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A STATEMENT ON THE UNDERMINING OF ELEMENTARY FREEDOMS IN INDIA

We, the signatories to this statement, write with the greatest of concern because we admire the
democratic structures that India embraced since gaining Independence from colonial rule, including a
set of Constitutionally guaranteed fundamental rights for every citizen. This entire democratic
tradition is being fundamentally undermined by some recent developments in that country. We write
at this particular moment to draw the world’s attention to how this is being done by the prolonged
incarceration without trial of a large number of writers, journalists and social activists, often without
so much as a charge-sheet against them. All that these individuals have done is to criticize the present
government in India.

Prabir Purkayastha, a 75-year old senior journalist, author, and founding editor of the independent
news portal Newsclick, whose office and home were repeatedly searched for weeks on end for
incriminating evidence without any being found, has been arrested and, despite being imprisoned for
nearly six months, is yet to be served a charge-sheet; the harmful effects of such an action on media
independence are obvious for everyone to see.

Others have been incarcerated even longer, such as those arrested in the Bheema-Koregaon case who
(with the exception of those whom the courts have released on bail on medical or technical-legal
grounds) have been languishing in prison for over five years without any trial.

Likewise, many accused in the Delhi riots case have been in prison for over three years without any
trial –and often without complete charge sheets brought against them; some, who have been charged,
but with no trial in sight, have spent even longer in jail than the maximum legal sentence warranted by
the charges against them.

This extended incarceration without trial has been given legislative backing, through an amendment to
the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act passed by the Indian parliament. But legislative backing
provides no justification for such incarceration. Indeed, to use it as a justification amounts to saying
that Constitutionally guaranteed fundamental rights can be abrogated through a legislative majority;
that, notwithstanding Constitutional provisions, someone can be imprisoned for any length of time by
a government enjoying a legislative majority. This amounts to undermining the Constitution and
overturning the structures of democracy.

India has long been admired internationally as an exemplary democracy, and the largest in the world .
Any abridgement of democracy in India is tragic, not only for the people of India, but for all of
humanity. We write this letter to alert international opinion to these recent alarming developments in
that country and to urge those holding positions of responsibility in the various organs of the Indian
state, in particular the judiciary, to ensure that the abridgements we are currently witnessing are
reversed, and that no encroachment occurs on the fundamental rights of its citizens. Those holding
such positions of responsibility will be remembered by posterity if they honourably stand up for
Indian democracy.
Signed:

1.Amitav Ghosh, Novelist and Author, New York.

2.Wendy Brown, UPS Foundation Professor, Institute for Advanced Studies, Princeton.

3. Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor, Department of Comparative Literature, and the Program of
Critical Theory, University of California, Berkeley.

4.Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, University Professor, Columbia University, New York.

5.Sheldon Pollock, Arvind Raghunathan Professor Emeritus of South Asian Studies, Columbia
University, New York.

6.Martha C. Nussbaum, Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Philosophy, University of


Chicago, Chicago.

7.Steven Lukes, Professor of Politics and Sociology, New York University, New York.

8.David Bromwich, Sterling Professor of English, Yale University, New Haven.

9. Marjorie Cohn, Professor, Thomas Jefferson School of Law, San Diego; former president, National
Lawyers Guild, U.S.A.

10. Jonathan Cole, John Mitchell Mason Professor, Provost & Dean of Faculties (1989-2003),
Columbia University, New York.

11. Janet Gyatso, Hershey Professor of Buddhist Studies and Associate Dean for Faculty and
Academic Affairs, Divinity School, Harvard University, Cambridge.

12. Carol Rovane, Violin Family Professor of Philosophy, Columbia University, New York.

13. Jan Werner-Muller, Roger Williams Straus Professor of Social Sciences, Princeton University,
Princeton.
14. Charles Taylor, Emeritus Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory, Oxford University;
and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at University of Montreal.

15.Akeel Bilgrami, Sidney Morgenbesser Professor of Philosophy; Professor, Committee on Global


Thought,
Columbia University, New York.

16. David Shulman, Renee Lang Professor of Humanistic Studies, Hebrew University, Jerusalem.

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