So
the magistrate issued an arrest warrant against him on July
19. That was when this latest episode of the drama had begun.
By going 'underground' and eluding the police, the (then)
Union Minster has successfully managed to lower his level
to that of notorious fugitives like Veerappan.
Soren
has also been involved in the famous JMM bribery case during
PV Narasimha Rao's reign in Delhi. Reportedly, six cases
have been filed against him, three of which are for murder.
He has been continuously evading arrest, or been on bail
since the past 25 years! Frankly, Shibu Soren is not the
first politician to face such a situation. There were and
still are, dozens of Indian politicians who faced criminal
charges and still 'did fine in public life'. Instead of
running away, he could have followed their lead. For all
we know, he is innocent and honourable. He has impressive
political record of mass mobilization and enjoys wide public
support. In any case, we must presume he is innocent, until
proven otherwise. But he should have submitted to the court's
orders, acquired bail and should have then started working
hard on proving his innocence, during the trial.
But
the very fact that a prominent public figure, a six-time
MP and a Union Minister escapes arrest and trial clearly
shows that even he has no confidence of getting a fair deal
from either the police or the courts. This is not surprising:
in this Chirudih massacre case alone, the authorities took
over 25 years to go after the accused even as they permitted
the entire investigation process to acquire deep political
overtones. This episode is yet another indictment of not
just our criminal investigation system but also India's
justice-delivery framework. Both suffer from extremely serious
deficiencies and are unable to inspire confidence that a
citizen submitting to the due process of law would be delivered
a fair deal. The operative words here are: 'fair' and 'due
process.' These notions compose the foundation on which
the pillars of law-and-order and justice are built. In turn,
these pillars rise to support the very structure of our
democracy itself.
To
prevent that structure from failing, our criminal investigation
system must be repaired immediately. Under the present system,
our politicians can and often do twist those (reputedly)
long arms of the investigating and prosecuting authorities.
Many politicians, once they are elected, successfully pressurize
the government to withdraw cases against them. This is precisely
why persons with criminal antecedents fall in love with
political offices, in the first place. The first step towards
cleaning this mess is also the most important one: crime
investigation must be insulated from the tanaav and dabaav
of politics. Our elected representatives should not interfere
with the routine functioning of the crime investigation
agencies and prosecuting bodies.
The
framework of judiciary in our country also needs immediate
and wholesale reforms of fundamental nature. The first of
which must be the setting up of a subordinate court structure
that can deliver timely justice to millions of desperate
Indians. Next, this justice-delivery system should be made
to develop immunity against corruption and subversion of
the due process. How can this be achieved? Only by ensuring
that the entire trial process is highly transparent and
easily understandable even by the layperson.
These
transformations must be coupled with fundamental political
and electoral reforms, so that criminal elements cannot
find their way into legislative or executive positions of
influence
***