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Whistleblowers & Activists Murdered in India

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Whistleblowers Murdered in India Show Fatal Hazard of Exposing Corruption
Whistleblowers Murdered in India Show Fatal Hazard of Exposing Corruption - Bloomberg

The shooter managed with one bullet what dozens of threats had failed to do: silence Shehla Masood.

The 38-year-old businesswoman in the central Indian city of Bhopal had used India’s Right to Information Act to expose local corruption after she kept losing on government contracts. She died from a gunshot on Aug. 16 after getting into her car near her home. The murder is unsolved.

Masood is among at least 12 whistleblowers killed in India since January 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, while at least 40 people were assaulted after seeking information under the law. Enacted by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh six years ago, the legislation has become the most powerful tool for fighting wrongdoing in politics and business, with 529,000 requests filed in the year through March. While some cases have prompted the resignation of public officials, users risk becoming victims of their success.

“It is a tragedy that these people have died, but it is also a sign of how powerful a tool the law is,” said Subhash Agrawal, a New Delhi cloth trader who successfully campaigned for Supreme Court judges and ministers’ assets to be made public under the information act.

“This is the most important piece of legislation passed in post-independence India. It is doing wonders for exposing corruption, and this will undoubtedly improve the performance of the economy,” he said in a phone interview.

Behind China

India’s economic expansion is being undermined by corruption, according to business leaders. Growth could approach China’s pace of more than 9 percent if graft were reduced, a KPMG LLP March survey of chief executive officers in India said. Gross domestic product has grown an average of 7.5 percent a year in the past decade, International Monetary Fund data show.

The law is making a difference. Answers to RTI requests helped lead to the ouster of the chief minister of Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital, and the arrest of three members of the 2010 Commonwealth Games’ organizing committee.

Increased scrutiny of government officials also holds promise for millions of poor in the world’s second-largest nation by population. The Alert Citizens Group in New Delhi helps slum-dwellers file applications that monitor improvements in services like water supplies and distribution systems for food, kerosene and cooking oil, and the meeting-attendance records and spending habits of local councilors.

For slum dwellers, filing a request under the law, known as RTI, was almost as effective as paying a bribe in getting a new ration card, according to a 2008 series of field experiments by Leonid Peisakhin and Paul Pinto, who were doctoral candidates at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Those who did nothing never received their card or waited three times as long, the researchers found in a 2009 paper.
More Protection

In a speech praising the impact of the RTI bill, Singh said Oct. 14 the government is taking steps to make the act more effective. To protect those exposing corruption he said the government will pass legislation that will provide security and protect the identity of whistleblowers.

“We expect this law to be enacted in the next few months and it would, among other things, help in prevention of violence against those who seek to expose wrongdoings,” Singh said.

Invoking the RTI act poses special risks for people living in remote areas, which often have only a handful of government officers, said Suhas Chakma, the New Delhi-based director of the Asian Centre for Human Rights. The official dealing with the request faces a potential conflict of interest in cases that reveal corruption or inefficiencies, since his own job could be jeopardized by releasing the information, he said.
‘More Aggressive’

“The increase in violence is a direct result of people getting more and more aggressive with their requests,” said Chakma, whose organization collects data on the assaults. “In the beginning, people didn’t realize how powerful this law was. Now, everybody knows, even the criminals and the corrupt.”

Eight of the 12 murdered activists lived in remote areas or towns. None lived in India’s 10 largest cities by population.

Accounts of the 40 assaults come from data compiled by Bloomberg from interviews with family members, police and regional-language newspapers, a database from the Asian human- rights center and cases examined by the Jaipur-based Consumer Unity and Trust Society.

One of the victims was Babbu Singh, a policeman who was shot after he filed an RTI request about public spending in his village of Katghar, in Uttar Pradesh state. Jaisukh Bambhania, who comes from the western state of Gujarat, was disfigured with acid; Jagdish Sharma, in the village of Chandrawal in Haryana, was injured and his daughter-in-law killed when the target of his RTI application drove his car into a crowd of protesters.
‘Used to Killing’

“When applications are filed people in government will pass the information on to criminals,” said N. Vikramsimha, a Bangalore-based trustee of the Right to Information Research Center, and author of “Gateway to Good Governance,” among other books on the measure. “The criminal bosses then come after you. They are used to killing people. It is not a problem for them.”

