INDIA: Negligent about negligence
An Article by the Asian Human Rights
Commission
INDIA:
Negligent about negligence: Mass disasters and the Indian
State
By Urmila
Pullat
On 9 April 2016, a
massive explosion at the Putingal Temple near Paravur in
Kollam, Kerala, resulted in the death of more than a hundred
people and injured more than 350 others. A fireworks display
had been in operation for the Temple festival, and initial
reports suggest that a firecracker fell into a stockpile,
causing an explosion. The result of traditional competitive
pyrotechnics between two groups, playful sparring in the
skies, had tragic consequences.
Display conducted
despite ban
It has been reported that banned substances were
used to make the fireworks louder, and, crucially, the
Kerala Fire and Rescue Services had not given clearance for
the fireworks display. Further, a Standard Operating
Procedure (SOP) for religious mass gatherings in Kerala has
been in existence since last year. Prepared by the Institute
of Land and Disaster Management, of the Kerala
Government’s Department of Revenue and Disaster
Management, the document provides “a guideline… for
event organizers, emergency services and government
departments involved in extending services to religious
festivals”.
The SOP clearly warns of dangers involved
in conducting a pyrotechnics display if adequate safety
precautions are not taken. A critical aspect of this case is
that the Kerala Fire and Rescue Services Department claims
that it had not given clearance for the fireworks
display to take place and it was conducted despite this. It
has also been reported that the District Collector and
Additional District Magistrate had both denied permission
for a pyrotechnic display to be conducted at the venue.
Permission was denied on the basis of a complaint filed by a woman who lived in
the locality, who alleged that her house was damaged due to
the fireworks displays of earlier years and stated that she
suffers from health issues that were exacerbated due to the
fireworks. She also alleged that she was threatened and
pressured to withdraw the plea. She claimed that she was
alone in her complaints, as there was “a superstition that
complaining against the fireworks display would invite the
wrath of the goddesses”.
Foolhardy
machismo
The behavior of the
Temple authorities exposes the complete lack of respect and
regard for the law of the land. In spite of the lack of
clearance by the Kerala Fire and Rescue Services Department
and an order by the Additional District Magistrate denying
permission to conduct the pyrotechnic display, the Temple
authorities brazenly went ahead and conducted it
anyway.
This serves as a reminder of a recent event, the
Art of Living Cultural Festival, which was organized on the
banks of the Yamuna River. The Festival was embroiled in
controversy, with allegations and cross-allegations bandied.
In that case too, the Delhi government told the National Green Tribunal (NGT)
that the event had not received police or fire safety
clearances initially, due to larger-than-expected footfalls.
Clearance was finally given after the National Green
Tribunal slapped a fine of Rs. 5 crore on the event
authorities for the environmental impact the event would
cause, which has reportedly still not been paid. The NGT
also hauled up the Festival authorities for preventing an expert panel constituted
by the NGT from visiting the site. At the time the initial
compensation of Rs. 5 crore was ordered, Sri Sri
Ravishankar, founder of the Art of Living Foundation and
spiritual guru (in)famously said,
“We have done nothing
wrong. I will go to jail but not pay the fine.”
The
festival was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi,
and went ahead as planned, with no whisper from the Prime
Minister about this contempt for the NGT order by Sri Sri
Ravi Shankar.
Begging for
justice
India seems to have a
history of being negligent about negligence. The Bhopal Gas
tragedy and the Uphaar Cinema disaster have resulted in
decades old litigation and, as usual, the victims and their
families have had to run from pillar to post to obtain a
semblance of justice. In 2015, the Supreme Court allowed the
Ansal brothers, owners of the theater to deposit a fine of
Rs. 60 crore in lieu of further jail time for the Uphaar
Cinema fire tragedy. The litigation surrounding the Bhopal
Gas tragedy too has dragged on for more than three decades
(since 1984) and many victims still haven’t received
compensation. The amount awarded to individuals has also
been severely criticized, along with the inability of the
State to comprehend and acknowledge the scale of the
disaster.
More recently, and closer home to the Kollam
Temple fire tragedy, is the Thekkady boat accident in 2009. The
accident resulted in the death of more than 40 people, when
a Kerala Tourism Development Corporation (KTDC) owned boat
capsized in Thekkady Lake. Almost seven years later, the
trial is still going on, with no concrete action having
being taken against the accused. Here too, umpteen safety
precautions were violated and it was even alleged that the
boat driver was not a professionally trained one. No action
has been taken against the KTDC, despite the judicial
commission set up to probe the accident very clearly pinning
part of the responsibility on the State
authority.
Blockaded by all parts of the
system
“Justice is open to
everyone in the same way as the Ritz Hotel”. - Judge
Sturgess
Our failing criminal justice institutions,
coupled with a complete lack of will on the part of the
State to take a stand on mass disasters, especially when
they involve a large religious community and its sentiments,
or powerful people, have cost our people dearly. Blockaded
by all parts of the system, victims have nowhere left to
turn and no authority left to trust when a disaster
occurs.
Licensees who organize the event pay scant regard
to State-mandated rules; the police do not do enough to
ensure that the rules are followed and when violated fail to
arrest the guilty ones, charge them, and bring them to trial
; the Executive plays vote-bank politics, pandering to group
sentiments, afraid to hurt religious feelings and powerful
egos; the Judiciary, the last resort, drags its feet and
fails the people time and again. And, as always, the
majority of victims are always the most vulnerable: the poor
and the powerless, who hold no sway over the State.
It is
time for the State to take a serious stand on these issues
and push for stern action against those responsible without
desecrating the democratic oaths they have taken, parrying
to “popular sentiment” and denying justice to the
hundreds who await it.
The one heartening statement has
come from senior Kerala High Court Judge, Justice
Chitambaresh, who said,
“The right to profess, practice
and propagate the religion of one's choice under Article 25
of the Constitution of India does not take in the freedom to
use dangerous crackers."
Despite the history, it is hoped
that the tragedy in Kerala sees swift justice for the
victims.
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