From: Syed Tanveeruddin <etanveerindian@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Dec 31, 2010 at 5:43 AM
Subject: release jailed for life human rights activist binayak sen - petition
To: palashbiswaskl@gmail.com
Release jailed for life human rights activist Binayak Sen

- signatures: 27
 - signature goal: 50
 
- Target: Hon'ble Supreme Court, President, PM, MHA, Union Law Ministry, NAC
 - Sponsored by: Syed Tanveeruddin for the human rights and civil rights activists
 
Created on Dec 30, 2010
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case/138940-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/138940/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case.html
 30 Minutes: Binayak Sen, the dissenting doctor Watch Videos
http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/93809/30-minutes-binayak-sen-the-dissenting-doctor.html
 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/videoshow/7179940.cms
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/videos/news/Dr-Binayak-Sen-found-guilty-of-sedition-treason/videoshow/7156191.cms
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/dr-binayak-sen-3-others-held-guilty-of-treason/138496-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/human-rights-activists-slam-binayak-sen-verdict/138596-3.html
We  the petition signers / signatories are appalled by the shocking  verdict. People in India have shamelessly robbed it of crores of rupees  through various scams, instigated / incited violence against others on  the grounds of religion, language, caste, reservation / quota, places of  worship and perpetrated crimes against humanity in general and women in  particular but are still roaming scot-free shamelessly. Binayak Sen has  worked amongst the poor for so many years of his life but has never  encouraged or justified violence. Therefore, we request for expeditious  hearing of his appeal and to grant him immediate bail till the end of  the appeal process.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/proof-must-back-charges-in-binayak-case-excji/138820-37-64.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/binayak-sens-mother-to-move-court/138822-37.html
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/willing-to-fight-for-binayak-sen-jethmalani/138763-3.html 
 Additional  District and Sessions Judge BP Verma held Dr Sen, Naxal ideologue  Narayan Sanyal and Kolkata businessman Piyush Guha guilty under  provisions of section 124 IPC (sedition), 120 B IPC (conspiracy) and  Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act on December 24. Dr Sen, Sanyal  and Guha have been sentenced to life.
A shocking verdict Opinion - Editorials - The Hindu Saturday, December 25, 2010
 http://www.hindu.com/2010/12/25/stories/2010122566591400.htm 
The  life sentence handed down to Binayak Sen by a Chhattisgarh trial court  on Friday is so over the top and outrageous that it calls into question  the fundamentals of the Indian justice system. The trial judge shocked  the conscience of the nation by finding the eminent doctor and rights  activist guilty of sedition and conspiring to wage war against the state  under Sections 120(B) and 124(A) of the Indian Penal Code, Sections  8(1), (2), (3), and (5) of the draconian Chhattisgarh Special Public  Security Act, and Section 39 (2) of the Unlawful Activities Prevention  Act (as amended in 2004). The fact that the Chhattisgarh police's case  against Dr. Sen consisted of pretty thin material was taken into the  realm of the absurd by the public prosecutor tying himself in knots in  an attempt to burnish the doctor's alleged sins. So it was that an  innocuous email message sent by his wife, Ilina, to the director of the  Indian Social Institute - a Delhi-based institution which happens to  share an acronym with Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence directorate  - got converted into "suspicious communication" with the dreaded "ISI."  Another email referring to an occupant of the White House as a  "chimpanzee" was introduced by the prosecutor as evidence of the kind of  "code language" terrorists resort to. But tragically, it is the  Chhattisgarh police that have had the last laugh in this round.
The  broad charge against Dr. Sen of helping the banned Community Party of  India (Maoist) wage war against the state was constructed by the police  around the scaffolding of his supposed relationship with Narayan Sanyal,  an alleged leader of the Maoists who was incarcerated in Raipur jail  following his arrest in 2006. In his capacity as a medical doctor and  head of the People's Union for Civil Liberties, Dr. Sen often met Mr.  Sanyal in jail but each of these meetings, as the jail authorities  subsequently testified, was closely supervised and afforded no  opportunity for the conveying of messages to the Maoist leadership. So  the police hit upon the strategy of linking him to the recovery from  Kolkata-based businessman Piyush Guha of a letter allegedly written by  Mr. Sanyal. During the trial, the defence counsel pointed to numerous  holes in the police case, including the introduction of an unsigned,  typewritten letter supposedly sent by the Maoists to Dr. Sen, despite  the fact that the letter found no mention in the attested list of  documents recovered from his residence the same day. It goes without  saying that Dr. Sen has the right to appeal the conviction and the  savage sentence. The higher judiciary, which did not exactly cover  itself in glory by denying him bail for nearly two years, must ensure  the expeditious hearing of his appeal and grant him immediate bail till  the end of the appeal process.
Raj throwback - Editorial - Times of India, December 27, 2010
 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/opinion/edit-page/Raj-throwback/articleshow/7168004.cms 
 The  life sentence imposed on globally acclaimed human rights activist  Binayak Sen on the charge of sedition is easily the most scandalous  abuse of a colonial remnant in independent India. Judging by the  intensity of civil society's outrage, the verdict by a trial court from  Chhattisgarh might provide impetus for a fresh review of the arbitrary  manner in which this provision continues to be invoked to gag dissenting  voices.
