest day
of my life I speak to you when I am totally overtaken by the dark cloud
of cruel fate. Our beloved Mrs. Indira Gandhi is no longer with us.
I have lost my dearest friend, we have all lost one of the greatest
leaders our country has ever produced and the world has lost a harbinger
of peace who was undoubtedly the greatest woman leader mankind has ever
produced . . . . . . The loss of Mrs. Gandhi is for me unbearable. In
spite of her pre-occupation with her official duties, we met often.
For me each such meeting was a memorable experience . . . . . The dastardly
act of assassins which is not only heinous but a crime against humanity
itself, has put the nation to test at an extremely critical juncture
of our history. The unity and integrity of the nation is being challenged.
Let our grief not cloud our good sense and maturity both as individuals
and a nation. God shall grant us the strength to meet the new challenges."
He also
instructed the people concerned to take effective steps to see that
there was no deterioration in the law and order situation. If necessary,
he advised that the Army may be called in. When the news of Smt.Gandhi
's death spread , thousands of mourners started calling upon the new
Prime Minister to convey condolences. The dead body was taken from the
AIIMS to the official residence at 1, Safdarjung Road. It was decided
to keep the body in state at Teenmurti Bhavan for a few days to enable
the people of India as also Heads of States of the world to pay respects
to the departed soul and participate in the official funeral. Funeral
was fixed for November 3, 1984. Hundreds of thousands of people started
collecting in Tenmurti Bhavan to have a last glimpse of their beloved
leader . Arrangements for reception of the visiting dignitaries from
different countries who were coming to participate in the funeral had
to be undertaken. Keeping up to protocol, Shri Rajiv Gandhi had to receive
many of these dignitaries . Evidently Smt. Gandhi had been killed in
the hands of the security guards on account of lapse in security arrangements.
The way in which she had been killed left scope for doubts about the
efficacy of the security. The situation had indeed been an alarming
one . Whether evil designs had come to an end with Smt. Gandhi being
killed was not definitely known. It is in these circumstances that Shri
Rajiv Gandhi had been called upon to shoulder the arduous responsibilities
of the office of Prime Minister of the largest democracy.
In the
morning of November 1, Smt. Gandhi 's body was taken to Teenmurti Bhavan
from No. 1 Safdarjang Road to lie in state so that the mourners could
take the last glimpse of her physical body . The arrangement at the
Teenmurti Bhavan was two-fold-VIPs were permitted to come into the room
through the guided entrance to file past the dead body and those who
wanted to make entries in the condolence register were permitted to
do so; the common people were allowed to march past on the outer side
without coming into the room. Thousands of people thronged in the premises
of Teenmurti Bhavan in the morning of November 1 , 1984. The Delhi Police
found it almost impossible to keep control of the situation at Teenmurti
Bhavan and by the afternoon the Army had to take over the control. The
low key of the Delhi Police seen at Teenmurti Bhavan was an exhibition
of lack of leadership, imaginative planning and incapacity to control
mobs in an odd situation.
In several
of the affidavits filed before the Commission it was alleged that through
the Doordarshan on November 1, 1984, a program was arranged wherein
it was said " khoon ka badla khoon" (blood for blood) obviously
suggesting that as Smt. Gandhi had been murdered, the community of the
two murderers should also be done to death. It was suggested that Shri
Rajiv Gandhi was within the Teenmurti Bhavan during the morning hours
of November 1, 1984. His presence there was quite natural and he had
obviously nothing to do with the T V program.
