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December 31, 2010
Obama's Selective Outrage: Rage Against Russia, Silence at Indian Injustice
By Chris Floyd
The grand poo-bahs of the Potomac lined up to condemn the Russian government for its barbaric treatment of Khodorkovsky--even while their own government was subjecting a 23-year-old soldier to KGB-style torture for the "crime" of telling the truth about outrageous atrocities committed by the US government in an act of aggression that unleashed--and empowered--a living hell that has left more than a million dead.
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The sham trial of Mikhail Khodorkovsky in Russia is rightly being protested by those who have a right to do so: Russians in Russia,
where more than a thousand people braved the batons of Kremlin
storm-troopers to decry the travesty of justice in his recent conviction
on more trumped-up charges. You do not have to warm to Khodorkovsky
himself, a former oil oligarch who fell out with the power structure
that enriched him, in order to denounce the thuggish authoritarianism
that his persecution represents. I have courageous friends among those
standing up in public against this injustice, putting their own bodies
and livelihoods on the line, and I salute them, and all those standing
with them.
There are, however, those denouncing the injustice of
the Khodorkovsky trial who have absolutely no right to do so. Prominent
among these, of course, is the Obama Administration, with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in the lead. Clinton, the foreign policy spokesperson for a government now raining death by drone on
hundreds of civilians inside the sovereign territory of an American
ally (among many other unjust and inhumane acts), thundered against the
Kremlin for allowing "the rule of law [to be] overshadowed by political
considerations."
The grand poo-bahs of the Potomac lined up to
condemn the Russian government for its barbaric treatment of
Khodorkovsky -- even while their own government was subjecting a
23-year-old soldier to KGB-style torture for
the "crime" of telling the truth about outrageous atrocities committed
by the American government in the course of an act of aggression that
unleashed -- and empowered -- a living hell that has left more than a
million people dead, and is still killing around 4,000 innocent civilians
every year. Hillary Clinton voted to authorize this act of
hyper-barbarism; Barack Obama has called the "surge" of death squads
and ethnic cleansing that kept the war going "an extraordinary
achievement."
The brave citizens and residents of Moscow who came
out to denounce Khodorkovsky's show trial deserve all praise for their
moral courage; but these bloodstained hacks of the Beltway have no
standing whatsoever to inveigh against the offenses of other regimes.
The
Obama administration has been loud in its denunciations of the
Kremlin's perversion of justice to carry out a political vendetta. But
what have these stalwart champions of human rights said about the life
sentence given last week to Indian human rights activist Binayak Sen?
What have we heard from the Nobel Peace Laureate, Barack Obama? What
have we heard from Hillary Clinton? Not a single word.
As the Guardian reports,
Sen is a "celebrated human rights activist and medical doctor, has
worked for more than three decades as a doctor in the tribal-dominated
areas of the state of Chhattisgarh in central India, working for people
denied many of the basic services that the state should provide, such as
health and education." The people he works among are among the poorest
on earth. Sen is also an avowed practitioner of non-violence, walking in
the path of Gandhi.
Sen is also a leading civil rights activist,
who has spoken out repeatedly and forcefully against the depredations
of the state government, which has launched savage "counterterrorism"
operations the Maoist movement spawned by the dire poverty. These
"counterterror" methods include the creation of a deadly paramilitary
force, the Salwa Judum, or "Purification Hunt.'
As Jawed Naqvi reports in Dawn,
"the Judum was founded not so much to track or hunt down Maoist rebels
as to clear the passage of local resistance groups to enable corporate
access to Chhattisgarh's largely untapped mineral resources." Sen's
chief "crime" seems to have been his vocal opposition to the state-run
militia's atrocities. The official charge was that he visited an elderly
prisoner who is alleged to be a Communist, and carried letters from the
prison for him. As Naqvi notes, the "evidence" against Sen was
threadbare, circumstantial and in some cases obviously fabricated, just
as in the Khodorkovsky case.
What's more, Sen was charged under
an ancient law originally imposed on India by its British colonial
masters. As Kalpana Sharma notes in the Guardian:
More than 150 years ago, the British
introduced a law in India designed to check rebellious natives. In 2010
this law has been used by an independent India to check activists who
question government policy.
Section 124A of the Indian penal code
was introduced in 1870 by the British to deal with sedition. It was
later used to convict Mahatma Gandhi. ..Sen worked among the poorest and
most deprived people in India, the Adivasis. The Maoists have also
established their base in the tribal belt stretching through the heart
of India. Their concerns are similar; their strategies diametrically
opposite.
..Denied bail for two years, Sen was finally allowed
out on bail last year. On December 24, a case that on all counts was
weak and based on hearsay and circumstantial evidence, concluded. Sen
was found guilty of sedition and other charges, and sentenced to life
imprisonment.
