Recent
article in THE HINDU, or rather the essay by George Orwell, ‘The Hanging’ gave
me goose bumps. For a few minutes I was myself witnessing the terror of facing
gallows. Immediately arose in me the feeling that the three convicts in Rajeev
Gandhi Assassination case indeed must be allowed to live. But soon, the feeling
subsided, when I tried to juxtapose the various contexts involved. Perhaps my
sympathy for the prisoner in ‘The Hanging’ was more because of sense of
patriotism that swelled up on imagining the wrongs afflicted upon, yet bravely
taken by, the freedom fighters of Indian struggle of Independence. (The essay
was about a situation in the imperialist regime of British in Burma, and though
the prisoner has been termed as a criminal, yet it involuntarily takes my
imagination to the like hangings of Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, Sukhdev and so many
more). It is a well known fact that during imperialist regimes, death sentences
were more often used as instrument to perpetuate the interests of the rulers
and to put off any opposition that dared to rise against them, rather than for
ajustice.
Today,
India is a free sovereign with a written Constitution, the supreme law of the
land, guaranteeing justice to one and all. And it is by the sanctions of this
law that capital punishments are allowed in rarest
of the rare cases. These are the heinous crimes like rape, murder for
robbery, abetment of child suicide or mass genocide, which would stir the soul
of any normal and sane person. Recently the agitation by few human right
activities and groups to commute the death sentence of three convicts in Rajiv Gandhi
assassination case on humane grounds has gained momentum. Tamil Nadu Assembly
has even passed a resolution recommending mercy. The case put up invokes
Article 21 of Constitution, Right to live, advocating that since there has been
exceptional long delay in deciding the fate of convicts, the right to live with
dignity is violated in such cases if the death sentence is executed even after
so many years of imprisonment. I find this very disturbing. Because the Article
21 itself says that no person shall be deprived of his/her life except
by the procedures laid down by law. Then how can mercy be expected on
grounds of right to live for a death convict!!
Law
stipulates no time limit on the government or the President to reply to the
mercy petition under Article 72. So everything in case of Murugan, Santhan,
Perarivalan and that of Bhullar, has been carried out in accordance with law.
It seems that some so called social groups can find an agenda out of anything,
and they just politicise the issues to satisfy their hidden interests. In fact
I feel that the reasoning capacity of Indian mob is very dismal and it is very
easy to control the opinion of a common man. At one hand, we feel repugnant at
the very idea of Indian government keeping terrorists like Kasab and Afzal Guru
alive, on the other hand we bootstrap to come on streets as and when such
terrorists are sentenced to death. This is a completely oxymoronic behaviour from
which we must refrain. In fact such agitations are agonising and breach of
justice for the kith and kin of the victims of such convicts. I fail to
understand how we can forget about the hundreds of victims of 28/11 episode,
LTTE terrorist activities, Mumbai train blasts, or the soldiers sacrificed
during attack on Parliament, the list is endless. In fact these agitations
portrait India as a soft state and make way for incidents like IC814 Hijack.
The issue
of ban on capital punishment is a long standing debate in India. So is the
issue of method of execution. It is argues that other lesser painful methods
like lethal injection and gunshot can be used instead of hanging. However these
should not at all be related to the issues of granting mercy to the death
convicts and must be decided upon on separate justifications. I myself am
against the practice of capital punishment, as it is irrevocable and may lead
to grave injustice in case of erroneous judgements. But there are many
constitutional ways to resolve the debate via a valid legislation in the forum
of democracy – Parliament. However any extra constitutional resolution or
agitation does nothing but disturbs the functioning of the executive. Also,
there must be a self imposed rule that all the pending mercy petitions must be
decided upon in shortest possible time with high priority. But we must learn to
respect and have faith in our constitutional machinery and should not disrupt
the administration everyday on one issue or another.
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