The Forum for the Protection of Free Speech
and Expression protests the rising incidents of assault on free speech
across the country, including the forced incarceration of writer
Taslima Nasreen.
At a time when India is projecting itself on the world’s stage as a
modern democracy, while it hosts international literary festivals and
book fairs, the Government of India, most mainstream political parties
and their armed squads are mounting a concerted assault on peoples’
right to free speech.
It is a matter of abiding shame that even as some of the world’s best
known writers were attending the Jaipur literary festival and
prestigious publishers were doing business at the World Book Fair in
Delhi, the exiled Bengali writer Taslima Nasreen was (and is) being
held in custody by the Government of India at an undisclosed location
somewhere in or around Delhi in conditions that amount to house arrest.
Contrary to misleading press reports stating that her visa has been
extended, her visa expires on February 18, after which she is liable to
be deported or remain confined as an illegal alien.
Taslima Nasreen is only one in a long list of journalists, writers,
scholars and artists who have been persecuted, banned, imprisoned,
forced into exile or had their work desecrated in this country. At
different points of time, different governments have either directly or
indirectly resorted to these measures in order to fan the flames of
religious, regional and ethnic obscurantism to gain popularity and
expand their ‘vote banks’. Every day the threat to free speech and
expression increases.
In the case of Taslima Nasreen it was the CPI(M) and not any religious
or sectarian group who first tried to ban her book Dwikhondito some
years ago. The ban was lifted by the Calcutta High Court and the book
was in the market and on best-seller lists in West Bengal for several
years. During those years Taslima Nasreen lived and worked as a free
person in Kolkata without any threat to her person, without being the
cause of public disorder, protests or demonstrations.
Ironically, Taslima Nasreen’s troubles in India began immediately after
the Nandigram uprising when the people of Nandigram, mostly Dalits and
Muslims, rose to resist the West Bengal government’s attempt to take
over their land and tens of thousands of people marched in Kolkata to
protest the government’s actions. Within days a little known group
claiming to speak for the Muslim community asked for a ban on
Dwikhondito and demanded that Taslima Nasreen be deported. The
CPI(M)-led government of West Bengal immediately caved in to the
demand, informed her that it could not offer her security and lost no
time in deporting her from West Bengal against her will. The
Congress-led UPA government has condoned this act by holding her in
custody in Delhi and refusing, thus far, to extend her visa and relieve
her of her public humiliation. They have once again played the suicidal
card of pitting minority communalism against majority communalism, a
game that can only end in disaster.
Inevitably, hoping to make political capital out of the situation, the
BJP is publicly shedding crocodile tears over Taslima Nasreen, going to
the extent of offering her asylum in Gujarat. It seems to expect people
to forget that the BJP, VHP and RSS cadres have been at the forefront
of harassing, persecuting, threatening and vandalising newspaper
offices, television studios, galleries, cinema halls, filmmakers,
artists and writers. Or that they have forced MF Husain, one of India’s
best known painters, into exile.
Meanwhile, in states like Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka,
away from the public glare of press conferences and television cameras,
journalists are being threatened and even imprisoned. Prashant Rahi
from Uttarakhand, Praful Jha from Chhattisgarh, Srisailum from Andhra
Pradesh, P. Govind Kutty from Kerala, are a few examples. As we speak,
Govind Kutty, who is on a hunger strike in prison, is being force-fed,
bound hand and foot. Scores of ordinary people, including people like
civil rights activist Binayak Sen, have been arrested and held
illegally under false charges.
We the undersigned do not necessarily agree with, endorse or admire the
views or the work of those whose rights we seek to defend. Many of us
have serious differences with them. We agree that many of them do
offend our (or someone else’s) religious, political and ideological
sensibilities. However, we believe that instead of making them
simultaneously into both victims and heroes, their work should be
viewed, read, criticised and vigorously debated. We believe that the
freedom of speech and expression is an absolute and inalienable right,
and is the keystone of a modern democracy.
If the Indian government deports Taslima Nasreen or holds her as an
illegal alien, it will shame and diminish all of us. We demand that she
be given a resident’s permit or, if she has applied for it, Indian
citizenship, and that she be allowed to live and work freely in India.
We demand that the spurious cases filed against MF Husain be dropped
and that he be allowed to return to a normal life in India. We demand
that the journalists who are being illegally detained in prison against
all principles of natural justice be released immediately.
http://www.sabrang.com/cc/archive/2008/feb08/human.html
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