The
Union of India denied having undertaken any program in which Doordarshan
had permitted shouting of a slogan ----' blood for blood' . It appears
that after the dead body was taken to Teenmurti Bhavan on November 1,
live telecast arrangement had been made covering the dead body lying
in state and the people who would move around either in the room where
the dead body was kept or the crowd that would fly past on the outer
side at the lower level so that millions in the country who could not
come to Delhi would be able to associate themselves with what was going
on at Teenmurti Bhavan. In the morning of November 1, a group of people
passing through the passage at the lower level did raise the shout 'khoon
ka badla khoon'. Since the live telecast arrangements had then been
working, the crowd along with the shout did come on the TV and their
shout was heard. When directed by the Commission, the Director-General
of Doordarshan appeared before it and explained the situation in which
this part of the program had been covered and to substantiate the explanation,
he exhibited that part of the cassette where the shouting crowd were
seen and their shout was recorded. The Director-General explained that
the officers of the Doordarshan never apprehended that a crowd paying
respect to the departed leader would raise such a shout which on account
of the live program would get televised. The moment this was realised
the live telecast arrangement was switched off. When the cassette was
played, the Commission found that the shout had been repeated for 18
times spread over 37 seconds. The impugned shouting came all of a sudden
at high pitch which probabilizes the position that Doordarshan people
could not have apprehended it. It melted away as the crowd was pushed
ahead by the police. From the original cassette , the Commission has
made a copy. Though it had been alleged that this telecast was arranged,
the Commission is of the view that neither the Prime Minister nor any
one in Government had any role to play in the matter and the Doordarshan
authorities did not intentionally do anything . The time lag between
the objectionable matter being telecast and the switching off also is
not unreasonably long to suggest, as alleged , that Doordarshan wanted
it to continue. The Director-General of Doordarshan also told the Commission
that care was taken thereafter to keep off any objectionable matter
from being included in the live program.
There
is no basis for the allegation that the All India Radio and Doordarshan
had given out the news that Smt. Gandhi 's assassins were two of her
Sikh guards and circulation of such information through news media helped
generation of anti-Sikh bias. The Commission has scrutinised the news
scripts of both media for the 31st October and 1st November and it is
noticed that there is no mention at all that the assassins were Sikhs.
Mention of this information in ordinary course would have been considered
as usual but discretion appears to have been exercised thoughtfully
in this case.
It was
unfortunate that the happenings in different areas of Delhi were not
being contemporaneously reported to Police Headquarters and there was,
therefore, no proper feeding of what was happening even to the Administrator-Lt.
Governor. Shri Gavai has admitted :
"
I am inclined to agree that there was a failure in the channel of communication
between local officers and the police and the district administration
as also the Commissioner 's level . Consequently , contemporaneous and
timely reports of incidents were not received at the other end . A true
picture of the situation was not emerging and decision making was ,
therefore affected ."
Since
this was the position at the level of the Administrator, the exact picture
of what was happening must not have reached the Home Minister or the
Prime Minister. There is material placed before the Commission from
which it appears that while Shri Rajiv Gandhi was in mourning and was
busy giving occasional attention to the dead body lying in state at
Teenmurti Bhavan and receiving foreign dignitaries who started arriving
from the evening of November 1, 1984 , he had tried to ensure maintenance
of law and order and was giving directions in that regard. He requested
the visiting Chief Ministers to return to their respective States and
ensure that all possible steps for the maintenance of law and order
were taken . When the worst had happened on November 1, Members of Parliament
and other leading people started raising hue and cry and ultimately
called upon the Prime Minister. An assessment of the situation was then
made. The Lt Governor was attending this meeting. Shri Gavai has told
the Commission :
".
. . . after I had met the Prime Minister in the meeting of MP's at his
residence I had asked for a personal interview with him and he obliged.
He told me 'Gavaiji you should have acted more swiftly in 'calling in
the Army '. I did not enter into any argument with him on that score
but I said : "Sir, your mother was a great personage and that her
assassination was a major calamity which had befallen the nation. Her
assassination was bound to cause repercussions."
He continued
:
"
In the course of this talk, I pointed out that during the curfew period
there were many occasions when bystanders came out of their houses just
to see what was going on. Government did not expect the administration
to shoot those people as curfew breakers. I further pointed out that
any such move would have been a politically unwise action. After that
when I was hanging about there the Prime Minister told me : ' Gavaiji
, you are a heart patient and you should now take rest."
It is
in the evidence of the then Lt. Governor that he was soon advised to
proceed on leave. On November 3, he wrote a letter to the President
wherein he stated :
"Although
I have no reason to believe that I have failed in my duties in the unprecedented
circumstances, I hereby resign from the post of Lieutenant Governor
out of my sense of moral responsibility.
An indication
of my intention to resign was given by me to the Cabinet Secretary and
also the Home Minister on 2nd November , 1984 itself, but I had withheld
it as it was necessary for me to oversee the arrangement for the funeral
of the late Prime Minister from our side. "
The
letter contains an admission of moral responsibility for what happened
at Delhi. Perhaps it was something more than that. The Commission does
not propose to go into that aspect and assess the extent of his responsibility.
