There is still another aspect of the Operation Bluestar
whether this Operation can be sustained on legal grounds, if
not, whether those who were interested in their place of
worship, had the right to defend it against an attack.
The Armed Forces (Punjab and Chandigarh)
Special Powers Act 1983, came into force on 15th of October,
1983. Soon after the Government had surrounded the Golden
Temple Complex by the para-military forces. Two to three
months before the Operation Bluestar, sporadic exchange of
fires between the para-military forces and inmates of the
Complex had become a common feature. On the Central
Government side it was perhaps decided to send the military
inside Golden Temple Complex especially for the purpose of
flushing out Sant Bhindranwale and his followers.
Obviously the Government justifies this
operation under the provisions of the Armed Forces (Punjab
and Chandigarh) Special Power Act, 1983. Provisions of this
Act, if examined threadbare may expose the Government for
its false claims. The Armed Forces in Punjab were called by
the Governor in aid of civil administration and armed forces
had planned their attack under section 3 of the Armed Forces
(Punjab and Chandigarh) Special Power Act, 1983, hereinafter
called the Act. Section 4 of Act describes the special
powers of the Armed Forces. Under this section any
commissioned officer or any warrant officer,
non-commissioned officer or any other person equivalent to a
rank in the armed forces may, in a disturbed area:-
(a) If he is of opinion that it is
necessary so as to do for the maintenance of the public
order, after giving such due warning as he may consider
necessary, fire upon or otherwise use force even to the
causing of death, against any person who is acting in
contravention of any of the order for the time being in
force in the disturbed area prohibiting the assembling of
five or more persons or the carrying of weapons or things
capable of being used as weapons or of fire arms, ammunition
or explosive substances.
(b) If he is of opinion that it is
necessary so to do, destroy any arms dump, prepared or
fortified position or shelter from which armed attacks are
made or are likely to be made or are attempted to be made or
any structure used as a training camp for armed volunteers
or utilised as a hide out by armed gangs or absconders
wanted for any offence.
An FIR was later lodged at Amritsar
against several persons, including those who died in the
operation, for sedition and waging war against the country
and many other penal sections. All that is known about the
dead amongst the combatants (Sant Bhindranwale's followers)
is that except four persons namely Sant Jarnail Singh
Bhindranwale, Gen. Subeg Singh. Bhai Amrik Singh and Thara
Singh, others about 170 were unidentified terrorists (as
mentioned in their post mortem reports.) So the Government
has not been able to show if any proclaimed offender or a
person wanted in some criminal case was inside the Golden
Temple Complex on 3.6.1984.
Seen in this light it cannot be said that
those who were inside were acting in contravention of any
law or order for the time being in force in the disturbed
area prohibiting assembly of five or more persons or
carrying of weapons or of things capable of being used as
weapons or of fire-arms ammunitions or explosive substances.
Whether the fortifications, morchas, weapons and arms being
kept by the Sant and his followers, can be covered under the
above quoted sub-section (2), shall have to be seen in the
Indian Penal Code. Section 442 JPC describes house-trespass:
“442. Whoever commits criminal trespass by
entering into or remaining in any building, tent or vessel,
used as a human dwelling, or any building used as a place of
worship, or as a place for the custody of property, is said
to commit house-trespass.”
Section 97, 98 and 100 IPC in the nature
of exceptions give a person right to defend his body and
property or body and property of any other person. Use of
force, according to law, in these sections shall be in
proportion to the violence being caused to the body or the
property. Such a defence of the body and property, besides
the licit weapons, can even be by illicit weapons, according
to the law as laid down in these sections.
