Guest guest Posted July 21, 2001 Report Share Posted July 21, 2001 Hi, We were refused bail in the CJM's court who after listening to us explain the HIV context in which we work, was of the opinion that the activities of the accused is like a curse on society. So he claimed in his order of rejection of bail. I wonder how many more of the judiciary feel that HIV/AIDS work is like a curse on society. I am convinced that we would not really have to wait very long to overtake south africa in gaining that unique distinction of being the nation with the most HIV positive persons. Every arm of the state is conspiring to help us gain that distinction. And I also wonder where all the sloganeering and public campaign on HIV awareness undertaken by NACO and the various state AIDS societies have taken us if this is the sentiments that judges have to display. Now the sessions court have also rejected our bail application and we have to go to the High court. That means at least two more weeks of incarceration for our friends. And when I think that their crime is that they attempted to save lives of a vulnerable population segment, that they belived that everyone had a right to a healthy life and to information that would keep them healthy and safe, then each day of their confinement piles another brick of shame on my head. A shame that I feel at having to call myself a citizen of a supposedly liberal democratic progressive nation, that can treat its heroes in such a pathetic fashion. I am not posting the bail order for this general posting to all the groups. It has been posted separately to all our lawyer friends and to the various human rights bodies who are supporting us. Suffice it to say that all our efforts at making known to the court the NACO policy and the HIV/AIDS context in which our jailed friends worked have failed not to speak of the fact that even the legal arguement that the case of 377 is not made out has not been considered. What has held sway in its place is the right of the police to be the guardian of everyone's morals, to be the protector of supposed Indian values that the Organisations were supposedly corrupting by trying to tell MSM that they need to protect themselves. What held sway is that there was abatement of spreading sodomy. The organisations continued to be called gay clubs in the order. HIV does not find a mention. Again so much of our screeching campaign on HIV information, not to speak of the double standards of the Indian state that for the sake of international posturing can talk of working with MSM in spaces like UNGASS, but that jails its activists who are doing the real work on the ground. It makes me ashamed and it makes me angry. The Police have produced the elusive case diary at last. The story now is that when they went to the office of Naz, they found a lot of people watching sodomy on TV. The attempt seems to be to substantiate the gay club / sex racket theory. All of this lot were caught. I wonder why only four of the workers are in jail, and where the rest of this lot that they caught are. And there is no mention of the fact that the outreach worker Mohhamad Shahid was caught doing outreach work in the field. A stark deviation to the early accounts given by the police and published in the media [when we did not have the advantage of the case diary, and the 'official' version of the story]. The story then was that they caught some people from a public park which included Shahid, and on interrogation of shahid they came to know of Bharosa where he is a outreach worker. The present version has the main accused who is actually said to have commited the sodomy citing Bharosa as a sex club that encouraged sodomy, and gave out obscene literature and magazine to that effect. Well we are off to the High Court. But that means at least 2 more weeks in jail for our friends as I said . I met the jailed friends in Jail 2 days back and in court today. They are physically down, jail does it to people. But Arif said that we have to fight on. He said that his conscience is clear that he has done no wrong and that this thing has to be fought on till the very end for the truth is on our side. He said that he understands that he is a prisoner of conscience, for he is being jailed for his faith that it is important to save lives, no matter how much so called society disapproves of the person being saved. He said that we cannot give up and that truth will at last be vindicated. That it cannot be allowed not be, for if India is to live up its national motto of 'satyameva jayate' [the truth shall win] we must all stand up and have the courage to say that even MSM need all the protection and support of the State to live a healthy life and live it with dignity. To deny that would be denying us our very nationhood. Real hero material that frail looking little man. A person who can talk of nationhood and ideals when the nation makes an extra effort to break up his universe. I wish I had that kind of conviction, that kind of courage. I wish I could see the nation having the guts to stand up to its own motto. Love Aditya Aditya Bondyopadhyay <adit_bond@...> __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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