Site icon Youth Ki Awaaz

Opinion: Hyderabad Police Encounter Was Patriarchy’s Attempt To Preserve Itself

Several years ago, the SP of Warangal killed three men in an encounter. Those men were charged by the police for pouring acid on a woman. A few days ago, the same policeman also headed the encounter, which shot the four accused in the Hyderabad rape case.

During all this, the protests were legitimate. There were a lot of opinions calling for harsher punishments for rapists with quicker justice delivery.

Let us now go back to the times when India hit Balakot in Pakistan. This is where the intimacy between politics and truth becomes evident in a perfect manner. When India apparently struck its target, the debate was fierce, both on social media, and on the hard ground. Both the countries held their political positions, so as to insult their opponents. India said it hit the targets as planned, while displaying ignorance about whether they killed the terrorists, and Pakistan said India hit some trees in Pakistan, and raised environmental concerns.

When we do not know the truth and display an urgency to take political positions, we have the flexibility to weave our own stories. The mere reason that truth is not clear means we can recreate the scene in our imaginations, which suit our political beliefs and stay comfortable in our cocoons. Media helps us with all possible facts to facilitate imaginations. We also had independent researchers, who used satellite-enabled, sophisticated technologies, like the Google Maps, to see how pictures of the target changed before and after the attack, as apparent from the carefully extracted screenshots – so as to prove that something was surely demolished.

One’s political identity is matured when one is able to create such stories in more such situations and answer the questions asked by common sense. We are now experts at holding our political positions without any scepticism. Some of us believed a lot of terrorists got killed when the Balakot attacks happened. The position that we take when the truth is blurred is a political position. Our political values make us create stories that match them. One should only wait for a situation where the truth is blurred to identify anyone’s political inclination.

As such, the performance of politics sees truth as a distraction. In other words, politics cannot exist where truth exists. Politics become irrelevant in situations of truth. If everything is clear, where is the scope for discussion, and thereby politics? If we look at it differently, the pursuit of politics itself is to understand some truth, so that we can lead the lives that we deserve. That’s why we allow politics in good faith, after all. This particular feature of politics is essential in democratic affairs, and this also makes consensus easier.

However, we cannot survive in politics if we become irrelevant. Hence, the situation is intensified where the truth is not known; more is the vibrancy of democracy. Political parties can thrive by feeding their version of stories to the partisan audience. Pratap Bhanu Mehta countered the arguments that we have entered a post-truth era, by saying, politics has always been post-truth. What it means is that the mere reason why politics was possible is also evidence that the truth was not clear. If politics has always existed, that means, truth in such a situation has never been clear. Or, truth kills politics. Conversely, we can observe that politics can kill the truth if there is an incentive in it.

Hence, to survive in politics means to look for situations, where the truth is not clear. In fact, one’s survival or self-preservation is also an incentive for one to destroy more and more truth.

Coming Back To The Hyderabad Case

When the victim in Hyderabad was raped and murdered on the outskirts of the city, her dead body was also burnt. This is nothing but an effort to destroy any possibility of evidence of rape, and the consequences of it. This is an effort to blur the truth so that the perpetrators can weave stories and explain their positions. One of the accused, allegedly told his parents after reaching home, that he killed a woman on a scooty when he was crossing the road in his lorry.

In this process, several Indians could argue that our loyalty to the nation was under question if we did not believe that the IAF hit the target. The accused also offered a story so that those who had faith in him would find truth in it.

This was the first act of politics in the incident. The accused narrated stories to their parents after reaching home so as to gain their sympathy or mislead them, if at all.

These politics failed as soon as the truth was established through techniques like the post-mortem examination. Once the truth was out in the media, the reaction was outrageous. The accused’s politics was not possible anymore. His parents wanted to disown him too. People surrounded the police station in agony to kill the four accused at Shadnagar.

Students protested, and people called for the death penalty to be imposed. The parents of the accused also expressed their opinion to kill their son at the same site where the victim was raped. However, laws existed to deal with this situation, and some also expected ‘due process’ was expected to be followed. Fast track courts were expected to deliver justice soon. The chief minister assured the same.

People were impatient, outraged, and wanted to execute the rapists. To lynch them publicly was also an option to be considered. Many supported it, ‘educated’ or not. However, no one popularly called for an encounter, though everyone wanted to lynch.

During all this, the protests were legitimate. There were a lot of opinions calling for harsher punishments for rapists with quicker justice delivery. The anger was justified. The protests appeared to care about women.

All through, women were seen as the victims, and we wanted reforms all across to improve justice delivery, and improvement, in social structures. We wanted children to be educated well so that they do not commit rapes or any form of sexual harassment, and we also wanted parents to teach better moralities to their children. We reminded ourselves of the ‘Indian’ culture, which always respected women in various forms. We even wondered why she did not call the police by dialing a simple ‘100’.

The activity of rape was seen, as if only the four individuals were responsible, as they were the perpetrators of rape. The victim, also seen as an individual, should have resorted to safety measures to protect herself from these perpetrators. Even when the state was doing everything, she was not smart enough to make use of them. Isn’t it?

Was Justice Really Delivered?

The police encounter was the second act of politics in the incident. In a single stroke, it killed all truth, which could pose these questions.

It is not just that four men raped her. Rapists merely formed the extended family of patriarchy, which could be taken support from, anytime.

The gist of the protests in this situation was that several bad men raped a woman, and good men must deliver justice. However, the way justice was delivered, makes us feel it was sheer power at play. If it was so, whose power was it?

Good men had an obligation on them to prove their goodness, after all, which good man did not worry about the safety of women and women empowerment? Several good men could easily feel they must eliminate the bad men within them to preserve their goodness.

Who knows who these powerful good men were? Whether the good men from the upper classes were hurt when the lower-class men raped their daughters. Who knows whether it was an act of anger and retribution by the good men from the upper classes, to show the loafers of lower classes their place, saying the law does not come in their way, or whether the accused tried to flee.

Who delivered justice, and by whom? Who secured it? Was this a justice delivered to the upper-class male ego that was hurt? Was it the justice delivered by patriarchy in its own masculine way? Did the government succumb to populism, and was the encounter just like another freebie to comfort the masses? Who would execute the patriarchal system which had its stake in it?

Since everyone celebrated it alike, was it justice delivered by society as a whole? Why would women celebrate at all, if it was patriarchal, or class-based, justice delivered?

It was a kind of justice delivered by men across all times – a powerful masculine one, which in turn, they used to keep women too oppressed – which created the very context for the rape. The state was there to expose the politics of Arif, who is there to expose the politics of state?

The police encounter was the second act of politics in the incident. In a single stroke, it killed all truth, which could pose these questions. Unintentionally, it was an effort that tried to avoid the consequences of accepting the truth of patriarchy, like the story created by the accused, towards self-preservation. It was patriarchy’s attempt to preserve itself. The police behaved just like the accused. The male-like government failed the women once more. The matter is finished. Disha (name changed) was still alive in the protests as a hope for change.

The encounter killed her again, and this time forever. We need to wait for true justice to happen until every ‘man’ within us is held in the trial. Till then, we can weave our stories to justify our political positions.

Who knows? The police encounter eleven years ago was responsible for today’s rape, too, as long as it delivered justice the male way and preserved patriarchy.

 

Featured Image Credits: Hindustan Times

Exit mobile version