Five days later, on December 24, the Raipur sessions court will deliver its
verdict in the Dr Binayak Sen
case<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/search?q=Dr%20Binayak%20Sen%20case>.
Supriya Sharma in Raipur puts together the legal evidence and arguments by
both the prosecution and defence on which the court will base its judgment.

Over the last week, a battery of lawyers engaged in a marathon summation of
evidence and arguments in a two-and-half year long trial, in a small square
court room, with three men crammed in the dock.

One among them was a familiar and famous face — award-winning doctor and
civil rights activist Binayak Sen, whose arrest and two year incarceration
had triggered headlines and protests.

The other two — Narayan Sanyal, an old man, in his 70s, allegedly a Maoist
ideologue, and Piyush Guha, a 30-year-old Kolkata-based businessman — may
not have elicited much attention, remaining peripheral in the public mind,
but in the case, they are as central as Sen.

In fact, the fate of all three men is intertwined since the prime charge
they face is conspiracy for war against the state and treason under Section
121A and 124A of the Indian Penal Code, apart from being members of a banned
organisation.

"There can be no direct evidence for conspiracy," contended the special
public prosecutor, T C Pandya, as he made a quick wrap up of the accusations
levelled by Chhattisgarh government. Binayak Sen met Narayan Sanyal in
prison 33 times between May 26 and June 30, 2007, carrying out seditious
letters, and passing them to Piyush Guha, who was arrested on May 6, with
three of the letters. Sen, Pandya alleged, was part of an effort to
establish an urban network of the banned extremist group CPI (Maoist).

A handwriting expert verified in court that the letters were written by
Sanyal. But is there evidence that they were handed over to Sen, or that he
passed them onto Guha, or that Guha was indeed found carrying those
letters?

With 'no direct evidence' to present, Pandya piled inferences over
circumstances, while Sen's lawyer, advocate Surinder Singh cited a Supreme
Court judgement from 2009: "There is no doubt that conviction can be based
on circumstantial evidence but in cases where evidence is circumstantial in
nature... all facts need to be consistent with hypothesis... and no
alternative hypothesis should be possible".

Do the prosecution's inferences pass this test? Here is a brief wrap up of
the prosecution's claims and inferences, and the defence's counter
arguments:

Article 37

This is a letter purportedly written by the Maoists to Sen, that Pandya
claims was seized from his house by the police. In the typewritten letter,
the Maoists thank Sen for his work and ask him to take a fact-finding team
to Sarguja to probe police atrocities. "It is evident from the letter that
Sen was not just in correspondence with Maoists, he even acted on their
behalf," said the public prosecutor. But the defence argued the letter was
planted by the police. "For a letter sent more than two years ago, it is
curiously fresh, without a single fold," said Surinder Singh, Sen's lawyer.

Besides, he argued, while all other objects found during the search were
noted in a seizure memo and corroborated on the spot by signatures of Sen
and the investigating officers, just this letter — the most significant of
all the seizures — was unsigned. As explanation, the prosecution said it
perhaps got stuck to other documents and went unnoticed and unsigned. The
prosecutor also claimed: "If the police had to fabricate and plant evidence,
they would have planted something more incriminating".

The Cloth Merchant

The prosecution produced Anil Kumar Singh, a cloth merchant, as the sole
independent witness for Guha's arrest. In court, he testified that he was
hailed down by the police on station road on May 6, 2007, where he saw Guha
being searched by the police, and the three incriminating letters being
found in his bag. He said he even heard Guha confess. But the defence
pointed out a contradiction: in an affidavit to the Supreme Court, BBS
Rajpoot, the investigating officer, stated that Guha was picked up not from
station road but from Mahindra hotel.

The Hotel Managers

The prosecution claimed Guha stayed in Mahindra Hotel where Sen visited him.
For this, they produced the statements of Rajkumar Namdeo, the manager of
the hotel, and Balram Soni, the receptionist. In court, both witnesses
turned hostile.

The Jailors

"Binayak Sen meet Sanyal 33 times in less than 35 days," underlined the
prosecution. The defence responded that Sen visited Sanyal on his brother's
request, applying on a People's Union for Civil
Liberties<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/search?q=People's%20Union%20for%20Civil%20Liberties>
(PUCL)
letterhead each time, and getting clearances by the jail and police
officers. "The meetings took place in the jailor's room. Instead of talking
in English or Bengali, they stuck to Hindi, so that every word could be
heard and understood by the supervising officer. Where does that leave room
for conspiracy or passing letters?" contended Singh, Sen's lawyer. Half a
dozen jail officials appeared in court and stated that all meetings between
Sanyal and Sen were strictly supervised.