Niyamat Ansari may have paid the ultimate price for his request. A resident of the state of Jharkhand, he collected enough documents through his RTI requests for details on the winning bidders of public-works contracts under India’s National Rural Employment Guarantee Act to register official complaints with the police. Three people, including a local development official, were arrested.
Beaten to Death

On March 2, he was dragged from his house and beaten to death by a group of people, according to a police complaint filed by his family at the time. The attackers threw copies of his RTI requests at him and his family during the attack, said a cousin who declined to be identified out of fear for his life.

Local police don’t pursue complaints vigorously, according to Jaisukh Bambhania, who said in a phone interview that at least three people accosted him outside a government office in Una, Gujarat. He said the individuals stabbed him in the back, beat him with metal pipes and threw acid on him on Aug. 21, after he filed an RTI request asking which officials had approved construction of a local restaurant.

Dipankar Trivedi, the superintendent of police in Junagadh district, where Bambhania said the attack took place, said in a telephone interview that an investigation was under way, and that the attackers that Bambhania had named had filed their own complaint saying that they were not in Junagadh on those days.
Requests Denied

About 40 percent of federal RTI requests were rated unsuccessful in a 2009 study of 17,000 people across India by the RTI Assessment Analysis Group and the National Campaign for People’s Right to Information. By contrast, a report from Chief Information Commissioner Satyananda Mishra says fewer than 7 percent of requests were denied. Mishra didn’t reply to phone calls and e-mails.

Singh’s government has stood by the law even after an RTI request revealed divisions between ministries on a 2008 decision by then-Telecommunications Minister Andimuthu Raja to allot, instead of auction, mobile-phone airwaves. The Central Bureau of Investigation is probing charges of corruption in the allotment case, and Raja and 10 corporate executives have been arrested.

A letter resulting from an RTI request made by private citizen Vivek Garg showed the finance and telecommunications ministries had differed over the allocation, undermining claims by Singh in February that the cabinet had been united in backing an allotment.
Citizens’ Demands

“Even an individual citizen can demand what is being written in the files of the government, what notes or instructions the ministers are giving,” Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said on Sept. 22, referring to the released letter, according to a transcript of a speech to U.S. and Indian business leaders in New Delhi.

Governments around the world are increasingly giving their citizens the legal right to information. More than 90 countries have enacted a version of the RTI, giving 5 billion people, or more than two-thirds of the world’s population, access to government records, according to the Accountability Initiative, a New Delhi-based research organization.

Chakma’s human rights group, along with others, is lobbying the Indian government to include RTI-related assaults in a special category of crimes to fast-track investigations and prosecutions. The information commission last month said it would publish anything sought by slain or attacked RTI requesters in the wake of Masood’s murder.

“Carrying out attacks will be counterproductive because the information that people want silenced will be published,” Information Commissioner Shailesh Gandhi said in an interview.
Lowest Bidder

Such disclosure will come too late for Masood, who began filing RTI requests seeking information about corruption after her first one showed she was the lowest bidder for contracts to manage state-government social events and yet never won. She asked about local environmental issues and government expenses and shared the responses with newspapers, which ran articles based on them.

“These experiences have made me tough, and work on social causes,” she told her friends in a posting on Facebook in May 2010. “I just pray that God gives me strength.”

By then she was living under a cloud of fear, according to her sister, Ayesha Masood.

In January 2010, Shehla Masood wrote a letter to the state director general of police and to other government officials, including Indian Minister for Home Affairs Palaniappan Chidambaram. She detailed threats to her life that she said were made by a local official, Pawan Shrivastava, and included a tape recording that she said was of Shrivastava threatening her.
‘Jurisdictional Issues’

The Home Ministry chose not to act because her letter was directed to the state director general of police, said ministry spokesman Onkar Kedia. “There were jurisdictional issues,” he said.