This is the latest in a series of cases in which either  the prosecution or the court appears to have missed the strict condition  on which Section 124A of the Indian Penal Code has survived the test of  free speech guaranteed by the Constitution. The Supreme Court ruled in  1962 that no sedition charge can be made unless the disaffection against  the state spread by the accused was found to be a direct incitement to  violence or armed rebellion. This meant that even if the prosecution's  version were accepted that he had couriered letters from a jailed Maoist  leader to his associates, the trial court would have had to establish  that Sen's words or deeds were a direct incitement to violence or  jeopardised public order. Without showing how any intent of violence  could be attributed to a human rights activist with a lifetime service  in rural healthcare, the trial court held him guilty of criminal  conspiracy to commit sedition in the teeth of the law laid down by the  Supreme Court.
Such a cavalier approach reinforces the impression  that the judiciary is allowing itself to be overrun by security  arguments. Blaming the sins of the Maoists on Sen, the trial court  awarded him the highest possible penalty of life sentence. Clearly,  India could do without the shame of jailing a humanist for sedition while  the hate-mongers responsible for the cataclysmic events of 1984 ( Delhi  massacre), 1992 (Ayodhya demolition) and 2002 (Gujarat riots) strut  around as patriots.
Quite apart from the question  whether Sen qualifies to be called a seditionist, the December 24  verdict deserves to be overturned for overlooking serious gaps in  evidence. That the three incriminating letters allegedly carried by Sen  had been recovered from co-accused Piyush Guha was by no means proved  beyond doubt. The recovery story hinges entirely on the testimony of a  cloth merchant who admitted to have been called by the police as a  seizure witness when Guha was already in their custody. The trial court  also overlooked discrepancies in the prosecution's version of where Guha  had been arrested. This miscarriage of justice cannot be ignored,  especially due to its larger ramifications.
Justice outraged Deccan Herald - Editorial - Monday December 27 2010
 http://www.deccanherald.com/content/123872/justice-outraged.html 
The evidence produced against Sen is unconvincing.
 The  conviction of celebrated human rights activist Binayak Sen for treason  by the Raipur sessions court on Friday has raised question about the  country's system of justice. Sen, along with two others, has been  awarded a harsh life sentence for allegedly aiding and abetting Maoist  activities. But the evidence produced against Sen is very unconvincing  and there are strong reasons to believe that it was manufactured or  doctored to implicate him in a false case. He has been hounded and  persecuted by the police and the authorities in Chhattisgarh for long  and has suffered much for his commitment to the welfare of poor tribals  in the state. He was even denied the normal right of bail after he was  arrested in 2006 and it was after spending nearly two years in jail that  he won freedom at the intervention of the supreme court.
The  prosecution charge that Sen acted as a conduit between a jailed Maoist  leader and a businessman is weak because all the meetings between the  two in jail were under the supervision of the authorities. The defence  claim that evidence was planted to incriminate Sen seems to be correct  in the light of production of letters and documents which were not  recovered from his residence. The ridiculousness of the prosecution  claim became clear in the court during the trial when it accused Sen of  links with the Pakistani ISI on the basis of an e-mail message to an  organisation with that acronym. It turned out the organisation was the  Indian Social Institute (ISI) in Delhi.
There is no doubt that  Sen did not get a fair trial and his conviction has tarnished the  reputation of the country. He has become an international symbol of the  struggle of the poor and marginalised people for their legitimate  rights. The Amnesty International considers him a prisoner of  conscience. A man who has been honoured with international awards for  his work among the poor, and on whose behalf Nobel laureates have  pleaded with the government, should not be treated the way he has been.  The Chhattisgarh police and the trial judge who accepted its story  uncritically have sent out a dire warning to all those who value and  work for human rights. It is the disregard for the rights of the poor  that has triggered the Maoist revolt. It is unfortunate that this truth  is not recognised.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/human-rights-activists-slam-binayak-sen-verdict/138596-3.html 
 It's  the verdict which has left many across India completely shocked. Dr  Binayak Sen being pronounced guilty by a Raipur Sessions Court has left  human rights activists, leading jurists and writers appalled.
A  travesty of justice: That is how leading human rights defenders,  activists and jurists have greeted the verdict of the Raipur sessions  court which held Dr Binayak Sen guity of sedition and sentenced him to  life.
Soli Sorabjee, Former Attorney General, finds the judgement  shocking and has questioned the validity of life imprisonment for the  doctor. He says, "I think the judgement is shocking. After all Binayak  Sen has a fine record. The evidence against him seems flimsy. The judge  has misapplied the section. And in any case the sentence is atrocious,  savage."
Amnesty International, which called Dr Binayak Sen a  prisoner of 'conscience', has slammed the verdict. In a strong statement  it said, "The life sentence handed down against Dr Binayak Sen by a  court in the India state of Chhattisgarh violates international fair  trial standards. Life in prison is an unusually harsh sentence for  anyone, much less for an internationally recognized human rights  defender who has never been charged with any act of violence."
Several organisations have joined hands to protest against the verdict.
"We  have people in this country who have robbed the country of crores of  rupees. And somebody who has worked amongst the poor for so many years  of his life gets life imprisonment", said Anand Patwardhan, documentary  filmmaker.
It is said that Dr Binayak Sen was shocked when the judge held him guilty for sedition.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/proof-must-back-charges-in-binayak-case-excji/138820-37-64.html 
 Former  CJI Justice VN Khare has said evidence has to prove sedition charge  beyond a shadow of doubt. If the evidence is weak, the High Court can  set aside the order, he said.
