By TCN News,
Ahmedabad: On the 10th anniversary of the Gujarat pogrom on Monday stressed on cleaning up the wounds and telling the truth because “the truth becomes the basis for justice.” As one of the components of justice, Justice Hosbert Suresh demanded “proper reparation for all the victims of the 2002 carnage,” saying that “‘Sadhbhavna’ without truth and justice is only a farce and has no meaning.”
“The dead cannot be resurrected but the living should hope to have a dignified future while their struggle seems to be eternal for justice and survival. We are here to express our solidarity with them and in that to make the government accountable,” Justice Suresh said while addressing a memorial for the Gulberg Society massacre of Feb. 27, 2002.
He said reconciliation cannot be achieved without victims getting justice.
“Some people say that it is time for reconciliation. Does reconcile mean letting off the perpetrators? While those who committed mass murder, mass rape and mass destruction are free, and with no sense of remorse or regret, will there be any reconciliation?,” he asked.
He also rejected the argument that as Gujarat is developing, people should forget what happened in 2002.
“Some people say that Gujarat has grown in forms of development and administration and therefore we forget what happened ten years ago. Who will say this? Women who were raped, would they say this? How does the so-called development of Gujarat mean anything to them when the rapists are free? Children who have seen their mothers, sisters, being raped and killed, would they say that? What about the large numbers of people who have lost their dear and near ones, would they say that? Would they not ask what has happened to those who were responsible for the acts they committed? What did the administration do when such horrible crimes were being committed? Who gave the orders? What did the police do? What did the ministers do? Above all, what did the chief minister do? None of these questions have been satisfactorily answered.”
“People may think of the South African experience of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. I agree. Truth must come. In Desmond Tutu’s words: “They must make a clean breast of what they did.” Yes, it may amount to reopening of old wounds. But what he said is important. Our justification was that these wounds were actually festering and that reopening was crucial in so much as it meant you would be able to cleanse the wounds and pour a balm on them. There is no way you can deal with the past without opening wounds.
So you have to clean up the wounds; you have to tell the truth, and the truth becomes the basis for justice. One of the components of justice is proper reparation for all the victims of the 2002 carnage. “Sadhbhavna” without truth and justice is only a farce and has no meaning,” said Justice Suresh.