Perverted Nationalism as an eraser for the Rule of Law
In this post, I am going to discuss how a certain brand of  
nationalism which I would call perverted nationalism is used to corrupt 
 understandings of terrorism and insurgency in our legal system, which  
ultimately leads to a gross violation of the Rule of Law. I start with a
  brief discussion on how the Constitution envisions law, and continue 
to  how existence of this law is then diluted by invocations of 
nationalist  zeal, leading to enactment of repressive laws, which only 
manage to  harden the foundation on which terrorism stands.
 
What constitutes law? | The Constitutional Mandate
Article 21 very clearly lays down that no person is to be deprived of
  his life or personal liberty without a procedure established by law.  
The key question here being, what constitutes law, which was  
conclusively laid down in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India
 as law is that which is just, fair and reasonable. Which implies that  
merely because a statute is enacted by a Parliament or Legislature  
following the requisite procedure doesn’t make it law. Any such legal  
provision can be questioned on account of justice, fairness and  
reasonableness and can be declared to be NOT LAW. This is not just a  
matter of competence of who enacts the legal provision, the content of  
the provision also matters to decide whether it is a law or not.
This means that courts have to evaluate any legal provision which is 
 challenged before them on whether it satisfies the just, fair 
reasonable  rule, including all laws which are used to prosecute 
terrorists and  insurgents.. Which means that the State cannot break the
 law to uphold  the law. State cannot bypass the just, fair, reasonable 
requirement for  alleged terrorists to say that it is upholding just, 
fair, reasonable  for other people-that’s a Rule of Law basic. And it is
 important,  because if different standards are applied to take away 
life and  liberty, you never know when you will be alleged as a 
terrorist, and  your life and liberty taken away without following a 
just, reasonable  and fair procedure.
 
Forget the Constitution, Enter Perverted Nationalism
By perverted nationalism I mean a crazy nationalist fervor which  
blinds us to the realities from which terrorism stems. Terrorism is not 
 the mindless violence the State portrays it to be. Any casual observer 
 would also notice that the unequivocal facts about these terrorists are
  that they are all people from areas wherein stagnation and poverty  
prevails, and are often dealing with survival issues on a daily basis. A
  careful analysis of their “demands” illustrates is that they all ask  
for a better life, where they are not treated like scum. But wait, and  
here comes the twist in the story…The State says it’s all a plot to  
undermine the “sovereignty and integrity” of India by some “foreign  
enemies.” That terrorism is a global menace, a mindless violence to  
tumble democratic governments, and India as one such democracy has to  
fight against it. [democracy btw, only because they are elected by a  
passive election process every five years- not as if they actually  
listen to the people’s problems.] The allegation by the government is  
that terrorism is an attack on national integrity and development- other
  countries hate us and want to see our downfall, and we can’t let the  
enmities perpetuated by these external powers to break us.
So, we will enact some laws totally violating all procedural  
protections- forget just, fair and reasonable- that’s for “normal”  
people, people who are not terrorists- thus excluding them even more  
from the ambit of our Constitution, all the while forgetting that  
terrorism emerges in the first place BECAUSE of the exclusion of these  
people from the Constitution. But Naxalism becomes an influence  
propelled by China, along with disturbances in the north-east and  
terrorism in Kashmir is Pakistan’s mischief-all part of a  
well-constructed nationalist paranoia. And even if that’s true, the  
question to ask is why our citizens are so ready to raise arms against  
the Indian State with just a little foreign persuasion? What do they  
find so oppressive and demeaning in our system that they resort to the  
use of violence, which is something any person would refrain from at the
  first go. We forget that most of these terrorist activities emerge 
from  land and developmental issues- and the Fundamental Rights of these
  terrorists even before they had to resort to violence so that the 
State  would at least listen to them were being constantly violated. 
Right to a  dignified life, you say? But these issues are never 
addressed.
Amazingly, the Supreme Court which is supposed to the guardian of our
  Constitution and uphold law has not refrained from using this 
perverted  nationalism to destroy all illusion of law. The use of this 
perverted  nationalism argument is well-evident in Kartar Singh v. State of Punjab
 [para 25], which shamelessly constitutionalises TADA. It is a judgment 
 which still exercises the power of its shadow over the 
constitutionality  of Unlawful Activities Prevention Act, under which 
PUCL members Binayak  Sen and Ajay TG were detained fro long periods. 
The court uses the  argument that it can consider matters of “common 
knowledge” in its  decision, to conclusively hammer the perverted 
nationalism saga into the  terrorist narrative. [paras 31- 35] And this 
argument is then used to  blind the Constitutional requirement of just, 
fair reasonable, in order  to do anything to kill these “enemies of the 
State”, which btw, are our  own people.
 
 Order trumps law
When perverted nationalism is built into the interpretation of legal 
 provisions, order triumphs over law. The defence, sovereignty and  
integrity of India is reduced to mere protection of its territorial  
boundaries rather than defence of the values of justice, liberty and  
equality which make up the nation. Order becomes more important than  
law, and law can be broken to maintain order. Which implies that legal  
provisions no longer need to be just, fair and reasonable. When  
judgments like Nandini Sundar v. State of Chhatisgarh
 are pronounced, they are accused of judicial activism and violation of 
 Article 50, because they harp on the Constitutional principle that the 
 government cannot break the law to uphold the law. This is the reality 
 of India today and it cannot be changed until we, as the people of  
India, and our legal machinery understands what it means to actually  
have a Constitution and Rule of law and tone down its drumbeat of  
foreign meddling to bring down India, and actually concentrate on the  
socio-economic deprivation of its own people.
Like Arundhati Roy says, “The Indian state, you know what its  
greatest art is—it’s not killing people—that’s its second greatest art, 
 the first greatest art is to wait, to wait and wait and wait and hope  
that everybody’s energies will just go down.” This waiting and 
doing  nothing about problems must be changed. More importantly to 
effectively  tackle terrorism, we and our Courts must consistently 
recognize that  terrorism and insurgency emerge when the government 
waits and passively  deprives people of their Fundamental Rights.
 
 
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