Justice Ahmadi, too, said that evidence in sedition case has to be clinching against the accused.
The  first time when I saw the newspaper I was taken aback. The charge is  very serious and the punishment prescribed is also very serious.  Evidence has to be clinching against the accused . If proof is weak I  would not expect court to sustain conviction. In deciding such cases  judiciary should show great concern," he said.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/intellectuals-appeal-for-binayak-sens-release/138708-3.html 
 Expressing  shock over awarding of life sentence to rights activist Binayak Sen on  charges of sedition, over 80 intellectuals including Noam Chomsky on  Monday demanded that his appeal be heard "expeditiously" with  "enlightened reason" and sought his immediate release on bail.
They  claimed that Sen never resorted to violence or incited anyone else to  do so. On the contrary, as a doctor and a human rights activist he stood  up in defence of the rights of downtrodden, said a statement signed by  Romila Thapar, Prabhat Patnaik, Ashok Mitra and Mushirul Hasan among  others.
"Yet he has been handed down this sentence whose savagery is unbelievable," it said.
Sen,  Naxal ideologue Narayan Sanyal and Kolkata businessman Piyush Guha were  sentenced to life imprisonment last Friday for colluding with Maoists  to establish a network to fight the state.
58-year-old Sen, a  paediatrician by training and vice-president of People's Union of Civil  Liberties, had been accused of acting as courier for Sanyal, who was in  jail, by carrying his messages and letters to the underground Maoists.
The  intellectuals said, "Such an action on the part of the State in the  name of preserving the Constitutional order will only serve to undermine  that Constitutional order itself.
"It will inevitably raise the  thought in the minds of many that an order within which the activities  of a person like Dr Sen can be held to be seditious is not worth  defending," the statement said.
Noting that such an impression  must be avoided, they said, the damage done by this "shocking" verdict  must be undone and sought his immediate release till the end of the  appeal.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case/138940-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/138940/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case.html 
Arundhati  Roy while speaking to CNN-IBN's Rupashree Nanda about the Binayak Sen  judgement said that she never expected the judgement to be fair but she  was taken aback at the extent of the unfairness. This is what she had to  say.
Rupashree Nanda: What was your first  reaction when you heard that Binayak Sen and two others have been  convicted for sedition and life sentence has been awarded to them?
Arundhati Roy:  I was not expecting the judgment to be fair but I was taken aback at  the extent of the unfairness. In a sense, it seemed as though the  evidence produced in the court and the judgment were just not connected  to each other. My reaction was that in some way it was a declaration -  it wasn't a judgment it was a declaration of intent, it was a message  and it was a warning to others. So that works in two ways. The warning  will be taken into account of. I think perhaps people who passed this  judgment were not expecting that it would unite people in outrage the  way it has done.
Rupashree Nanda: Why didn't you expect a fair judgment?
Arundhati Roy:  We have been following this case for some years now. The reporting of  the trial was coming through. The fact that some of the evidence was  fabricated, what evidence there was, was so weak - even Narayan Sanyal  who seems to be the kingpin around who the whole sedition case was built  up wasn't accused of sedition when Binayak was arrested. So there is an  atmosphere of prejudice and I think what is really worrying is that the  infrastructure of democracy, the courts, the media is being rented out  to the mob. Whichever side you are on, whether you are a corporate,  business man, middleclass, Hindutva or not - it is something that  anybody who has any kind of affection should be worried about.
Rupashree Nanda:  Do you think that the state can ever walk the tightrope between  protection democratic rights and safeguarding against terror? Is that a  fair expectation?
Arundhati Roy: The definition  of terror is a loose one. We can argue about that. But such laws have  always been there, whether it is TADA or POTA. If you look at the  history, how many people have been convicted among the accused... it is  1% or 0.1 %. Because people who are really outlaws, either rebels or  terrorists are not interested in the laws. So those laws are almost  always used against those who are not terrorists or not outlaws in some  way. And this is beyond Binayak Sen. Point is, if you are talking lets  say about the Maoists who are a banned party - why are they banned ?  Because they believe in violence - but today's papers talk about  Hindutva elements being involved in the Samjhauta blast. Even mainstream  political parties have been involved in acts of heinous violence, even  amounting to genocide but they are not banned. So what you choose to  ban, what you choose not to ban all these things are political  decisions. Today, the situation is it is the government and the economic  policies which are actively performing anti- constitutional activity.  They are the ones who are going against PESA ( Panchayat Extension  Scheduled Areas Act ), they are the ones whose economic policies are  resulting in displacement, in 800 million people living under 20 rupees a  day, in 17000 farmers committing suicide in a year...
Rupashree Nanda:  But does that justify violence. A CNN IBN poll had shown that a  majority of people sympathized with the Maoist cause but disagreed with  their methods. And yes mainstream political parties do indulge in  violence, but they do not say that in their manifestoes? There is a  difference?
Arundhati Roy: Yes, I agree there is  a crucial difference. One can question the methods of the Maoists of  course. But I am trying to say that these laws are so loose and, so  draconian that you and I and everybody are a criminal. It does not work  for Maoists it works for those who are not Maoists. It criminalizes  democratic activity and pushes more and more people outside the pale of  the law. So it is actually counter productive in the end. If you have  somebody who is indulging in violence, you have plenty of ordinary laws  to deal with that. So to have laws where even the tendency to cause  disaffection against the state is a crime and an offense means that all  of us are criminals.