Shri Gavai had already suffered a major heart attack prior to the riots
and had very likely become unfit to continue to take any physical load
upon himself. He should not have been maintained in a key post like
that of Administrator of the Union Territory at such a crucial period
which had started soon after the Blue Star Operation. Shri Gavai is
in broken health and when he appeared before the Commission, he gave
the impression of having broken down after the riots and what followed
thereafter. What the Prime Minister could assess on the 2nd November
1984, within two days of assuming office and after a few rounds to the
riot affected areas should have been realised long before and perhaps
Shri Gavai should have been replaced after he had suffered a massive
heart attack. The post of Administrator should have been manned by a
very competent person -- agile, astute, determined, experienced, farsighted,
knowledgeable. The need for such a person for Delhi was all the more
so on account of the primacy of this Union Territory as covering the
seat of the country's capital and in the back drop of the development
that had then currently taken place.
There
is material on record that Shri Rajiv Gandhi moved in certain affected
areas on 2nd November with a view to having a spot assessment of the
situation and for boosting up the morale of the riot victims. Even on
the 3rd he took another round as would be noticed later. On the morning
of 4th November Shri M.M.K. Wali, the then Home Secretary was sworn
in as Lt. Governor.
On November
3, the cremation took place and once the cremation was over the Prime
Minister who was until then busy in receiving visiting dignitaries and
overseeing the arrangements for the cremation started devoting almost
full attention to the riot situation. The Commission is of the opinion
that Shri Rajiv Gandhi as the Prime Minister, notwithstanding the handicapped
situation in which he then was, took all reasonable steps expected of
him to meet the situation that arose following the assassination of
Smt. Gandhi. He even moved into the affected areas against advice on
the ground of security and made a personal assessment of the situation
and boosted up the morale of the victims. His appeal on the 31st October,
his address to the nation on the 1st November, the condemnation of riots
in strong terms , his action in sacking the Administrator and the overall
posture adopted against the mad crowd leave no scope to entertain the
allegation in a couple of affidavits that he too had something to do
to help the unseemly situation.
In quite
a number of affidavits there was allegation that Shri H.K.L. Bhagat,
Minister in Smt. Gandhi's cabinet and continued in Shri Rajiv Gandhi's
cabinet, insinuated the non-Sikhs to take revenge on the Sikhs as two
of their people had murdered Smt Gandhi. Implicating of Shri Bhagat
in the affidavits before the Commission was perhaps in the air and hundreds
of affidavits were filed before the Commission , a few from Sikhs and
mostly from non-Sikhs to say that Shri Bhagat had no role to play in
organising the riots ; on the other hand, he had helped the Sikhs and
attended to their discomforts and looked after rehabilitation. The Commission
has dealt with these affidavits separately and for reasons indicated
there not much of reliance has been placed on most of these affidavits.
Even if these affidavits are kept away, the allegations made in the
affidavits from the victims' side have to be scrutinised on their own
merit. Excepting a handful of affidavits where it has been alleged that
Shri Bhagat had come to meetings along with some other local Congress
(I) leaders in the night of the 31st October or in the morning of the
1st November , and in a few affidavits alleging distribution of money
by him to boost up riots, the allegations are not very positive or specific.
The Commission had no intention of separately dealing with the case
of Shri Bhagat but as this was very much highlighted, was inquired into
by the Investigating Agency, evidence about it was specifically led
and the affidavits which the Commission has not very much relied upon
were pressed into service, the Commission has thought it appropriate
to deal with it. The Commission makes it clear that these are prima
facie conclusions as far as he is concerned. In the list at p. 219 of
the written arguments of the Committee where 16 instances are cited
he is said to have held a meeting of party people. The evidence regarding
what transpired at the meeting is scanty.
Shri
Bhagat was a sitting Member of Parliament from East Delhi constituency
wherein a bulk of the tragic incidents have happened. Some people belonging
to the Sikh community have deposed before the Commission that Shri Bhagat
had good relationship with the Sikhs and had helped them during the
November riots. Shri Gavai , the then Lt. Governor in his evidence before
the Commission has stated that on November 1, 1984 , Shri Bhagat and
Shri Jag Pravesh Chandra had been constantly ringing up Raj Niwas for
assistance in the affected areas. Shri Gavai, on account of the treatment
meted out to him, was likely to have a grievance against the Government
and those in Government. His statement so far as Shri Bhagat is concerned,
therefore , should be accepted as closer to truth. Shri Bhagat being
a sitting M.P. and Minister was not likely to misbehave in the manner
alleged. Shri R.S. Sethi , who was then the District Magistrate, has
also spoken thus :
"I
did not see any political leader of any party moving about to support
the riotous mobs. In view of the fact that I was freely moving about
during that period and came across several mobs in different areas ,
I am in a position to say that if they had really come out and joined
the mobs, I could have seen them."
