The Caravan

A Special Injustice

In February 2020, northeast Delhi witnessed widespread communal violence and arson. Atleast 53 people were killed and hundreds injured. On 2 May, the Indian Express reported that the Delhi Police planned to request the Delhi High Court to assign special courts to prosecute cases relating to the violence. On 15 June, the Delhi High Court designated certain courts to exclusively try cases arising out of the February violence, though it is not known whether this is in response to a police request. In the aftermath of several other pogroms, special courts have been recommended but often set up only years later. In three major instances of past communal violence—the 1984 anti-Sikh pogrom, the 1992-93 riots, and the 2002 Gujarat carnage—special courts were instituted to prosecute cases.

Similar to those cases, the special courts set up in the aftermath of the Delhi violence are simply existing courts that have been exclusively assigned “riot” cases, in order to ensure faster trials. These courts follow the same judicial processes as other ordinary courts. These “special” courts are thus merely an attempt to fast-track trials. They are different from other special courts such as those for the prosecution of sexual offences against children or for cases investigated by the National Investigation Agency, where the courts follow special procedures.

However, reports from previous incidents of mass violence and from Delhi this year highlight a more fundamental issue—the role of the state both during the violence and after. If the state is a passive onlooker or complicit in violence, it can hardly be expected to ensure an impartial investigation. Special courts will remain ineffective until this larger issue is addressed. As the track record of many of these past

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Caravan

The Caravan65 min read
The Sangh’s Fixer
THE COUNTRY’S MOST IMPORTANT politicians and industrialists walked into a brightly lit hall in Chennai on 18 January 2015. Among them were the senior ministers Rajnath Singh, Arun Jaitley, Piyush Goyal, M Venkaiah Naidu and Ravi Shankar Prasad, and t
The Caravan40 min read
Blurred Lines
AS WE TRUNDLED DOWNHILL along the treacherous dirt track, made muddy by rain, I wondered how those routinely negotiating this path did not lose their mental bearings—or a few spinal discs. Our Mizo driver was nonchalant, piloting our pickup truck wit
The Caravan2 min readCrime & Violence
Editor’s Pick
ON 13 JANUARY 1898, the newspaper L’Aurore published an open letter by the novelist Émile Zola to the French president, Félix Faure. Titled “J’accuse…!”—I accuse—the article deplored the antisemitism that had led to the artillery officer Alfred Dreyf

Related Books & Audiobooks