Obviously, therefore, the criteria as laid
down in clause (a) of section 4 of the Act, is missing. The
law as contained in the exceptions quoted above, shall come
into play. No less than Director General of Punjab Police
had observed that there was no criminal inside the Golden
Temple complex. Even Mr. Rajiv Gandhi, only a few days
before the Operation Blue-Star, had given a clean chit to
Sant Bhindranwale, giving him a good character certificate
of a religious man. The government has not been able to
establish any nexus between the offences committed elsewhere
in the Punjab and the Sant and his followers inside the
Golden Temple complex. At least, all the murders, dacoities
and other offences have now been investigated and fully
traced and till now none of the inmates of the complex has
been linked with any of these crimes.
Let us examine the ingredients of the
clauses one by one. Acting in contravention of any law or
order for the time being in force in the disturbed area
prohibiting the assembly of five or more persons has not
been established. Congregations inside the places of worship
certainly do not fall within the prohibition of assembly of
five or more persons Carrying of weapons or of things
capable of being used as weapons or of fire arms, ammunition
or explosive substance, obviously means carrying weapons
from one place to another. Inescapable conclusion,
therefore, would he that the inmates of the complex had the
right to defend it against the attack by the military forces
with licit or illicit weapons.
(a) Even if the case is examined in the
light of clause (b) above, it is doubtful if any of the
criteria in that clause could be available to the government
on 3-6-1984.
As I have said above the military forces
were out to commit a trespass, therefore criteria too was
not available to them. No attacks were being carried out
from the complex upon anybody or at least no case as
mentioned above was registered against any inmate. We can
safely presume that there were no arms dumps prepared or
fortified positions or shelter for making attacks or a
training camp for armed volunteers or used as a hide out by
armed gangs absconders wanted for any offence.
The last criterion wanted for any offence
is important the Government had no material with them on
3-6-1984 to show that any inmate was wanted for any offence.
It can, therefore, be said that apart from political or
other reasons there were no military reasons for the attack
of the armed forces on the Golden Temple Complex on
3-6-1984.
What followed the Operation Bluestar is
still worse. Hundreds of innocent persons have been roped
in. They have been subjected to torture, experienced only
during the war day. They have been interrogated like the
prisoners of war, and are still languishing in the military
custody. Some of those who have been released are physical
wrecks and many had been killed without trial. Even now
false encounters are carried out daily by the Punjab Police.
Armed forces justify the military custody of such persons
under section 6 of the Act, which runs as under :-
"Section 6 - Arrested person and seized
property to be made over to the police; Any person arrested
and taken into custody under this act and every property,
arm, ammunition or explosive substance or any vehicle or
vessel seized under this act, shall be made over to the
Officer-in-Charge of the nearest police station with the
least possible delay, together with the a report of the
circumstances, occasioning the arrest, or as the case may be
occasioning the seizure of such property. arms, ammunition
or explosive substance or any vehicle or vessel as the case
may be."
This section nowhere envisages a custody
in the hands of Armed Forces, rather on the opposite it says
that any person arrested shall be made over to the
Officer-in-Charge of the nearest police station "with the
least possible delay" together with a report of the
circumstances.Almost in every case giving reports on the
bail applications the police have pleaded that the accused
are in the military custody. They interpret this section as
having a right for the custody of the accused for unlimited
period. "With the least possible delay" cannot by any
stretch of law be interpreted as an unlimited period. This
perfectly coincides with sub-section (1) and (2) of Art. 22
of the constitution and means that the Armed forces can not
retain the custody of the arrested persons for more than
period that it required for handing him over to the police.
Hundreds of persons have been arrested and
interrogated and 90% of them have been found innocent but
still they are not being discharged. Many of them are still
in the judicial lock up. Punjab has experienced the blanket
means of the provisions of section 107/151 Cr.P.C. Many
person are roped in under these provisions and are subjected
to heavy sureties which even if given, are send to Revenue
Officers for the verifications which take more than a
fortnight to complete. Provisions of remand are being
misused in most of the cases. People are kept in the police
or military custody for full 30 days in some cases, even
though there are no reasons for the same. Executive Courts
created under the Punjab Criminal Procedure Court, Amendment
Act, 1983, are found only too obliging in the regard.