Masood later requested a copy of her letter through an RTI application to see what had become of it. The copy is marked as on file with the director general of police’s office in Bhopal. It includes a notation from an unnamed official saying that an investigation into her complaints should be undertaken.

Shrivastava has been questioned by the Central Bureau of Investigation in relation to the Masood case, said Hemant Priyadarshy, deputy inspector general for the CBI’s office in Madhya Pradesh state. He is running the murder investigation.

Shrivastava told Bloomberg News by telephone on Oct. 3 that he had no comment. He had previously agreed to meet a reporter in Bhopal and speak with him, then hung up the phone when the reporter called to make a specific appointment on Sept 17. The reporter was denied permission to enter the Bhopal police headquarters, where Shrivastava was assigned, on Sept. 20.
Parking-Lot Scuffle

That day, the reporter’s driver was slapped and knocked to the ground in a parking area by two constables. He had refused to answer their questions about the reporter’s identity and location of his hotel.

Masood never received protection despite several complaints, her sister and father said in their home in Bhopal.

“She was fighting alone, and while we were obviously worried, we never thought anything like this could happen,” said her father, Sultan Masood, 70.

Three weeks after Shehla Masood was shot in the trachea and bled to death in her car, the investigation was taken from local police and referred to the Central Bureau of Investigation, said the CBI’s Priyadarshy.

A forensic team found additional evidence, including files that Masood had on the day of her murder. Her cell phone records show the police used the phone after her death to order food from a nearby eatery, according to her family and Priyadarshy.

The crime “has attracted a lot of attention, both from the government and from the media, because Masood was an RTI activist and also because she was a woman,” said Priyadarshy. “I can assure you, my best men are working on the case.”

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Woman activist beaten, axed to death in Jharkhand
Woman activist beaten, axed to death in Jharkhand - Hindustan Times

Valsha John, a woman who hailed from Kerala's Ernakulam district and spearheaded an anti-displacement movement against a private company at Pachwara village in Pakur district, was killed by unidentified men. "She was beaten with sticks and then axed to death at around 11.30 hours last
night (Tuesday). An FIR has been filed against unknown men," Pakur Superintendent of Police Amarnath Khanna told reporters in Pakur.

Valsha (52) had been staying in the village for about 12 years and led a protest against coal mining by Panem coal company Limited three years ago, he added.

According to locals, the stir began after villagers feared displacement following coal mining.

"She was away from the village for sometime and some villagers protested when she returned in the first week of November. Only after a probe can we give some details," the SP added.

Deputy Inspector General of Police (Santhal Pargana) VK Pandey said the police suspect that reports of her subsequent withdrawal from the stir might have been the reason behind the incident.

302194_174298772657296_174296699324170_324406_1275784124_n.jpg

This is probable the secret of long life in India

Courtesy of SpArK
 
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This is not the first activist that have been killed since they spoke up.

I agree. Sadly only those activists who are not harming the country are getting snuffed rather than thieving traitoring scum. This is what happens till we have CONgress in power.
 
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The family of a murdered nun who campaigned for the rights of tribal people in India says she received threats from local coal mine chiefs.

Sister Valsa John was killed after about 50 people broke into her home on Tuesday in eastern Jharkand state.

She campaigned on behalf of tribes people allegedly displaced by mining activity in the eastern state.

Her brother says she recently spoke of threats from a "mining mafia". There has been no word from mining officials.

Initially the police believed the killing could be the work of Maoist rebels as Maoist pamphlets were found at the site but they now believe it is possible the pamphlets were left to mislead investigators.

"Still nothing can be ruled out," Pakur's police chief Amarnath Khanna told reporters. They also believe that tribal people could be involved in her killing. No arrests have been made.

"Nearly 50 people with traditional arms in their hands attacked her house and killed her," Mr Khanna said, adding that no arrests had yet been made over the murder.

