The Proposed Communal Violence Bill 2009 in its present form is
totally unacceptable! - Online Petition

This is an urgent call to all democrats and responsible citizens to
register their protest to the government of India for not having taken
into consideration widespread demands since 2005 by independent legal
experts, human rights defenders and secular activists for a much
needed proper legislation on Communal Violence. Despite repeated
efforts from civil society groups seeking specific changes in the
proposed communal violence, the government has turned a deaf ear.

In the present form the Communal Violence Bill has been rejected by
all major anti-communal groups in India and it will prove to be
dangerous for the minorities, Muslims, Christians and all others. The
govt is pushing the bill. We must mount pressure within this week to
stop the govt from tabling this bill in the Parliament.

Pasted below is a public statement that was issued after the recent
National Consultation on the Communal Violence Bill (see also a
critique of the CV Bill: http://www.anhadin.net/article97.html).

We appeal to all to urgently endorse the public statement by adding
their names online. We will print and send the above public statement
(with all signatures gathered by the March 5th, 2010) to the Prime
Minister of India, The Home Minister and to the UPA Chairperson.

* To directly endorse and sign the public statement go to:
[http://www.anhadin.net/article101.html] [signatories will recieve an
automatically generated confirmation mail to validate your signatures.
Please remember to also look into you spam folders too incase you cant
find the confirmation mail.]

* We also invite all signatories to send individual faxes / e-mails to
The Prime Minister, Mr Manmohan Singh ( fax-23019334, ) UPA
Chairperson and Leader of the Congress Party Mrs Sonia Gandhi (fax-
23018651 ) The Home minister, Mr P. Chidambaram (fax- 23094221)  Rahul
Gandhi (23012410/ [email protected]) and send a copy to us
([email protected]) please.

Please treat this as urgent.

You can use a free faxing facility to send you faxes directly via the
internet: (http://www.tpc.int/fax_cover_auto.html) [you must prefix
the fax numbers with: +91-11 ]

I sincerely hope we can mobilise atleast 100 letters to the authorities.

Shabnam Hashmi
Anhad

-----------------------------------------------------------

Proposed Model Letter For Those Sending Individual Letters

Date:

To: Honorable Prime Minister of India, Dr Manmohan Singh

Subject: We demand that the government revise the proposed Communal
Violence Bill

Text:

Dear Prime Minister,

I [or we] write to you to vigourously protest against the proposed
Communal Violence Bill in its present form that is soon to be tabled
in the Parliment. As responsible citizens of this country we find it
truly reprehensible and unfair that wise counsel of anti communal
groups, human rights defenders and independent legal experts was not
taken stock of and their very important suggestions and modifications
have been totally ignored. The bill in its present form as is being
proposed is dangerous for the health of our secular democracy and it
could cause great harm to protect victims of communal violence. We
want you to urgently intervene and ensure that the vitally needed
legislation on Communal Violence be reviewed and revised. We want your
government not to rush in a law for electoral or short term
considerations. We want this important law to be amongst the finest
and the best in the world; As citizens of country that has been torn
and wounded by communal strife, we want a law that best protects us
and gives us justice. You will set a fine democratic precedent by
taking a step back and listening to our plea.

Yours sincerely

-----------------------------------

Statement Issued at National Consultation on The Communal Violence
(Prevention, Control & Rehabilitation of Victims) Bill, 2009

February 12-13, 2010, New Delhi

The demand for a law on communal violence emerged from a brutal record
of recurring violence in our country, the increasing occurrence of
gender-based crimes in communal conflagrations, and complete impunity
for mass crimes. The reasons are many - lack of political will to
prosecute perpetrators, State complicity in communal crimes, lack of
impartial investigation, and lack of sensitivity to victim’s
experiences. But there is also, crucially, the glaring inadequacy of
the law. Today, despite huge strides in international jurisprudence,
India continues to lack an adequate domestic legal framework, which
would allow survivors of communal violence to seek and to secure
justice.

The UPA Government’s Common Minimum Programme in 2004 had promised to
give the citizens of this country a ‘comprehensive legislation’ to
fill this legal vacuum. We were promised a legislation that would
strengthen the hands of the citizens in the struggle against
communalism. However, The Communal Violence (Prevention, Control &
Rehabilitation of Victims) Bill 2005, introduced in the Rajya Sabha in
December 5, 2005, was a complete betrayal of that promise. The 2005
Bill was roundly criticized and rejected by civil society at all
levels. Eminent jurists, legal experts, activists who worked with
survivors, and all prominent minority groups rejected the Bill and
urged the Government to make serious changes in it. The Bill was sent
to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs for its review
and recommendations. But the Standing Committee report, when it was
finally tabled in Parliament in December 2006, suggested no
significant changes.

Between 2005 and now, civil society groups have repeatedly engaged
with the government at all levels and time and again communicated our
serious objections to this Bill. We have written critiques, given
alternative formulations, written alternative draft laws, and
suggested changes in several specific Chapters and clauses. Civil
society groups have met everyone over the last 4 years - from the
Chairperson of the UPA, Prime Minister, two successive Home Ministers,
officials in the Home Ministry, to members of parliament. And yet the
Government appears unwilling to listen.
[. . .]
Full Text at: http://www.anhadin.net/article101.html

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