Rupashree Nanda: What would be an adequate safeguard?
Arundhati Roy:  See, I think you got to understand that all this stems from a people's  lack of faith in institutions of the state, from a people who are  beginning to believe that they can expect no justice from any democratic  institutions. So there are no quick fixes. You have to signal to the  people that you are taking cognizance of their dissent and that you are  prepared to change tack. Otherwise, you are going to have a situation in  which you polarize things, you create a violent atmosphere, you have a  police state or a military state %u2026 and that is not going to benefit  anyone. Because you cannot impoverish 800 million people and expect to  be secure. It won't happen.
More and more people are being charged and convicted for sedition.
You  are creating a situation where your definition of what constitutes anti  national and what is the definition of doing something for the greater  common good are completely conflicted and corrupted. A man like Bin yak  Sen who worked amongst the poorest of the poor is a criminal and those  who have scammed 175,000 cores of the public exchequer with the help of  the judiciary, the media and everybody else... there is a little tut-tut  and everyone is going about their lives, their farm houses, their bmws .  So the definition of anti %u2013 national activity is itself corrupted  now. .anyone who is talking about justice is being called a Maoist. You  have a whole spectrum of people's movements that are challenging  policies that are leading to this kind of dispossession and this kind of  displacement and this kind of terrible despair among people. So it is a  word game. Who decides what is in the national good.
Rupashree Nanda: There is an FIR in Delhi against you too - do you fear that you might be charged for sedition?
Arundhati Roy:  Well, right now it is just private parties. The person who filed the  case is the non official campaign manager of the BJP. It is not the  state that is doing it and I don't want to overreact or make myself a  martyr. In the case of Binayak and hundreds of others who are in jail,  the process is the punishment - their lives have been destroyed. Even if  he will be released on bail, he will be impoverished by legal fees. He  has been made to give up his practice doing the great work he has been  doing. It is a way of silencing you, tripping you up, choking off the  air supply and it is very, very worrying.
Rupashree Nanda: Have you ever seen things so bad? People are scared of who they are meeting, who they are talking to?
Arundhati Roy:  Listen, in places like Kashmir and Manipur it's been like this for  years - now the fact is that it is seeping into the heart of the  capital, it is seeping into our lovely drawing rooms. And that is a very  worrying sign- but it's been happening in Bastar for years now.
Rupashree Nanda: As a writer, how would you sum up the climate we live in today?
Arundhati Roy:  My point is that these set of policies cannot be implemented and pushed  through without us turning into a police or a military state. We have  heard the Radian tapes, and the scandal about 2 G has been exposed. But  the scandal about the privatization of the natural resources is equally  great with a much greater human component. It is arbitrary. It is people  jumping of their treadmill and saying that you'll take the coal, you'll  take the gas, and you'll take the housing. So we are a nation in  crisis. And if we are going to put a black executioner's hood over all  the people who are blowing whistles and raising the alarm, they are not  people who hate this country. If you go back and read what they have  been saying and writing and saying, you will find that they predicted  this situation a long time ago. These are people you need to listen to,  not send to jail, not sentence to life, and not kill.
Conclusion:  We the petition signers / signatories are appalled by the shocking  verdict. People in India have shamelessly robbed it of crores of rupees  through various scams, instigated / incited violence against others on  the grounds of religion, language, caste, reservation / quota, places of  worship and perpetrated crimes against humanity in general and women in  particular but are still roaming scot-free shamelessly. Binayak Sen has  worked amongst the poor for so many years of his life but has never  encouraged or justified violence. Therefore, we request for expeditious  hearing of his appeal and to grant him immediate bail till the end of  the appeal process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This  petition's been addressed to the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India,  President, Prime Minister (PM), Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA),  Union Ministry of Law and National Advisory Council (NAC).  less
 Created on Dec 30, 2010
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case/138940-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/138940/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case.html
 30 Minutes: Binayak Sen, the dissenting doctor Watch Videos
http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/93809/30-minutes-binayak-sen-the-dissenting-doctor.html
 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/videoshow/7179940.cms
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/videos/news/Dr-Binayak-Sen-found-guilty-of-sedition-treason/videoshow/7156191.cms
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/dr-binayak-sen-3-others-held-guilty-of-treason/138496-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/human-rights-activists-slam-binayak-sen-verdict/138596-3.html
We  the petition signers / signatories are appalled by the shocking  verdict. People in India have shamelessly robbed it of crores of rupees  through various scams, instigated / incited violence against others on  the grounds of religion, language, caste, reservation / quota, places of  worship and perpetrated c... more
Created on Dec 30, 2010
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case/138940-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/138940/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case.html
 30 Minutes: Binayak Sen, the dissenting doctor Watch Videos
http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/93809/30-minutes-binayak-sen-the-dissenting-doctor.html
 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/videoshow/7179940.cms
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/videos/news/Dr-Binayak-Sen-found-guilty-of-sedition-treason/videoshow/7156191.cms
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/dr-binayak-sen-3-others-held-guilty-of-treason/138496-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/human-rights-activists-slam-binayak-sen-verdict/138596-3.html
We  the petition signers / signatories are appalled by the shocking  verdict. People in India have shamelessly robbed it of crores of rupees  through various scams, instigated / incited violence against others on  the grounds of religion, language, caste, reservation / quota, places of  worship and perpetrated crimes against humanity in general and women in  particular but are still roaming scot-free shamelessly. Binayak Sen has  worked amongst the poor for so many years of his life but has never  encouraged or justified violence. Therefore, we request for expeditious  hearing of his appeal and to grant him immediate bail till the end of  the appeal process.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/proof-must-back-charges-in-binayak-case-excji/138820-37-64.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/binayak-sens-mother-to-move-court/138822-37.html
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/willing-to-fight-for-binayak-sen-jethmalani/138763-3.html 
 Additional  District and Sessions Judge BP Verma held Dr Sen, Naxal ideologue  Narayan Sanyal and Kolkata businessman Piyush Guha guilty under  provisions of section 124 IPC (sedition), 120 B IPC (conspiracy) and  Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act on December 24. Dr Sen, Sanyal  and Guha have been sentenced to life.
