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Centre asks TN to send Vaiko papers
Our Political Bureau / New Delhi/Chennai September 04, 2004
A high-voltage trial that will decide the difference between abatement to terrorism and freedom of political belief will start here next week, following a direction from the Centre to the Tamil Nadu government to provide all the case records relating to MDMK leader Vaiko's detention under the tough anti-terrorism law, the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA).
 
A specially designated court in Chennai yesterday turned down consent to the Tamil Nadu government to withdraw POTA cases against Vaiko and eight other partymen. Simultaneously, the central POTA review committee has asked the Tamil Nadu Chief Secretary to produce on 10 September, the papers relating to the case.
 
The POTA review committee had recommended that the case against Vaiko be withdrawn. Accordingly the Tamil Nadu public prosecutor had pleaded before the designated judge, L Rajendran, that the case be withdrawn.
 
Rajendran on Friday said that the order of the review committee was "destitute of any valid materials, except the speech delivered by the accused at a public meeting on June 29, 2002".
 
The whole episode has the makings of a showdown between the Centre and the state and also between Jayalalithaa and the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance.
 
Jayalalithaa has repeatedly said that Vaiko lauds the LTTE's terrorist activities whenever he delivers a speech and seeks support and sympathy for the banned organisation in India and abroad.
 
The state government's public prosecutor had argued that the Tamil Nadu government had "rightly" charged Vaiko under the tough anti-terrorism law as there was a "prima facie" case against him.
 
Earlier, the Tamil Nadu government had submitted materials pertaining to the case to the committee in three bound volumes in sealed covers with replies praying that the complaints be dismissed.
 
The state also pleaded claim of privilege against disclosure of documents to the accused on the ground that the chargesheet in the case was yet to be filed.
 
Therefore, it may not be possible to furnish copies of the documents to the accused at this juncture as it would greatly prejudice the trial, it had added.
 
Vaiko's justification of LTTE's violence in his speech on 29 June, 2002 at Tirumangalam near the temple town of Madurai - three months after the enactment of POTA - was not an outburst but a pre-meditated and calculated one to stimulate secessionist sentiments in Tamilians and to enhance LTTE's support base in Tamil Nadu, the state government had said in its arguments.
 
Countering the allegations, Vaiko's counsel Ramasubramanyam told the committee that the MDMK leader's support to LTTE was on account of its sympathies for the Tamil cause and not due to its militant actions.
 
Delineating the history of the Dravidian movement and Indian politics vis-a-vis the Sri Lankan situation, he said it was only after the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi in 1992 that the LTTE earned a bad name in India.
 
Before that, even government supported the outfit, he said adding Rajiv Gandhi fell out with LTTE only after the suicide of 13 of its cadres in Sri Lankan army custody when the IPKF was disarming militants in the island nation.
 
The counsel quoted a statement made by Vaiko in the Parliament where he had said "I was a supporter of LTTE yesterday, I'm a supporter today and will be a supporter tomorrow".
 
But all this was his political view, the counsel said and sought to know if Vaiko was not entitled to create a movement against the LTTE's inclusion in the list of outfits banned under POTA. That Vaiko is a supporter of the LTTE does not mean he supports its terrorist acts too, he said.
 
After hearing the arguments, in its 8 April report, the review committee had held there was no prima facie case against Vaiko and others for the state government to proceed against them under the anti-terror law. The state government had directed withdrawal of the case in keeping with an 13 August order of the Supreme Court.
 
The next - and possibly final- chapter of the drama will now take place beginning 10 September at the high security Vigyan Bhavan in Delhi.

 
 

Centre asks TN to send Vaiko papers
Court says no to POTA withdrawal
Our Political Bureau / New Delhi/Chennai Sep 04, 2004, 21:55 IST

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