People
of the Sikh community being electors of his constituency, Shri Bhagat,
keeping the democratic politician's behaviour towards the elector in
view, was not likely to antagonise the Sikh sympathy towards him.
There
is evidence that in the election to the Lok Sabha held almost within
seven to eight weeks of the riots, certain members of the Sikh community
worked in support of Shri Bhagat. For instance, in the affidavit filed
by Shri Tara Singh [No. 2531] it is stated that he so worked for Shri
Bhagat. Some other Sikhs have also accepted that position. If Shri Bhagat
had indeed played the role of an organiser of the riots, it is difficult
to find even a single Sikh supporter in his camp. The rioters had no
' pick and choose' method in their operations and when they attacked
a Sikh or his property they never enquired about his antecedents or
party affiliation. It was an attack against the community. Shri Balwinder
Singh [ no. 2163] , a member of the Sikh community stated in his affidavit
that he contacted Shri Bhagat on 1-11-84 on telephone and apprised him
of what was happening. He was then told by Shri Bhagat that Sikhs and
Hindus should join and put up a common front to meet the situation.
He also told him that he [Shri Bhagat] was trying to ensure arrival
of a CRP unit within an hour. This is evidence of an assuring type and
does indicate against the allegation with reference to Shri Bhagat.
There is another material on record for consideration while dealing
with this aspect. It is the case of the victims -- and has either been
accepted or not seriously disputed by others--- that the attacking mobs
used to swell up while moving on the lanes and roads --- a feature to
suggest that the rioters were not an organised team and were made up
by a section of the community willing to play to the mood of the people,
satisfy their hurt sentiments by harassing the Sikhs and share the booty.
Again, if violence had been organised, it would have spread into every
corner and the manner in which it abated may not have been possible.
In the absence of convincing material, the Commission is not in a position
to accept the allegation that Shri Bhagat had instigated the rioters.
That
violence was let loose in Delhi between October 31 and November 3 ,
1984, is not all in dispute. Nor is there much of dispute that this
violence was essentially one - sided , namely , the non-sikhs attacked
the sikhs and damaged, looted and burnt their properties-moveable and
immoveable, Gurudwaras and killed a few thousand of them. If the party
in power or a minister or well placed person had masterminded or organised
the riots , the same would had taken even a more serious turn. It is
the case of all parties before the Commission that in certain area there
was no trouble of any noticeable degree and two reasons have been advanced
for such a situation-(i) effectiveness of the local police ; and (ii)
raising of combined defence of the local residents. If the Congress
(1) party or a powerful force in the party played any role, neither
of these two elements could have functioned in the manner each of them
has been ascribed. The Commission , with view to ascertaining what exactly
worked to make the police passive, indifferent and callous, has perused
a lot of contemporaneous records and examined several official witnesses.
The Investigating Agency also did try in its own way to delve into the
matter. In answer to searching questions put to the police officers,
they have denied any political force to have operated behind the scene
in the matter of formulation of their attitude and conduct. The manner
and the setting in which the questions relating to this aspect had been
asked would in ordinary course have brought out such implication if
it were true to any extent.
The
Commission has noticed that in a few affidavits the hand of the party
politicians was alleged. Some of the deponents were cross-examined and
they have not stood the test while some have not broken down. All the
material on the record in the ultimate analysis is not evidence of that
type relying on which the Commission can record a finding that Congress
(1) Party or some leaders in that party had organised the violence which
manifested in the shape of riots. The Congress (1) Party denounced riots
by regular resolutions adopted at official meeting of the party. The
Commission had at the instance of the CJC collected the newspapers published
from Delhi during the 1st and 5th November, 1984. From the Hindustan
Times 2-11-1984 , it appears that the Delhi Pradesh Congress Committee
( I ) on 1-11-1984 released the following statement :
"
Unity of the country was dearest to her ( Smt. Gandhi ) and she has
given her blood for it. The unity of India must not only be preserved
and strengthened through tolerance and communal harmony but also good
neighbourly relations. Violence in any form anywhere in the country
must be condemned and eschewed. The incidents of violence in the capital
are condemnable and every citizen must cooperate fully in maintaining
peace and normalcy in the counrty. Use of any violence in any shape
or form would only negative and weaken the ideals for which Mrs. Gandhi
stood and died."