A shocking verdict Opinion - Editorials - The Hindu Saturday, December 25, 2010
 http://www.hindu.com/2010/12/25/stories/2010122566591400.htm 
The  life sentence handed down to Binayak Sen by a Chhattisgarh trial court  on Friday is so over the top and outrageous that it calls into question  the fundamentals of the Indian justice system. The trial judge shocked  the conscience of the nation by finding the eminent doctor and rights  activist guilty of sedition and conspiring to wage war against the state  under Sections 120(B) and 124(A) of the Indian Penal Code, Sections  8(1), (2), (3), and (5) of the draconian Chhattisgarh Special Public  Security Act, and Section 39 (2) of the Unlawful Activities Prevention  Act (as amended in 2004). The fact that the Chhattisgarh police's case  against Dr. Sen consisted of pretty thin material was taken into the  realm of the absurd by the public prosecutor tying himself in knots in  an attempt to burnish the doctor's alleged sins. So it was that an  innocuous email message sent by his wife, Ilina, to the director of the  Indian Social Institute - a Delhi-based institution which happens to  share an acronym with Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence directorate  - got converted into "suspicious communication" with the dreaded "ISI."  Another email referring to an occupant of the White House as a  "chimpanzee" was introduced by the prosecutor as evidence of the kind of  "code language" terrorists resort to. But tragically, it is the  Chhattisgarh police that have had the last laugh in this round.
The  broad charge against Dr. Sen of helping the banned Community Party of  India (Maoist) wage war against the state was constructed by the police  around the scaffolding of his supposed relationship with Narayan Sanyal,  an alleged leader of the Maoists who was incarcerated in Raipur jail  following his arrest in 2006. In his capacity as a medical doctor and  head of the People's Union for Civil Liberties, Dr. Sen often met Mr.  Sanyal in jail but each of these meetings, as the jail authorities  subsequently testified, was closely supervised and afforded no  opportunity for the conveying of messages to the Maoist leadership. So  the police hit upon the strategy of linking him to the recovery from  Kolkata-based businessman Piyush Guha of a letter allegedly written by  Mr. Sanyal. During the trial, the defence counsel pointed to numerous  holes in the police case, including the introduction of an unsigned,  typewritten letter supposedly sent by the Maoists to Dr. Sen, despite  the fact that the letter found no mention in the attested list of  documents recovered from his residence the same day. It goes without  saying that Dr. Sen has the right to appeal the conviction and the  savage sentence. The higher judiciary, which did not exactly cover  itself in glory by denying him bail for nearly two years, must ensure  the expeditious hearing of his appeal and grant him immediate bail till  the end of the appeal process.
Raj throwback - Editorial - Times of India, December 27, 2010
 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/opinion/edit-page/Raj-throwback/articleshow/7168004.cms 
 The  life sentence imposed on globally acclaimed human rights activist  Binayak Sen on the charge of sedition is easily the most scandalous  abuse of a colonial remnant in independent India. Judging by the  intensity of civil society's outrage, the verdict by a trial court from  Chhattisgarh might provide impetus for a fresh review of the arbitrary  manner in which this provision continues to be invoked to gag dissenting  voices.
This is the latest in a series of cases in which either  the prosecution or the court appears to have missed the strict condition  on which Section 124A of the Indian Penal Code has survived the test of  free speech guaranteed by the Constitution. The Supreme Court ruled in  1962 that no sedition charge can be made unless the disaffection against  the state spread by the accused was found to be a direct incitement to  violence or armed rebellion. This meant that even if the prosecution's  version were accepted that he had couriered letters from a jailed Maoist  leader to his associates, the trial court would have had to establish  that Sen's words or deeds were a direct incitement to violence or  jeopardised public order. Without showing how any intent of violence  could be attributed to a human rights activist with a lifetime service  in rural healthcare, the trial court held him guilty of criminal  conspiracy to commit sedition in the teeth of the law laid down by the  Supreme Court.
Such a cavalier approach reinforces the impression  that the judiciary is allowing itself to be overrun by security  arguments. Blaming the sins of the Maoists on Sen, the trial court  awarded him the highest possible penalty of life sentence. Clearly,  India could do without the shame of jailing a humanist for sedition while  the hate-mongers responsible for the cataclysmic events of 1984 ( Delhi  massacre), 1992 (Ayodhya demolition) and 2002 (Gujarat riots) strut  around as patriots.
