NEW DELHI—An Indian court Friday is scheduled to deliver a verdict in the
trial of Binayak Sen, a doctor accused of aiding India's Maoists in a
closely watched case that activists have labeled a referendum on whether
India, the world's largest democracy, supports human rights or squashes them
in the name of national security.

Dr. Sen was arrested in May 2007 in the central Indian state of
Chhattisgarh, which in the last decade has become a center for India's
Maoist rebels, locally known as Naxalites. The insurgency, which began in a
village called Naxalbari in the eastern state of West Bengal in 1967, seeks
to overthrow the Indian government in a bid to present a communist paradigm
of development. The rebels have attracted support by playing up local
grievances such a lack of school and health facilities and the perceived
abuse of land rights in the name of industrialization.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said Naxalism is the single largest threat
to India's internal security. The government's approach at the national and
state levels has been to counter the insurgency with a two-pronged strategy
of police mobilization and infrastructure development.

The government accused Dr. Sen of aiding the insurgents by passing notes
from a jailed Maoist rebel he was treating to someone outside the jail. He
was released on bail in May 2009. He denies passing notes or committing any
crime, and says his activities in the jail were constantly supervised by the
authorities.

"There is no explanation as to why I was put in prison," Dr. Sen told The
Wall Street Journal in an interview after his release. "I will continue with
my role as a doctor and human-rights activist."

Of his alleged support for the Maoists, Dr. Sen said he didn't support
violence from either the state or the Maoists but that the grievances that
Maoists were tapping into for support among the populace were "real."

Dr. Sen says it was his criticism of killings of civilians by a vigilante
group that prompted his arrest and prosecution. The group, Salwa Judum, was
created in 2005 and is designed and supported by the state government in
Chhattisgarh to nip the insurgency where it is thriving: villages inhabited
by India's indigenous tribes.

Dr. Sen says the main motive of the group, though, is to clear villages so
the land can be quarried for iron ore, bauxite and diamonds. Chhattisgarh is
one of the most mineral-rich Indian states.

In 2008, when Dr. Sen was still in jail, the U.S.-based Global Health
Council awarded Dr. Sen its 2008 Jonathan Mann Award for global health and
human rights in recognition of his services to poor and indigenous
communities in India. In May that year, a group of 22 Noble laureates sent a
letter to the Indian government criticizing Dr. Sen's incarceration and
asking that he be released to receive the award in person.

"We also wish to express grave concern that Dr. Sen appears to be
incarcerated solely for peacefully exercising his fundamental human
rights...and that he is charged under two internal security laws that do not
comport with international human rights standards," they said in the letter.
Meenakshi Ganguly, the South Asia director for the Human Rights Watch said
the legal case against Dr. Sen has "several political implications. We are
hoping that the justice will be done."

Ms. Ganguly added: "If he has been unfairly treated by the state, then the
court should tell the government not to make political prisoners out of
individuals like Binayak Sen."

Since coming to Chhattisgarh in 1981, Dr. Sen has focused on helping tribal
Indians, among India's most disadvantaged. In 2004, he became the national
vice president of the People's Union for Civil Liberties, a civil rights
group.

A spokesman for the Chhattisgarh state government said: "We have always
taken the stand that the matter is sub judice and whatever be the verdict we
will check on its merit and then take a proper legal course."

In a statement before the verdict Mr. Sen said: "I submit that my
prosecution is malafide; in fact it is a persecution."

"I am being made an example of by the state government of Chhattisgarh as a
warning to others not to expose the patent trampling of human rights taking
place in the state," he added.

Write to Krishna Pokharel at [email protected]



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-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

The UID project is going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists

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
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.

*SAY NO TO UID CAMPAIGN-  SPREAD THE WORD AND JOIN FB GROUP*
*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/
http://questioningaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
http://www.youtube.com/my_playlists?p=B67A798223F96E73

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