Monday, April 15, 2013

‘Free lawyer’ service in J’khand helps tribals branded Maoists

Jaideep Deogharia TNN 


Ranchi: A group of young lawyers in Ranchi has decided to take up, gratis, cases of thousands of tribals branded Maoists and shoved into jails across Jharkhand every year. 
    The lawyers, who have named their organization Jharkhand Organization for Human Rights (JOHAR), have initiated a survey to pick out such cases and offer them free legal consultation. And just so that the tribals are aware that they need not pay for seeking judicial assistance, the lawyers have named their endeavour ‘muft mein wakil’. 
    “Despite options of free legal aid offered by the government and agencies like district legal services authority, tribals often don’t get these facilities because they are afraid to approach 
them. Also, they are hardly aware of the law,” says Gopi Nath Ghosh, who is associated with the endeavour. 
    Human rights violation is a mounting problem in Jharkhand’s tribal areas which sees many innocent people being labelled Maoists and prosecuted. 
NGOs working in the area say that the number of such cases increases whenever there is a security operation in the region. 
    For instance, 13 people were framed as Maoists in the 2001 Topchanchi massacre in which 13 Jharkhand armed police officers were killed. After they had spent many years in jail, they were finally acquitted by the Dhanbad district court in May last year. 
    Curiously, nobody is really sure about the exact number of such cases where tribals are unfairly branded as rebels. A missionary, Father Stain Swami, who works for the rights of tribals, had filed an RTI application with the state government in 2011 to seek accurate figures. He says that the total number of such cases could be around 6,000 or even more. 
    With most tribals not 
even fully literate — let alone being aware of complex legal formalities — help from the lawyers is being hailed as a welcome step for them. Although till now, the lawyers have identified only about a dozen cases, the momentum, says advocate Anup Agarwal, convener of JOHAR, would pick up once their survey is complete. 
    Incidentally, one of the cases in which the lawyer group has already started providing free assistance is the high-profile Jeetan Marandi case. Jeetan Marandi was accused of masterminding the Chilkhari massacre in 2007 in which former chief minister Babu Lal Marandi’s son Anup was killed. The subordinate court had pronounced capital punishment but the Jharkhand high court not only reversed the judgment but also acquitted him of the charges.

TAKING UP THE CUDGELS: 
The lawyers say that legal aid is offered by the govt and other agencies but the tribals are afraid to approach them

 
Source:::::: The Times of India, 15-04-2013, p.07, http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW 

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