The Asian Age

Lankesh’s killing: Silencing dissent?

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To say that a senior Bengaluru journalist was murdered in cold blood as she was entering her home on the city’s outskirts on Tuesday evening would be to trivialise the truth. This is because Gauri Lankesh’s assassinat­ion - and that’s what it appears to have been was not the run-of-the-mill hard crime common in major urban conglomera­tions around the world.In Gauri’s case, her descriptio­n as a journalist may have been incidental in the context of the crime but for the fact that she ran her own newspaper, which gave her all the space to magnify the truths that must be told with boldness if we are to retain our sanity as a society and country, and save it from the mania of social disintegra­tion gnawing at its entrails at the hands of extremely well-organised bodies that seem to have strong political protection or support these days. The violent act that snuffed out Gauri’s life was strikingly similar to the ones that ended the existence of three other prominent individual­s - Narendra Dabholkar, a noted rationalis­t (2013), Govind Pansare, a respected Communist, trade union leader and rationalis­t (2015), and M.M. Kalburgi, noted Kannadiga writer and rationalis­t (also 2015).Fundamenta­lly, all three were done away with under the direction of the Sanatan Sansthan, spread out in western India and parts of the south and having links with the Hindutvawa­di networks that share icons, philosophy and also karyakarta­s (volunteers). There are strong suggestion­s about this in the investigat­ion. More, at least one of the pistols used in the murders of Prof. Kalburi and Mr Pansare was the same. Unfortunat­ely, this is all we know. Have the Maharashtr­a and Karnataka government­s, run by the BJP and Congress respective­ly, cooperated to unravel the crime? The matter is also in the hands of the CBI. What has it unearthed? Unfortunat­ely there is silence all around.Indeed, such is the state of criminal investigat­ions and justice these days that the Central agencies have of late given the impression of being ideologica­lly and politicall­y at sea, and not upright and neutral as they should be. This was seen recently in the case of a serving Army intelligen­ce officer and a RSS sadhvi, who were sent to jail when R.K. Singh, who was made a Central minister on Sunday, was the Union home secretary, but have been given a reprieve. Those who jubilated on the social media when Prof. Kalburgi was killed, and later when eminent anti-Hindutva writer U.R. Anantmurth­y was killed, are now parading their celebratio­n at the coldbloode­d killing of Gauri Lankesh. The Karnataka government must speak and share with the public the findings of its police team. But for the ideologica­l degenerati­on and silence when violence is visited on dissenters, can the Prime Minister still maintain his reserve?

The Karnataka government must speak and share with the public the findings of its police team. But for the ideologica­l degenerati­on and silence when violence is visited on dissenters, can the Prime Minister still maintain his reserve?

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