The Landlords

Much before the meetings in jail, Sen knew Sanyal. He even helped him find a
house in Raipur, stated the prosecution. To prove this, they called Deepak
Choubey to court. Choubey claimed he let out his father-in-law's house in
Daulat Estate to Sanyal on Sen's recommendation. He said he did not realize
anything was amiss till January 2006 when he went to collect rent and was
told by his neighbour 'Sharma ji' that Andhra Police had swooped down and
arrested his tenant in the last days of December. The defence pointed out a
contradiction: according to the testimony of a police officer, Sanyal had
been arrested not in Raipur, but in Bhadrachalam.

'Fronts'

When a sub-inspector Prakash Soni was kidnapped, the Maoists asked for the
withdrawal of CRPF from Maoist areas in return for his release. So did PUCL,
claimed Pandya. "This showed PUCL is a hiteshi sangathan or sympathetic
front organisation of the Maoists. It is not even a registered body," he
said. Even Rupantar, the NGO run by Sen's wife Ilina, was suspect. One of
its employee Shankar Singh is a hardcore Naxal who is currently absconding,
added Pandya.

The defence countered: PUCL was founded by the socialist stalwart,
Jayaprakash Narayan in the post Emergency years, and has boasted a series of
distinguished members, including former Justices V M Tarkunde and Rajinder
Sachar. As far as Rupantar goes, there are no cases against Shankar Singh,
responded the defence, adding: "the state government is funding Rupantar.
Should we presume the state government is funding Naxalites? This is
scandalous and defamatory".

'Comrades'

In two postcards seized from Sen's house, he is addressed as 'Comrade
Binayak Sen'. In printouts of his computer's records, his wife Ilina Sen
writes an email to 'Comrade Kusumlata'. "Comrade ussi ko kehte hai jo
Maowadi hai," argued Pandya. Not true, responded the defence, even
Communists use the term, it is just a takiyakalaam, a common expression. "It
is a citizen's right to embrace Communism," said Singh. (Outside court,
Ilina Sen clarified Comrade Kusumlata was Kusumlata Kedia of the Gandhi
Institute in Varanasi).

Jungle Meetings

Investigating officer BBS Rajpoot claimed to have seen a video recording
showing Sen meeting Naxalites inside a forest, but when questioned by the
defence whether those Naxalites were armed and uniformed, he could not give
a clear answer. The defence has requested the judge to watch the recording.
Another police officer claimed Sen had participated in Maoist meetings in
the jungle, but on cross examination, conceded it could be hearsay.

Naxal Literature

The objects seized from Sen's house included anti-imperialist pamphlets,
postcards by jailed Maoists, and the magazine 'People's March', that the
prosecution argued established Sen's sympathies for the Maoists, as well as
close links. The defence pointed out that People's March was a registered
publication. Invoking the freedom of speech and thought, and citing similar
cases, Surinder Singh said, "reading Mao's collected speeches does not make
someone a Maoist".

More Letters

The prosecution produced a letter that PUCL member Shoma Sen wrote to her
husband, Tushar Kant Bhattacharya. Arrested in Patna and currently in
Hyderabad jail, he was charged with being a Maoist. The letter said: "I am
enclosing a small note from Bijoya da from jail, given to Binayak Sen". The
prosecution claimed Bijoya Da is an alias for Narayan Sanyal. But the
defence said it was instead a name used by Madanlal Barkhade, a jailed
Maoist who had posted a note to Sen, complaining about the appalling
conditions in the prison.

As he concluded his brief, Sen's lawyer Surender Singh asked, "Do we not
have the right to criticize the government?" He accused the government of
"fabricating evidence by hook or crook with the sole motive of crushing
Sen's voice", since Sen had been a fierce critic of Salwa Judum, the state
supported anti-Maoist movement.

These are broadly the arguments that sessions court judge B P Varma must
take into account when he delivers a verdict in the case on Friday, December
24.


Read more: Dr. Binayak Sen case: Court to deliver verdict on Dec 24 - The
Times of 
India<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Dr-Binayak-Sen-case-Court-to-deliver-verdict-on-Dec-24/articleshow/7125220.cms#ixzz18X3FrY9s>

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Dr-Binayak-Sen-case-Court-to-deliver-verdict-on-Dec-24/articleshow/7125220.cms#ixzz18X3FrY9s



http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Dr-Binayak-Sen-case-Court-to-deliver-verdict-on-Dec-24/articleshow/7125220.cms

-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

The UID project is going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
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of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
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*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/
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http://www.youtube.com/my_playlists?p=B67A798223F96E73

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