Quite apart from the question  whether Sen qualifies to be called a seditionist, the December 24  verdict deserves to be overturned for overlooking serious gaps in  evidence. That the three incriminating letters allegedly carried by Sen  had been recovered from co-accused Piyush Guha was by no means proved  beyond doubt. The recovery story hinges entirely on the testimony of a  cloth merchant who admitted to have been called by the police as a  seizure witness when Guha was already in their custody. The trial court  also overlooked discrepancies in the prosecution's version of where Guha  had been arrested. This miscarriage of justice cannot be ignored,  especially due to its larger ramifications.
Justice outraged Deccan Herald - Editorial - Monday December 27 2010
 http://www.deccanherald.com/content/123872/justice-outraged.html 
The evidence produced against Sen is unconvincing.
 The  conviction of celebrated human rights activist Binayak Sen for treason  by the Raipur sessions court on Friday has raised question about the  country's system of justice. Sen, along with two others, has been  awarded a harsh life sentence for allegedly aiding and abetting Maoist  activities. But the evidence produced against Sen is very unconvincing  and there are strong reasons to believe that it was manufactured or  doctored to implicate him in a false case. He has been hounded and  persecuted by the police and the authorities in Chhattisgarh for long  and has suffered much for his commitment to the welfare of poor tribals  in the state. He was even denied the normal right of bail after he was  arrested in 2006 and it was after spending nearly two years in jail that  he won freedom at the intervention of the supreme court.
The  prosecution charge that Sen acted as a conduit between a jailed Maoist  leader and a businessman is weak because all the meetings between the  two in jail were under the supervision of the authorities. The defence  claim that evidence was planted to incriminate Sen seems to be correct  in the light of production of letters and documents which were not  recovered from his residence. The ridiculousness of the prosecution  claim became clear in the court during the trial when it accused Sen of  links with the Pakistani ISI on the basis of an e-mail message to an  organisation with that acronym. It turned out the organisation was the  Indian Social Institute (ISI) in Delhi.
There is no doubt that  Sen did not get a fair trial and his conviction has tarnished the  reputation of the country. He has become an international symbol of the  struggle of the poor and marginalised people for their legitimate  rights. The Amnesty International considers him a prisoner of  conscience. A man who has been honoured with international awards for  his work among the poor, and on whose behalf Nobel laureates have  pleaded with the government, should not be treated the way he has been.  The Chhattisgarh police and the trial judge who accepted its story  uncritically have sent out a dire warning to all those who value and  work for human rights. It is the disregard for the rights of the poor  that has triggered the Maoist revolt. It is unfortunate that this truth  is not recognised.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/human-rights-activists-slam-binayak-sen-verdict/138596-3.html 
 It's  the verdict which has left many across India completely shocked. Dr  Binayak Sen being pronounced guilty by a Raipur Sessions Court has left  human rights activists, leading jurists and writers appalled.
A  travesty of justice: That is how leading human rights defenders,  activists and jurists have greeted the verdict of the Raipur sessions  court which held Dr Binayak Sen guity of sedition and sentenced him to  life.
Soli Sorabjee, Former Attorney General, finds the judgement  shocking and has questioned the validity of life imprisonment for the  doctor. He says, "I think the judgement is shocking. After all Binayak  Sen has a fine record. The evidence against him seems flimsy. The judge  has misapplied the section. And in any case the sentence is atrocious,  savage."
Amnesty International, which called Dr Binayak Sen a  prisoner of 'conscience', has slammed the verdict. In a strong statement  it said, "The life sentence handed down against Dr Binayak Sen by a  court in the India state of Chhattisgarh violates international fair  trial standards. Life in prison is an unusually harsh sentence for  anyone, much less for an internationally recognized human rights  defender who has never been charged with any act of violence."
Several organisations have joined hands to protest against the verdict.
"We  have people in this country who have robbed the country of crores of  rupees. And somebody who has worked amongst the poor for so many years  of his life gets life imprisonment", said Anand Patwardhan, documentary  filmmaker.
It is said that Dr Binayak Sen was shocked when the judge held him guilty for sedition.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/proof-must-back-charges-in-binayak-case-excji/138820-37-64.html 
 Former  CJI Justice VN Khare has said evidence has to prove sedition charge  beyond a shadow of doubt. If the evidence is weak, the High Court can  set aside the order, he said.
Justice Ahmadi, too, said that evidence in sedition case has to be clinching against the accused.
The  first time when I saw the newspaper I was taken aback. The charge is  very serious and the punishment prescribed is also very serious.  Evidence has to be clinching against the accused . If proof is weak I  would not expect court to sustain conviction. In deciding such cases  judiciary should show great concern," he said.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/intellectuals-appeal-for-binayak-sens-release/138708-3.html 
 Expressing  shock over awarding of life sentence to rights activist Binayak Sen on  charges of sedition, over 80 intellectuals including Noam Chomsky on  Monday demanded that his appeal be heard "expeditiously" with  "enlightened reason" and sought his immediate release on bail.
They  claimed that Sen never resorted to violence or incited anyone else to  do so. On the contrary, as a doctor and a human rights activist he stood  up in defence of the rights of downtrodden, said a statement signed by  Romila Thapar, Prabhat Patnaik, Ashok Mitra and Mushirul Hasan among  others.