They gave a life sentence to a man who has never raised a violent hand against the state or another human being. (He only narrowly avoided a death sentence for another charge: "waging war against the state.") A life sentence -- under a colonial law. This is the "democracy" praised by Barack Obama just a few weeks ago during a state visit to India, where he made sure to be seen paying homage to Gandhi -- whose mantle of moral courage Obama himself claimed during his acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize, declaring:
As someone who stands here as a direct consequence of Dr. King's life's work, I am living testimony to the moral force of non-violence. I know there is nothing weak, nothing passive, nothing naive in the creed and lives of Gandhi and King.
But moral force means nothing when there is money to be made --
from the corporate exploitation of Chhattisgarh's resources or, in
Obama's case, from hawking $5 billion worth of death machinery from
America's war profiteers to the Indian government.
Protests
against Sen's sentence have broken out all over India. The injustice has
also provoked denunciations across the world. Even the imperial house
organ, the Washington Post, published a decent news story about
the case on Wednesday. (Obviously the main editors are still off
enjoying the holidays.) The article, by Emily Wax, actually provides
some good context to the Sen case, the larger machinations behind it,
and even -- gasp! -- some understanding of how generations of poverty,
despair and exploitation can give rise to an "insurgency":
In a case that has prompted denunciations
by international human rights groups and scholars, prosecutors said
Binayak Sen, 60, had aided Maoist rebels in rural India, visiting Maoist
leaders in jail and opening a bank account for a Maoist, charges that
Sen denies. Human rights activists allege that police planted evidence
and manufactured testimonies, and Indian judges have criticized the Dec.
24 judgment.
Soli Sorabjee, a former attorney general, called
the ruling shocking. "Binayak Sen has a fine record," he said. "The
evidence against him seems flimsy. The judge has misapplied the section.
And in any case, the sentence is atrocious, savage."
Sen, a
pediatrician, has worked for decades to help people displaced by
violence and government land seizures in India's mineral-rich regions.
Despite the country's booming economy, hundreds of millions of Indians
remain mired in poverty - a stubborn inequality that has helped fuel a
deadly Maoist insurgency in as many as 20 of India's 28 states.
...en,
who was arrested in 2007 and was not granted bail for two years, says
he was targeted solely because he was a vocal critic of the government's
use of armed groups to push villagers out of mineral-rich forest areas.
His sentencing comes as major economies, including the United States
and China, are seeking access to India's growing markets - a sign of the
country's emergence as an economic superpower.
I'm afraid if Ms Wax keeps writing like this, addressing actual realities, she will soon find herself out of a job. For it is surely the pursuit of "access to India's growing markets" -- for well-connected elites, of course -- that has led to the Peace Laureate's voluminous silence on the case of Dr. Sen, and to the lack of reaction from the world's scolding schoolmarm, Hillary Clinton.
Wax even slips this passage into the article: an observation that has growing resonance not only in India:
"Anyone in India who dissents or questions the superpower script is ostracized," said Kavita Srivastava, national secretary of the People's Union for Civil Liberties, of which Sen is a vice president. "Sen's arrest is happening because this government is extremely anti-poor. Our much-praised 9 percent growth is coming at the cost of displacing millions of people with land that is being given away for mining and corporate development."
Wax concludes her piece with these damning quotes:
"Binayak Sen has never fired a gun. He
probably does not know how to hold one," historian Ramachandra Guha
wrote in the Hindustan Times. "He has explicitly condemned Maoist
violence, and even said of the armed revolutionaries that theirs is an
invalid and unsustainable movement. His conviction will and should be
challenged."
Sen's wife, also a doctor, said in an interview that she is launching an international campaign to do just that.
"He
is a person who has worked for the poor of the country for 30 years,"
Ilina Sen said. "If that person is found guilty of sedition activities
when gangsters and scamsters are walking free, well, that's a disgrace
to our democracy."
Yes, when gangsters and scamsters -- and brazen war criminals -- walk free, it is indeed a disgrace to democracy. A disgrace in India, a disgrace in the thug state of Russia -- and a damnable disgrace in the United States of America, where hypocritical poltroons mouth empty pieties in their highly selective protests against injustices that pale before the crimes they are committing.
Chris Floyd is an American journalist. His work has appeared in print and online in venues all over the world, including The Nation, Counterpunch, Columbia Journalism Review, the Christian Science Monitor, Il Manifesto, the Moscow Times and many others. He is the author of Empire Burlesque: High Crimes and Low Comedy in the Bush Imperium, and is co-founder and editor of the "Empire Burlesque" political blog.