The
Congress ( I ) Working Committee on November 1, 1984 appealed to the
countrymen to exercise restraint, maintain peace and harmony among all
sections of the people and to uphold the unity, integrity and security
of the nation for which Indira Gandhi laid down her life.
In the
face of these resolutions of November 1, 1984 by the Central and Union
Territory party organs, it is indeed difficult to allege, much less
discover, unseen hands of the party behind the violence perpetrated
so dastardly over member of the Sikh community at Delhi. If the Congress
( I ) party or some of its highly placed leaders had set the rioters
to operate , one would expect the Sikhs with Congress base and affinity
to have escaped the depredation. No distinction appears to have been
made by the rioters and there is no single instance placed before the
Commission where the plea of Sikh that he belonged to the Congress (
I ) had ever been acceded to by the rioters. It is in the written submissions
of DSGMC on behalf of the riot-victims that even some of the enquiries
conducted unofficially had led to the conclusion of suspicion only of
such implication. The evident passivity of the police- a very unusual
role in police history and tradition-gave rise to the scope for suspicion.
Many perhaps genuinely thought-in the situation it cannot be said to
be too far-fetched to be thought of-that it was the magic wand of the
politician that tamed the police. Acting under impression which some
have believed to be true, the allegation of implication seems to have
been made.
Support
for the conclusion of the Commission that uncontrolled events of the
31st October transformed themselves into riotous activity with the participation
and monitoring thereof by the anti-socials also can be drawn from the
facts highlighted in the written arguments furnished by the DSGMC. At
page 221 ( of the written arguments ) it has been said:
"
The mob was jubilating and dancing. There was no sign of sorrow and
grief on their faces. They were no mourners of the Prime Minister, Mrs.
Indira Gandhi but were totally unconnected with it."
Eleven
affidavits being of Smt. Trilochan Kaur (no.2411) , Smt. Gurdeep Kaur
(no. 2307), Smt. Harjeet Kaur (no. 2708), Smt. Sarabjit Kaur (no.166),
Smt. Nanki Devi (no. 2550), Smt. Prakash Kaur (no. 2396), Smt. Prakash
Kaur (no. 2407) Shri Tara Singh (no.2531), Smt. Balwant Kaur (no. 2690),
Shri P. Miglani (no. 2527) and Shri B.S. Kapoor (no. 2376) have been
cited with preference to the conduct and behaviour pattern of the people
in the mobs in pages 221 to 224. Anti-social gangsters obviously had
no mourning to observe. The troubled atmosphere provided them with opportunity
to plunder and otherwise satisfy their animal desires and, therefore,
the conduct exhibited of the people in the mobs shows that the constituents
of the mobs were the anti-social ruffians and usually not the people
of Smt. Gandhi's camp or party who ordinarily were likely to exhibit
mournful conduct. As already extracted from the news report, they were
in low spirit everywhere after the shock.
At page
226 three instances have been cited which show that outsider came and
incited the local people to join the riots. Reference has been made
to the affidavits of Smt. Prakash Kaur (no. 36), Shri Ishar Singh (168)
and Shri Avtar Singh (172) ---all on the victim's side ----to show that
outsiders came in a truck and incited the local people.
Along
with these, the Commission would like to refer to an analysis presented
at pages 216 -- 218 of the written arguments where a list of "
organisers of the carnage " at the local level is given. Nineteen
instances have been catalogued where people associated with Congress
(1) have been named as organisers. Of them fourteen are described as
workers either of Congress (1) on its youth wing ; four are said to
local Congress (I) leaders and the other being the Secretary of a then
Congress (1) M.P. Conceding that there is no particular reason to disbelieve
the allegations so tabulated, considering the position occupied by these
people, the Commission is not in a position to hold that from their
participation, the Congress (1) party as such can be found to have organised
the violence. On the other hand, these details supplied by the DSGMC
fortify the conclusion that some people of the Congress (1) party on
their own had indulged and participated in the turmoil for considerations
entirely their own. Every person who takes a dip in the Ganges is not
purified. Similarly, everyone in the Congress (1) is not a Gandhi believing
and practising non-violence. The party label, therefore, does not attract
the party nor takes away the individual element.
