
MUMBAI (UCAN) Jesuits [SJ] in India are planning to appeal to a court to clear the stigma attached to their activist colleague, the late Father Stan Swamy, who died while in detention after being arrested under a draconian anti-terror law [Sunday Examiner, July 11].
“We are soon filing a petition in the Mumbai High Court seeking a direction to clear his name from alleged charges under the provisions of the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act [UAPA],” said Father A. Santhanam sj, a lawyer based in the southern state of Tamil Nadu.
The top court in Maharashtra state had, on November 24 disposed of two appeals the late priest had filed for his bail, noting them as withdrawn.
Earlier, Father Frazer Mascarenhas sj, former principal of St. Xavier’s College, Mumbai, filed an interim application seeking directions from the high court for a mandatory judicial inquiry into the circumstances that led to Father Swamy’s death while confined to Taloja prison on the outskirts of Mumbai.
The Jamshedpur Jesuit Province, to which Father Swamy, belonged has appointed Father Mascarenhas and the parish priest of St. Peter’s Church, Mumbai, as delegates and the next of kin of Father Swamy.
The 84-year-old Jesuit was arrested on 8 October 2020, by the National Investigation Agency, a federal anti-terror combat unit, at his residence on the outskirts of Jharkhand’s state capital, Ranchi, in eastern India.
He, along with 16 other arrested academics, lawyers and activists, was suspected of having a role in instigating mob violence at Bhima Koregaon in Maharashtra state on 1 January 2018, that left one person dead and several injured.
He was accused of serious offenses such as sedition, having links with an outlawed Maoist group and being part of a conspiracy to kill Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, among others.
Father Swamy was remanded to judicial custody the following day by a special NIA court in Mumbai. He died following a heart attack on July 5 this year while undergoing treatment at a Catholic-run hospital where he was taken after his health deteriorated.
The priest was suffering from Parkinson’s disease, hearing impairment and other age-related ailments, and was also infected with Covid-19, but he was repeatedly denied bail due to the stringent provisions of the UAPA.
Father Swamy was an indigenous people’s rights activist who became an irritant to the political establishment, both in Jharkhand and Delhi, due to his consistent opposition to attempts to dilute the land rights laws that prevented the purchase of tribal land in the state by outsiders.
His protest along with other political parties and civil rights groups forced the state government to withdraw the proposed amendment. The elderly priest also filed a case against the then ruling Bharatiya Janata Party government for jailing close to 3,000 indigenous young people after accusing them of being supporters of Maoist rebels.
Father Swamy’s associates felt this action led to his false implication in the Bhima Koregaon case.
“He was a hardcore activist who always stood for protecting the rights of indigenous and other ordinary humans,” Father Santhanam said,.