Wednesday, June 07, 2006

Intriguing indeed!

You have to excuse me if I sound as if I’m in a perennial ‘conspiracy theorist’ state of mind. But don’t you think that the timing of the recent visit of Ms Malini Bhattacharya, member, National Commission for Woman, is quite intriguing?

About a week back, Justice Rajkhowa announced that all the girls whose statements he had personally recorded at Parbung and Lungthulien, should be ready for cross-examination by other interested counsels. (At that time, I was too harried telling you my personal ‘anecdotes’ to take note of the Justice’s announcement here. But I took a mental note of the announcement so that I could bring it up when the situations presented themselves—like today). In the same announcement, the Justice also noted that all the statements that were recorded in Hmar language were in the process of being translated into English. When completed, they would be made available to all the parties. Note that Mafyf demanded that it be supplied with all the statements.

The reaction was immediate. Hmar Women Association did not like the idea of cross-examination citing that all the girls were in varying stages of trauma and they should not be further forced to re-visit their hellish experiences.

The reply to that reaction came from Human Rights Alert. It is headed by Mr Babloo Loitongbam who, I think, has those impeccable credentials required for a non-controversial human rights activist. He said that he could understand the girls’ plight in having to re-visit their hellish experiences but cross-examination is a must for establishing the truth.

Then, he gave four or five names of women of proven rape cases but I can remember only name of Ahanjaobi, rape victim of an Indian Army soldier, who ultimately was found guilty of his crime and convicted.

Babloo said that all these women had to undergo several layers of cross-examination. He said that a woman is honour-bound to undergo any test imposed by the law of the land which will to the punishment of the perpetrators of rape.

The second point is very significant. Babloo himself was on Aizawl-Parbung circuit when the news of the mass rape just came out in the media in full force. It was before the Rajkhowa Commission was instituted. He personally met the majority of the girls who were alleged to have been raped by the rebels. In all the cases, he tried to go a little deeper into the affair by putting some more questions to the girls—all the girls demurred and said that it was an ‘attempt to rape’.

The words are ‘attempt to rape’.

When he came back to Imphal with his report, the Government of Manipur just announced the institution of a judicial commission to probe the rape cases. So, he decided not to release his report to the public but to submit it to the coming commission.

I remember him telling the media just that at that time.

It was in the middle of such points and counterpoints that Ms Malini Bhattacharya arrived in Imphal and she said:

>> In the absence of primary evidence of rape, what the purported rape victims say should be trusted. (Does she mean to say that if the girls are to be trusted, cross-examination is a waste of time?)

>>Manipur Government does absolutely nothing to alleviate the trauma of the Hmar girls ( Does she mean to say that as the girls are already in the state of traumatic shocks, anybody should not try to intensify the shock by any means—like, cross-examination?)

Well, I may sound liking a good conspiracy theory a little bit but it is still intriguing to me—very intriguing indeed!

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