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Dec 12, 2009:
A crucial meeting of ecumenical church leaders in Orissa
has endorsed the formation of a new association to
ardently pursue reconciliation and reconstruction in
riot-afflicted Kandhamal.
On Dec. 7 pastors, priests, community leaders and
activists convened at Berakhpur to cogitate on ways to
initiate grass roots action under the newly formed
Sampradayik Hinsa Prapidita Sangathana (association of
victims of communal violence in Kandhamal).
"The major task of the new association, working closely
with clergy and civil society activists irrespective of
religion, is to restore public confidence and to ensure
that the victims and witnesses felt safe enough to
depose in court," said John Dayal, general secretary of
the All India Christian Council (AICC).
"This grass roots action will also help in the process
of reconciliation and hopefully allow people to come
back to their villages which are now barred to them by
Hindutva activists who are forcing them to first convert
to Hinduism before assimilating in the old habitations,"
he added.
The meeting at Berhampur, presided over by Archbishop
Cheenath, expressed its deep distrust in the current
justice delivery system which they rued was trying to
finish off the cases without looking closely at the
evidence.
About 2500 complaints had been registered but only 823
FIR have been registered. On top of it, last month one
of the main accused in the violence was acquitted for
the sixth time.
Christians, meanwhile, also decided to boycott the
Justice Mohapatra commission probing the murder of VHP
leader Laxmananda Saraswati and the violence that
followed his death at the hands of a Maoist group on
23rd August 2008.
They said the commission has preconceived notions and
has already formed its conclusions without even waiting
for evidence.
In addition to this, they also expressed concern for the
security of people in the aftermath of violence.
"As victims have complained to the Orissa High Court
separately, witnesses are being coerced, threatened,
cajoled and sought to be bribed by murderers and
arsonists facing trial," lamented Dayal, who is also the
Member of National Integration Council.
He added: "Shoddy police investigations have already
created a crisis in the dispensation of justice, and
even genuine eye witnesses are reneging in court as they
see the court premises full of top activists of
fundamentalist organisations and often the same persons
who had burnt their houses. The police remain mute
watchers, as always.”
He called for urgent and immediate action by the
district administration and the police to ensure that
the process of justice is not thwarted and sabotaged.
The other concern raised was the lack of relief and
rehabilitation to the victims which was a serious cause
of vexation.
Not a single Christian place of worship or Christian NGO
has been compensated for their loss; the poor victims
are also being mocked by the inadequate compensation,
they rued.
Says Dayal, it costs about Rs. 85,000 to reconstruct a
house and yet the government gives only Rs 50,000 in
separate tranches.
"It is the duty of the state to give the full money.
Just to save the people from the vagaries of the
weather, the Church has sought to pitch in, but their
resources are meagre and more than 2,500 families cannot
be helped by the Church," he pointed.
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