The government of King Gyanendra in Nepal, who took absolute power on February 1, is now mobilising military-backed mobs to engage in extreme acts of violence on the pretext of fighting Maoists. The army-orchestrated burning of hundreds of homes and lynching of about 30 alleged Maoists in Kapilvastu district are methods of control all too familiar in many Asian countries during these times of heavy carnage and blood-letting.
In India, during recent decades countless
mobs have been let loose while the police and military have watched. The
violence and subsequent tension around the destruction of the Babri mosque
in
1992; organised attacks on Muslims in Bombay during 1993; and attempted
genocide of local Muslim populations by the state government of Gujarat
in 2002 are but a few. After the 1984 massacres
of Sikhs collectively blamed for the killing of Indira Gandhi, the prominent
Supreme Court Justice V R Krishna Iyer said that
"When the history of Human Rights
in India of our half-century comes to be written, the most blood-stained
pages will be reserved for the three deadly November days in the life of
the nation. Where is law? Where is justice? What is the truth? Lying
dead in the streets of Delhi's democracy? Where are the guilty? Untouchable
and unapproachable in high offices? How can the highest in the executive
and members of the Summit Court ever command, when mass casualty of human
lives and rights remain a poignant interrogation?"
Examples of this kind of army-backed
mob violence can be found from virtually every part of Asia and many other
regions as well. In Indonesia the unleashing of anti-communist mobs by
the military
caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people in that country during
the 1960s. As the perpetrators of those crimes ruled the country for over
the next three decades, Indonesian memory and
identity has been so confused that up to today recovery has been impossible.
In Sri Lanka the mob violence against the Tamil population living in Colombo
during the 'Black July' of 1983 is well
known. Much of the extreme political bloodshed that was to come in the
subsequent years had its origin in the horrors of that time. In May 2003
the military regime in Burma deployed mobs to brutally
attack a convoy of democracy supporters in the north of the country; the
true circumstances of the attack remain obscure.
State-sponsored mob violence is often
introduced ostensibly to counter a perceived threat: communism, terrorism
or otherwise. However, the real purpose is for the ruling group to destroy
all
opposition and obtain or retain absolute control. The consequences, whether
intended or not, are rampant corruption and unlimited slaughter. A permanent
state of chaos denies the establishment of a
stable society functioning under the rule of law. Through destruction,
a type of authoritarian anarchy prevails.
Nepal is on that path. As its media is
now completely controlled and many journalists are under arrest, the actual
extent of violence is not getting reported to the outside world. The BBC
and CNN do not
have their cameras pointed on the houses as they burn, or the villagers
as they are hanged. The continuous detention of political leaders of democratic
parties, trade unionists, human rights workers
and journalists also has failed to excite the attention of the international
media.
The Asian Human Rights Commission has in recent weeks almost daily reminded the international community that Nepal is descending into an abyss of violence from which there will be no easy return. The rule of law, democracy and human rights: all of these are now the stuff of mythology in Nepal. We are once again calling upon every concerned person and organisation to pay heed to the colossal destruction of Nepal, which has been plunged into this situation by the mindless actions of its dictatorial king and his accomplices.
About AHRC The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984
Disclaimer
- Asian Human Rights Commission
- About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984