The
Committee in its written submissions at p. 55 has stated :
"
A perusal of the record supplied by the Fire Brigade shows that the
violence started in the evening (of the 31st) from areas around All
India Institute of Medical Sciences. The first call which the Fire Brigade
received about fire was at 5.30 p.m. on 31-10-84. A careful scrutiny
of the record shows that the rioters formed different groups, started
from All India Institute of Medical Sciences and indulged in violence.
One of such groups proceeded towards Defence Colony from AIIMS and on
the way indulged in arson at Kidwai Nagar, NDSE I & II , Andrews
Ganj Chowk and then at Defence Colony. Another group proceeded towards
R. K. Puram from there and indulged in violence on the way.
One
group proceeded towards Prithviraj Road and a different group towards
Hauz Khas.......The routes followed by these groups can be easily traced
on the perusal of the record of the Fire Brigade."
A map
showing this route has been placed by the Committee with the timings
of the incidents shown therein on the basis of the Fire Brigade records.
It is
clear from these materials that arson on large scale had been undertaken
by these mobs after leaving the AIIMS. In the written submissions it
has been further started at p. 56 :
"
By about 8 p.m. on 31-10-84, the word spread throughout the city and
at some places in the city some persons indulged in violence. But till
late night the main incidents of violence in the city were reported
from the areas of South Delhi where the aforesaid groups were operating."
It is
reasonable to hold on the basis of what has been said above and on the
basis of the news report of incidents extracted while dealing with the
incidents of the 31st October, that the genesis of the riots began from
the AIIMS where large crowds had gathered following the removal thereto
of Smt. Gandhi in an injured condition for medical attention. Soon after
the President left after his cavalcade was attacked, not the dispersal
of the crowd started and this crowd which had been impatiently waiting
at the AIIMS for the news fate had in store, became divided into groups
and moved away. There is no allegation much less evidence before the
Commission that any plan was hatched at the AIIMS and/or passed on to
the crowd. There is evidence which has been noticed in the written submission
of the Committee that a good number of Sikhs had also come to the AIIMS
and were in the crowd. If anything was hatched and spread, they would
have known and were expected to disclose. The AIIMS was not the place
where any planning could have been done. Again, that was not the time
appropriate for hatching any plot. Anxiety and tension had spread everywhere
and all the people who had been waiting to know whether the Prime Minister
shall live or has perished could be in no mood to hatch a plan or talk
to some one or group guiding them. Unless pre-planned ( Smt. Gandhi's
killing being sudden there is no scope for the view of pre-planning)
within such a short time and in that atmosphere no planning could have
been done. Thus the stand that violence was organised is difficult to
accept. On the other hand, as held earlier, the evidence fits into the
position that when the incidents started taking place and the police
remained passive , leading to the generation of feeling that if Sikhs
were harassed no action would be taken, the situation fast deteriorated
and the anti-socials got into the fray and gave the lead after taking
over the situation.
It has
now to be seen whether the violence was organised. The word 'organised'
according the the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary means " to
form into a whole with interdependent parts; to give a definite and
orderly structure to; to arrange or get up something involving united
action ". The Oxford English Dictionary gives the meaning to be
" to form into a whole with mutually connected and depended parts;
to coordinate parts or elements so as to form a systematic whole ; to
give a definite and orderly structure to ; to systematise ; to frame
and put into working order; to arrange or ' set up ' something involving
united action." Black's Law Dictionary gives the meaning as "
to systematise; to put into working order ; to arrange in order for
the normal exercise of its appropriate functions." Webster's Third
New International Dictionary gives the meaning of the word as "
to arrange or constitute into a coherent unity in which each part has
a special function or relation." In Words and Phrases, Permanent
Edition, the word is said to mean " to arrange or constitute in
interdependent parts, each having a special function, act, office or
relation with respect to the whole." Reference may be made to the
chapter on Organised Crime in Criminal Investigation (IInd Edition )
by James N. Gilbert (1986 Edn. ) in which at p. 434 it has been said
: " They (such groups) typically involve a sizeable number of individuals
in the planning and execution. A true organised crime groups requires
a continuous commitment by its members, although there may be some non-members
participating for short periods of time."
"
To organise" thus involves a process which requires time, men,
money and an aim or goal to achieve which the organization is done.
