Sometimes, what appears to be something of passing interest, or, even trivial matters, might just be the signposts telling us that we are now about to go into a completely new territory, where the whole rule of the game would be different.
Two things fit this description.
One, the killing of two young girls and a young man in Heirok during a thabal.
Two, the killing of one Uttam by Police commandos.
In the first case, a rebel group owned responsibility telling us that the killing was a result of some unintentional misfire. And they expressed regret while asking for forgiveness by the general public. To be fair, in the past some very few instances where, some particular rebel groups expressing regrets and asking for forgiveness for some unintentional misfire, did happen. In all of those instances, we somehow brought ourselves to believe that the rebels were telling the truth and they were really sorry for that. But, in the case of Heirok, the feelings are totally different. We cannot persuade ourselves to believe the rebels.
In the second case, a man in his early thirties was shot down in his own house, in front of his own family members. The gunmen, who were in civil clothes, later, turned out to be the Commandos of the Police. But the most shocking episode is yet to come. That arrives as the callous act of the State in disposing the death body saying that nobody came forward to claim it. This is pure shock. They are not even honoring the dead. We have remember here that the family members and residents of the neighborhood were demanding from the State one single point—put the two Police personnel involved in the killing under suspension. They are not demanding either judicial inquiry or compensation.
These two instances show us that we are about to step into a new territory where the State itself is being traumatized by the vigorous rebellion whereas the rebels themselves are facing creeping moral corruption in trying to withstand the coercive power of the State.
What would be the rule of the game governing this new territory?
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
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