"Yet he has been handed down this sentence whose savagery is unbelievable," it said.
Sen,  Naxal ideologue Narayan Sanyal and Kolkata businessman Piyush Guha were  sentenced to life imprisonment last Friday for colluding with Maoists  to establish a network to fight the state.
58-year-old Sen, a  paediatrician by training and vice-president of People's Union of Civil  Liberties, had been accused of acting as courier for Sanyal, who was in  jail, by carrying his messages and letters to the underground Maoists.
The  intellectuals said, "Such an action on the part of the State in the  name of preserving the Constitutional order will only serve to undermine  that Constitutional order itself.
"It will inevitably raise the  thought in the minds of many that an order within which the activities  of a person like Dr Sen can be held to be seditious is not worth  defending," the statement said.
Noting that such an impression  must be avoided, they said, the damage done by this "shocking" verdict  must be undone and sought his immediate release till the end of the  appeal.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case/138940-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/138940/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case.html 
Arundhati  Roy while speaking to CNN-IBN's Rupashree Nanda about the Binayak Sen  judgement said that she never expected the judgement to be fair but she  was taken aback at the extent of the unfairness. This is what she had to  say.
Rupashree Nanda: What was your first  reaction when you heard that Binayak Sen and two others have been  convicted for sedition and life sentence has been awarded to them?
Arundhati Roy:  I was not expecting the judgment to be fair but I was taken aback at  the extent of the unfairness. In a sense, it seemed as though the  evidence produced in the court and the judgment were just not connected  to each other. My reaction was that in some way it was a declaration -  it wasn't a judgment it was a declaration of intent, it was a message  and it was a warning to others. So that works in two ways. The warning  will be taken into account of. I think perhaps people who passed this  judgment were not expecting that it would unite people in outrage the  way it has done.
Rupashree Nanda: Why didn't you expect a fair judgment?
Arundhati Roy:  We have been following this case for some years now. The reporting of  the trial was coming through. The fact that some of the evidence was  fabricated, what evidence there was, was so weak - even Narayan Sanyal  who seems to be the kingpin around who the whole sedition case was built  up wasn't accused of sedition when Binayak was arrested. So there is an  atmosphere of prejudice and I think what is really worrying is that the  infrastructure of democracy, the courts, the media is being rented out  to the mob. Whichever side you are on, whether you are a corporate,  business man, middleclass, Hindutva or not - it is something that  anybody who has any kind of affection should be worried about.
Rupashree Nanda:  Do you think that the state can ever walk the tightrope between  protection democratic rights and safeguarding against terror? Is that a  fair expectation?
Arundhati Roy: The definition  of terror is a loose one. We can argue about that. But such laws have  always been there, whether it is TADA or POTA. If you look at the  history, how many people have been convicted among the accused... it is  1% or 0.1 %. Because people who are really outlaws, either rebels or  terrorists are not interested in the laws. So those laws are almost  always used against those who are not terrorists or not outlaws in some  way. And this is beyond Binayak Sen. Point is, if you are talking lets  say about the Maoists who are a banned party - why are they banned ?  Because they believe in violence - but today's papers talk about  Hindutva elements being involved in the Samjhauta blast. Even mainstream  political parties have been involved in acts of heinous violence, even  amounting to genocide but they are not banned. So what you choose to  ban, what you choose not to ban all these things are political  decisions. Today, the situation is it is the government and the economic  policies which are actively performing anti- constitutional activity.  They are the ones who are going against PESA ( Panchayat Extension  Scheduled Areas Act ), they are the ones whose economic policies are  resulting in displacement, in 800 million people living under 20 rupees a  day, in 17000 farmers committing suicide in a year...
Rupashree Nanda:  But does that justify violence. A CNN IBN poll had shown that a  majority of people sympathized with the Maoist cause but disagreed with  their methods. And yes mainstream political parties do indulge in  violence, but they do not say that in their manifestoes? There is a  difference?
Arundhati Roy: Yes, I agree there is  a crucial difference. One can question the methods of the Maoists of  course. But I am trying to say that these laws are so loose and, so  draconian that you and I and everybody are a criminal. It does not work  for Maoists it works for those who are not Maoists. It criminalizes  democratic activity and pushes more and more people outside the pale of  the law. So it is actually counter productive in the end. If you have  somebody who is indulging in violence, you have plenty of ordinary laws  to deal with that. So to have laws where even the tendency to cause  disaffection against the state is a crime and an offense means that all  of us are criminals.
Rupashree Nanda: What would be an adequate safeguard?
Arundhati Roy:  See, I think you got to understand that all this stems from a people's  lack of faith in institutions of the state, from a people who are  beginning to believe that they can expect no justice from any democratic  institutions. So there are no quick fixes. You have to signal to the  people that you are taking cognizance of their dissent and that you are  prepared to change tack. Otherwise, you are going to have a situation in  which you polarize things, you create a violent atmosphere, you have a  police state or a military state %u2026 and that is not going to benefit  anyone. Because you cannot impoverish 800 million people and expect to  be secure. It won't happen.
More and more people are being charged and convicted for sedition.