There is no material before the Commission to suggest that some Congress
(1) men had undertaken any process involving the elements referred to
at the AIIMS on the 31st . For reasons indicated elsewhere, the Commission
has come to the conclusion that violence was not organised by the Congress
(1) party or any official who matters in the party.
Even
if "organised" involves the concept as mentioned above, in
ordinary parlance it perhaps covers instances where a process is systematised.
In that popular sense -- and the Commission takes the phrase 'organised
violence' in the reference by Government to have been used in that sense
-- the riots after spontaneous origin got into channelised methods in
the hands of gangsters. It would not be wrong to say that there was
organised violence at Delhi and that was done by the anti-social elements
and in the riots, thousands of people who do not really belong to the
classification of anti-socials did participate. Many of these participants
were people from the lower ranks of the Congress (1) party and sympathisers.
The
Commission has accepted the position very appropriately advanced on
behalf of the victims that the entire community of the Sikhs constituting
about two percent of the country's entire population could not be made
to suffer for the act of two misguided persons of that community. The
Commission cannot keep aside that logic while dealing with the issue
of involvement of the Congress (1) party as such in organising violence.
It cannot, therefore, draw a conclusion inferentially from the fact
of participation of party workers and sympathisers or some leaders at
local levels that the Party was involved in organising what has perhaps
been rightly called a carnage.
The
Commission accepts the evidence placed before it that most of the mobs
were from areas different from where they operated and only a few local
people had joined such mobs to faciliate the operations. In some areas
, however , local people had also organised riotous activities. In the
mobs of both types people of different communities (not being Sikhs)
did join. The anti-social elements monitored the activities of these
mobs and played the principal role in killing, looting as also arson.
In these mobs people with sympathy for the Congress (1) and associated
with party activities appear to have also joined in good number. The
Congress Party at the lower level --- like any political party anywhere----
has loose ends and from the fact of participation of people belonging
to the party at that level it is difficult to accept the stand that
the Congress (1) party had either organised or participated as such
in the riots. Such participation was not on party basis and it seems
to be a fact that a number of people belonging to the Congress (1) party
at the lower level had participated in the riots. Anxiety to participate
in that way perhaps was either with an avenging attitude -- their leader
having been done to death by two Sikh guards -- or from the allurement
of acquiring property by fishing in troubled waters.
As the
Commission has already found, the riots at the initial stage were spontaneous
and by way of reaction to the situation but later the riots developed
into a set type. The change in the pattern from spontaneous reaction
to organised riots was the outcome of the take over of the command of
the situation by anti-social elements. It is said that Satan too has
a process and when taking to stanic activities the anti-social elements
took to their organised process. This is how --- and in this sense ---violence
in Delhi was indeed organised but such organisation was not by any political
party or a definite group of persons but by the anti-social elements
which as will be shown in another part of this report is quite a formidable
and powerful element in the Indian capital. It would not be out of place
to record here the finding of the Commission that the pattern followed
at Kanpur and Bokaro was the same. At Kanpur serious incidents took
place on October 31 itself and some on November 1, 1984. At Bokaro most
of the incidents were in the morning of November 1, 1984 . As found
by the Commission, organised pattern in rioting appeared in Delhi after
9 or 10 in the morning of November 1. There was thus no connection in
the activities of Delhi and the activities of Kanpur and Bokaro. They
were all locally based: organised locally too and came with the expertise
of the anti-social elements and they have a common pattern all the world
over.
It is
useful to refer to a passage fom Hubert Blumer (quoted in 'Collective
Behaviour ' by A.M. Lee in Principles of Sociology ----1951 ) where
it is said :
"
Individual behaviour changes in certain respects in the presence of
other people. In most instances, their presence tends to have a restricting
effect on behaviour. However, under certain conditions, there is a permissiveness
about a crowd situation that induces individuals to act in a less restrained
way. An individual may normally never think of looting a store, but
when others are doing so, he may join them. The thought that 'everybody
is doing it' and the feeling that as an individual he cannot be singled
out and punished for his act may be responsible for this change of behaviour."
The
anti-social elements had obviously the support of a vast group of people
who ordinarily would not have liked to do what the anti-socials did
or do.
A detailed
statement of First Information Reports, Investigations with results,
charge-sheets and pending cases is in Vol. II Appendix 5 at pages 13-18.
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