Posted on 09/13/2007 8:26:58 AM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu
Vigilante justice appears to have become the order of the day in the lawless northern Indian state of Bihar. The latest incident in which 10 men suspected to be thieves were lynched by a group of villagers in Vaishali district on Thursday underscored the people's frustration with the police. The villagers said that they were fed up with rising theft for the last two months in spite of informing the police regularly. "But when the police did not take any action we started patrolling our village ourselves to catch the thieves. Today we succeeded in catching them and did justice then and there," said a villager who preferred to remain unnamed. Losing faith
The villagers of Vaishali are not the only ones to dish out vigilante justice to suspected thieves and burglars in Bihar. Two weeks ago, in bustling Bhagalpur town, a mob nearly beat to death a man who was accused of snatching a gold chain from a woman. What was more shocking was the fact that the incident took place in the presence of two policemen who were filmed by a local news channel dragging the man on their motorcycle. On 9 September alone, there were three particularly horrific cases of public lynchings and beatings.
First, three suspected motorcycle thieves were caught by villagers in Nawada district and brutally beaten up with sticks, stones and metal rods. The enraged mob even gouged out an eye of one of the suspects, Tinku Singh, with a pointed iron tool. The three men were taken to hospital.
Then, two men caught stealing material at a thermal power station in Begusarai district were beaten up by locals in the presence of policemen.
They were later shot dead by unknown persons - and the locals said the police had fired on them. The police deny killing the men. And in Nawada district, two children, aged 13 and 12 years, were beaten up by locals and paraded with their heads shaved for allegedly stealing salt and detergents from a local grocery where they were employed. Such mob anger is not restricted to the villages alone. Crime wave
Some six months ago, people in the Sultanganj area in the state capital, Patna, lynched a suspected criminal in full public view. Earlier, three alleged criminals were nearly beaten to death in the posh Rajendra Nagar of the capital. The police arrived and allegedly shot them dead in front of a cheering mob. Bihar has been India's most lawless state for many years now, and a change in government two years ago doesn't seem to have improved matters much. Have the people lost their faith in the police completely to indulge in such wanton acts of vigilante justice? "No, it means that under the present regime, people have become more confident and daring. They do not fear the criminals now," state home secretary Afzal Amanullah says. Social scientist Shaibal Gupta does not agree. "This only reveals the state of Bihar. People think justice will not be delivered. So they resort to instant justice by lynching the culprit," he says. It is true that there has been no let-up in the public complaints against police inaction in the state. Last Monday, at his weekly meeting with members of the public, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar received some 1,600 complaints against police officials.
"There is still a lot to do to reform the police. They are not pro-people," admitted Mr Kumar. Even after his government tried to restore sagging public confidence in the police with a range of new measures - speedy trials, giving police a free hand to conduct investigations and appointing new officers in many districts - crime remains stubbornly high.
For example, a total of 4,849 cases of kidnappings were registered in the state between July 2006 and June 2007, according to a report presented in the local high court recently. More than 2,000 people were abducted in the state in the first half of this year. "The new regime seems to have failed to stem the crime wave," says businessman Ashish Kumar. Bihar opposition leader Shyam Rajak says people have "no option, but to lynch criminals" when crime is so high. It would seem that Bihar needs to tackle crime on a war footing to restore the people's confidence in the police and the criminal justice system.
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Indians seem more benign than their Asian counterparts, the Mohammedans, but the more I read about India the more it seems their culture is equally as twisted as Islam.
The lynchings of Blacks in the South during the first 30 years of the 20th Century was the result of a inadequate or corrupt government? The vigilantism I speak of was certainly not people taking the law into their own hands because the laws weren't being adequately enforced by government, it was hatred, pure and simple.
I’m with you. Vigilantism arises when government breaks down and ceases to perform its proper function. It is not the ideal.
Reading the story, you can see some of the problems with vigilantism. Is the best solution to rampant theft to catch the thieves and put out their eyes, or torture and kill them? I don’t think so.
