Nonadanga: Arrest of activists condemned

Seven activists belonging to different groups were detained by the Kolkata police while they were staging a peaceful sit-in protest in the city against the forceful eviction of about 250 families from Nonadanga slums.

The seven activists, including Debolina Chakravorty, Sidhhartha Gupta, Debjani Ghosh, Partha Sarathi Roy, Abhigyan Sarkar, Amal Chatterjee and Shamik Chakraborty, have been booked under the section 143, 149, 332, 341, 342, 353 of IPC.
All the seven activists were remanded to one-week of police custody by an Alipore court on Monday. Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate, Alipore, D N Mitra ordered the police remand after the state counsel alleged that the seven had Maoist links and were involved in stockpiling of arms, ammunition and explosives at Nonadanga. The seven, however, were charged with illegal assembly and assault on police.
One of the activists, Partha Sarathi Roy, was in a Kalyani University programme when the protest was held and there is documentary evidence and testimony to prove this but then also the court refused to grant him bail.
KMDA on March 30 forcefully evicted about 250 families from the Nonadanga area of Kolkata and demolished their slums. The police personnel also set ablaze some of the slums.
On April 4, the police resorted to lathicharge on the slum dwellers while they were staging a peaceful protest against the demolition drive. Several women and children were also injured in the attack.
Various rights groups and section of civil society have condemned the arrests . They have sought the earliest release of the activists who have been sent to police custody on false charges.
A petition to West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee has also been signed by scores of people seeking release of the activists and suitable rehabilitation and compensation to the residents of Nonadanga slum.
Here is the full text of the petition:
To
Mamata Banerjee,
Chief Minister,
Government of West Bengal,
Writers Building,
Kolkata,
India-700 001
We are deeply concerned by your government\\\’s arrest of seven democratic rights activists and its earlier detention of residents of the Nonadanga slum on April 8, 2012 at Ruby junction.
These activists were engaged in a peaceful sit-in demonstration attended by a broad spectrum of left organisations and individuals of good conscience, demanding rehabilitation of hundreds of residents evicted from the Nonadanga slum of Kolkata on March 30, 2012. The peaceful character of their protest is a matter of public record, documented by various media reports.
Accordingly, we are shocked and dismayed at the response of your police forces to these democratic protests.
In this matter, the actions of your police forces have been systematically repressive and appear to be progressively sinister while sending a very dangerous and anti-democratic signal.
On April 4th, your police lathi-charged a peaceful rally and beat a pregnant woman in her third trimester. Your police forces proceeded, on April 8th, to attack a peaceful sit-in demonstration and arrest 69 people, victimising children under the age of ten.
Seven activists were kept in custody by slapping non-bailable charges, i.e., Debolina Chakroborty, Samik Chakrobarty, Manas Chatterjee, Debjani Ghosh, Siddhartha Gupta, Partho Sarathi Ray, and Abhijnan Sarkar. Yet this was not enough.
On April 9th, your police attacked yet another peaceful rally of the anti-eviction movement in Kolkata and arrested more than 50 participants.
In addition, your advocates insisted on pressing quite incredible charges against the seven detained activists.
State counsel has essentially argued that any peaceful democratic dissent constitutes a conspiracy to hatch a subversive plot against the government. Furthermore, this argument revealed the aim of the State to interrogate those remanded in order to recover "information" about "possible stockpiling of arms and explosives".
This daft and tired accusation is patently a euphemism serving to disguise the government\\\’s aim to torture the detainees. We are quite apprehensive of false evidences being foisted and concerned with this attempt by your government to throttle democratic dissent and protest in such a sinister manner.
This turn of events reminds us of the infamous case of Dr Binayak Sen and various attempts by police and security personnel to manufacture false cases against intellectuals and activists in order to harass, malign and silence them.
We demand in the strongest possible terms the immediate release of the seven democratic rights activists and immediate annulment of this bizarre set of charges. Furthermore, we demand that all the evicted persons from the Nonadanga colony be suitably rehabilitated and proper compensation be arranged for them.
We also demand that you prosecute police personnel responsible for the brutal lathicharge on women and minors on April 4th.
Instead of addressing the genuine grievances of the urban poor, who have been mercilessly evicted from their homes, your government has cracked down on conscientious intellectuals and activists who stood by the people. This is rather shameful behaviour for a purportedly pro-poor government.
The Trinamool Congress promised "Pariborton" to the citizens of West Bengal. But the more things change, the more they stay the same. Let it deliver or go the way of its predecessor.

Recent Posts

  • Featured

Commentary: The Heat Is On, From Poll Booths To Weather Stations

Parts of India are facing a heatwave, for which the Kerala heat is a curtain raiser. Kerala experienced its first…

2 hours ago
  • Featured

India Uses National Interest As A Smokescreen To Muzzle The Media

The idea of a squadron of government officials storming a newsroom to shut down news-gathering and seize laptops and phones…

3 hours ago
  • Featured

What Do The Students Protesting Israel’s Gaza Siege Want?

A wave of protests expressing solidarity with the Palestinian people is spreading across college and university campuses. There were more…

4 hours ago
  • Featured

Eco-anxiety Soars As Planet Health Plummets

Climate anxiety, ecological anxiety, eco-anxiety, or environmental anxiety are umbrella terms used to describe a spectrum of mental and emotional…

4 hours ago
  • Featured

The Curious Case Of Google Trends In India

For nine of the last ten years, the most searches were for why Apple products and Evian water are so…

2 days ago
  • Featured

Here’s How Real Journalists Can Lead The War Against Deepfakes

Almost half the world is voting in national elections this year and AI is the elephant in the room. There…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.