Sister John, originally from Kerala, was working with the Missionaries of Charity and had gone to Jharkhand to work with tribespeople.

The BBC's Salman Ravi says she later took up the cause of tribal people displaced by mining around Pakur, about 400km (248 miles) north-east of the state capital Ranchi.

The state government has ordered an inquiry into the incident.

BBC News - Murdered India activist Sister Valsa John 'was threatened'
 
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These mafias not spares anyone coming in their way of illegal activities.... Jharkhand govt. must work hard on this issue...
 
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Very Sad, the culprit should be severely punished.
 
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Minorities dont look safe in India ..... India should take steps so that minorities are not brutally murdered
"Nearly 50 people with traditional arms in their hands attacked her house and killed her," Mr Khanna said, adding that no arrests had yet been made over the murder.
50 armed men ? and not a single man is arrested yet .... its an alarming situation
 
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These mafias not spares anyone coming in their way of illegal activities.... Jharkhand govt. must work hard on this issue...

It is distressing that 50 people or so were involved in lynching to death an innocent lady. She was known to be a quiet religious woman that didn't deserve this. She was a good christian lady that would transparently be gentle with all. I am sure people know and are aware what happened - its not easy to keep 50 people quiet and i hope someone comes forward to pin these people down.
R.I.P. to Sister Valsa and prayers for her family
 
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Minorities dont look safe in India ..... India should take steps so that minorities are not brutally murdered
"Nearly 50 people with traditional arms in their hands attacked her house and killed her," Mr Khanna said, adding that no arrests had yet been made over the murder.
50 armed men ? and not a single man is arrested yet .... its an alarming situation

Thanks for your concern, hope you show such concerns for minorities in ither as well as you own country.
 
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It is distressing that 50 people or so were involved in lynching to death an innocent lady. She was known to be a quiet religious woman that didn't deserve this. She was a good christian lady that would transparently be gentle with all. I am sure people know and are aware what happened - its not easy to keep 50 people quiet and i hope someone comes forward to pin these people down.
R.I.P. to Sister Valsa and prayers for her family

Maybe it ain't your intention, but your post seems to be giving an unnecessary religious color to the incident. There's no apparent need for it as the issue seems to be of exploitation of tribal land for mining purposes by the mining mafia.
 
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The family of a murdered nun who campaigned for the rights of tribal people in India says she received threats from local coal mine chiefs.

Sister Valsa John was killed after about 50 people broke into her home on Tuesday in eastern Jharkand state.

She campaigned on behalf of tribes people allegedly displaced by mining activity in the eastern state.

Her brother says she recently spoke of threats from a "mining mafia". There has been no word from mining officials.

Initially the police believed the killing could be the work of Maoist rebels as Maoist pamphlets were found at the site but they now believe it is possible the pamphlets were left to mislead investigators.

"Still nothing can be ruled out," Pakur's police chief Amarnath Khanna told reporters. They also believe that tribal people could be involved in her killing. No arrests have been made.

"Nearly 50 people with traditional arms in their hands attacked her house and killed her," Mr Khanna said, adding that no arrests had yet been made over the murder.

Sister John, originally from Kerala, was working with the Missionaries of Charity and had gone to Jharkhand to work with tribespeople.

The BBC's Salman Ravi says she later took up the cause of tribal people displaced by mining around Pakur, about 400km (248 miles) north-east of the state capital Ranchi.

The state government has ordered an inquiry into the incident.

BBC News - Murdered India activist Sister Valsa John 'was threatened'

Really sad incident. I don't know if they will ever catch the guilty. There is a strong nexus between the mining mafia and the local administration/ local politicians.
 
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Maybe it ain't your intention, but your post seems to be giving an unnecessary religious color to the incident. There's no apparent need for it as the issue seems to be of exploitation of tribal land for mining purposes by the mining mafia.

wasn't my intention - was reading an article about her and thought a religious woman being attacked made it even sadder. My apologies if you feel im putting a religious color. I don't know the religion of the attackers - nor should it matter Nalwa. Thanks
 
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