On the other hand, letting thieves run rampant and doing nothing about it is even worse. The preferred solution is to get a better government. But realistically that isn’t always possible. The second-best solution might be a more just form of vigilantism, better organized, in which thieves are punished but with some reasonable approach to justice rather than uncontrolled mob fury, such as flogging them instead of blinding or killing them. The idea is to persuade them not to do it again, but to go into some other line of business. Repeat offenses might be treated accordingly.
In other words, you need an unofficial justice system if you can’t have an official one, not a lynch mob.
Montana had vigilantes too. They were organized committees of citizens who captured, tried, and hanged criminals. There are those who criticize their conduct and results but at the time Montana was unsafe territory where many suspected Sheriff Plummer of being in cahoots with the roadagente. He and many others were tried and executed.
No system of justice is perfect and where there is no system or a hopelessly inept or corrupt system then direct citizen action is undertaken to safeguard life and property. They do not function as well as a formal, honest system and therefore often commit their own crimes. But they make the bad guys think twice in places where ther is no law.
Having never lived in a truly lawless environment I find it hard to criticize people who take extereme measures to safeguard their community. The government needs to step up and do its job to stop this and this wouldn’t happen.
Yes. I admit that I was thinking and wondering about our own system of justice when I wrote that.
Vigilantism is never the best solution. But systems of justice are always imperfect, too. America has better justice than most nations in history, but it’s very far from perfect. You have rampant political corruption in most states and municipalities, and you have activist ideological judges in most courts, as seems to be the case with the decision you mention.
Since when is the testimony of one criminal against another not admissible in court? The job of the jury and the lawyers is to weigh such evidence and decide how credible it is. But I have never heard of the idea that you can’t get one criminal to testify against another. Preposterous.
All that aside from the beastliness of the crime. No doubt the released criminal will now go into business, with the judges’ compliments, running a preschool service. This is the kind of decision that strongly tempts people to turn to vigilante justice.
The lynchings you speak of had nothing to do with what is commonly understood to be vigilante activity.
I agree that torture is wrong, but I have no problem with executing thieves. They are a plague.
A disgusting practice, then and now...
“When the Mob rules, it lynches” -— Jose Ortega Y Gasset
Sometimes it "is" a good thing, when the only alternatives are worse.
"Justice is something for the government to mete out, not an angry mob."
See above, somethmes the government will NOT do it's job, and sometimes government IS the problem.
"If the government is not doing its job, India has a representative form of government, and they can vote in a more responsible government."
Sometimes that isn't possible, even with a supposedly "representative form of government". To say otherwise is a nice idealistic sentiment.
Some freepers support actual vigilantism. As some here have pointed out, that could be because there is not other reasonable way. But even if vigilantism is inevitable, the group of people should have a set of rules that they follow when hunting down, prosecuting, and punishing criminals.
Minuteman movement.....
If you've read the section, you will see little there which opposes what the Minutemen do, chiefly watch the border and report to the government (via the border patrol) when they spot an illegal alien, which is perfectly legal--vigilantism is not.
As someone who spent some years in remote, sparsely populated areas I can tell you that this was usually the case. When law enforcement was hours away and often not available for anything but major crimes, ad hoc groups would form. I never saw any of the mob mentality that is depicted in movies but usually older and very somber and sober respected citizens would meet to consider the situation.
The deliberations were probably more intense than actual jury trials. Each man knew that he was putting his name and reputation on the line. There would be no legal games and no absolution before God if they were in error. They most often tended to the minimum practical solution to the problem, most often a warning that the transgressors crimes were known and that they would stop immediately or the criminals would face the wrath of the community. Usually that stopped the behavior.
If that didn't work, the subject would have a visit by a group of very serious and very fit men with a final warning as a demonstration of what they were facing. From there things would escalate rapidly. There would probably be a beating. Then there would be a notice that their presence was no longer desirable in the county. Then there would be a 24 hour deadline to leave town. Then...
Rarely did things go past steps one or two. It was efficient and effective and I never, ever, saw it abused.
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