You  are creating a situation where your definition of what constitutes anti  national and what is the definition of doing something for the greater  common good are completely conflicted and corrupted. A man like Bin yak  Sen who worked amongst the poorest of the poor is a criminal and those  who have scammed 175,000 cores of the public exchequer with the help of  the judiciary, the media and everybody else... there is a little tut-tut  and everyone is going about their lives, their farm houses, their bmws .  So the definition of anti %u2013 national activity is itself corrupted  now. .anyone who is talking about justice is being called a Maoist. You  have a whole spectrum of people's movements that are challenging  policies that are leading to this kind of dispossession and this kind of  displacement and this kind of terrible despair among people. So it is a  word game. Who decides what is in the national good.
Rupashree Nanda: There is an FIR in Delhi against you too - do you fear that you might be charged for sedition?
Arundhati Roy:  Well, right now it is just private parties. The person who filed the  case is the non official campaign manager of the BJP. It is not the  state that is doing it and I don't want to overreact or make myself a  martyr. In the case of Binayak and hundreds of others who are in jail,  the process is the punishment - their lives have been destroyed. Even if  he will be released on bail, he will be impoverished by legal fees. He  has been made to give up his practice doing the great work he has been  doing. It is a way of silencing you, tripping you up, choking off the  air supply and it is very, very worrying.
Rupashree Nanda: Have you ever seen things so bad? People are scared of who they are meeting, who they are talking to?
Arundhati Roy:  Listen, in places like Kashmir and Manipur it's been like this for  years - now the fact is that it is seeping into the heart of the  capital, it is seeping into our lovely drawing rooms. And that is a very  worrying sign- but it's been happening in Bastar for years now.
Rupashree Nanda: As a writer, how would you sum up the climate we live in today?
Arundhati Roy:  My point is that these set of policies cannot be implemented and pushed  through without us turning into a police or a military state. We have  heard the Radian tapes, and the scandal about 2 G has been exposed. But  the scandal about the privatization of the natural resources is equally  great with a much greater human component. It is arbitrary. It is people  jumping of their treadmill and saying that you'll take the coal, you'll  take the gas, and you'll take the housing. So we are a nation in  crisis. And if we are going to put a black executioner's hood over all  the people who are blowing whistles and raising the alarm, they are not  people who hate this country. If you go back and read what they have  been saying and writing and saying, you will find that they predicted  this situation a long time ago. These are people you need to listen to,  not send to jail, not sentence to life, and not kill.
Conclusion:  We the petition signers / signatories are appalled by the shocking  verdict. People in India have shamelessly robbed it of crores of rupees  through various scams, instigated / incited violence against others on  the grounds of religion, language, caste, reservation / quota, places of  worship and perpetrated crimes against humanity in general and women in  particular but are still roaming scot-free shamelessly. Binayak Sen has  worked amongst the poor for so many years of his life but has never  encouraged or justified violence. Therefore, we request for expeditious  hearing of his appeal and to grant him immediate bail till the end of  the appeal process.
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This  petition's been addressed to the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India,  President, Prime Minister (PM), Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA),  Union Ministry of Law and National Advisory Council (NAC).  less
Created on Dec 30, 2010
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case/138940-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/138940/never-expected-a-fair-verdict-in-binayak-case.html
 30 Minutes: Binayak Sen, the dissenting doctor Watch Videos
http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/93809/30-minutes-binayak-sen-the-dissenting-doctor.html
 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/videoshow/7179940.cms
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/videos/news/Dr-Binayak-Sen-found-guilty-of-sedition-treason/videoshow/7156191.cms
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/dr-binayak-sen-3-others-held-guilty-of-treason/138496-3.html
 http://ibnlive.in.com/news/human-rights-activists-slam-binayak-sen-verdict/138596-3.html
We  the petition signers / signatories are appalled by the shocking  verdict. People in India have shamelessly robbed it of crores of rupees  through various scams, instigated / incited violence against others on  the grounds of religion, language, caste, reservation / quota, places of  worship and perpetrated ... more

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                  This petition is now closed.
Please take action on these important issues below., this petition is now closed.
Please take action on these important issues below.Palash, this petition is now closed.
You signed on December 31, 2010. Please take action on these important issues below.Palash, You signed on December 31, 2010.
Your signature has been delivered to:Hon'ble Supreme Court, President, PM, MHA, Union Law Ministry, NAC

we signed "Release jailed for life human rights activist Binayak Sen"
Release Binayak without delay
You can muzzle people's voices. Can you muzzle their thoughts?
São Luís, Brazil
Has autocracy and imperialism replaced the much celebrated democracy in this country? I vehemently protest against this court judgment.
A shocking case that could happen anywhere to any of us given the immense power of global capital and factionalism.
Dr Sen is an asset to his community.
People in India have shamelessly robbed it of crores of rupees through various scams, incited / justified violence against others on the grounds of religion, language, caste, community, reservation / quota, places of worship and perpetrated crimes against humanity in general and women in particular but are still roaming scot-free shamelessly. A humanist is jailed for life for sedition and treason while the hate-mongers who have no conscience of their own and have constantly challenged the law and constitution of India by inventing phrases like vote bank politics, pseudo-secularism and minority appeasement and are responsible for the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, 1992 Ayodhya/Babri Masjid demolition (despite having given a joint written undertaking / commitment to the Hon'ble Supreme Court that it wouldn't be harmed on Dec 06, 1992), 1992-93 Bombay/Mumbai riots and 2002 Gujarat riots walk around shamelessly as patriots.
--
Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/


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