Abstract
In this article, I draw on Nasser Hussain’s conceptualizations on rule of law, violence, and exception to read the Inquiry Commission Report on the torture and murder of Thangjam Manorama in 2004. While clearly the Commission strongly condemns the torture and murder of Manorama, it continues to represent one of the most serious tensions that exist in the context of the rule of law and emergency that Hussain mentions in British colonial times. The Commission report attempts to resolve the tension between political exigencies and rule of law by restricting itself to being a procedural effort to deal with what is essentially a political and national security regime that ends up being curiously reminiscent of colonial reports. In other words, rather than recognizing the role of extraordinary laws such as AFSPA (Armed Forces Special Powers Act) in creating such situations, the report primarily recognizes procedural violations as responsible for the violence against Manorama. The report then ends up being a paternalistic symbolic act that fails to acknowledge the political authority of the state in conflict areas and the regime of impunity created by the very existence of the laws such as the AFSPA.
However, I note that in the postcolonial context, the contestations of hyperlegality also reflect a tension between a rejection of emergency provisions for the Northeast and an inability to embrace excessive violence that the Constitution otherwise prohibits. I argue that the postcolonial state is unable to contain this tension successfully between political exigencies and the rule of law in the Thangjam Manorama case due to the continued demands for accountability by those resisting this law and protesting her and other deaths. Regardless of the intent of the author, the report following this particular death appears to have generated a fissure in the postcolonial legal narrative that reveals the excessive violence embedded in the AFSPA regime that cannot be easily embraced and yet cannot be denied and becoming increasingly difficult to contain and legitimize.
Keywords
“I want to emphasize that this study neither concludes that contrary to their protestations the British failed to establish a rule of law in India nor that they were entirely successful in doing so. Rather, it is my consistent effort to draw attention to the tension between political exigencies and legal rule – to examine the rhetoric of both an illimitable sovereignty and a rule of law and the corresponding effects upon the structure of both the colonial and ultimately the postcolonial state” (Hussain, Jurisprudence of Emergency, pp. 6-7). 1
In 2004, a young Manipuri woman Thangjam Manorama who was picked up as a “suspected militant” from her home was found dead in a nearby village in Imphal; the lower part of her body shot apparently as a way to hide the marks of rape and sexual assault. The death of Manorama in the Northeast region of India, Manipur prompted a number of Manipuri women – Meira Paibis – to express their anger and outrage by baring themselves in front of the army headquarters and holding banners that read “Indian Army Rape Us, Kill Us.” 2 The protests led to the setting up of a review committee – Jeevan Reddy Committee – on the constitutionality of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) 3 and an Inquiry Commission led by Upendra Singh, a retired district and sessions Judge (Manipur) to look into the death of Manorama. 4
In this article, I draw on Nasser Hussain’s conceptualizations on rule of law, violence, and exception to read the Inquiry Commission Report on the torture and murder of Thangjam Manorama in 2004. The anxieties of the state regarding the tension between “political exigencies and legal rule” appear to traverse Inquiry Commission reports in both colonial as well as postcolonial contexts. The postcolonial Indian state has come up with some innovative formal checks on its own powers that appear to create occasional moments of discord in state narratives that have mostly defended its acts of violence with impunity. Commissions, such as in the Thangjam Manorama case, are sometimes willing to indict the armed forces for their inhuman actions and reject the dominant state narrative about “suspected militants.” The judicial inquiry did not accept that implementation of procedures could differ even in the case of an ostensible militant challenging national sovereignty.
While the Commission strongly condemns the torture and murder of Thangjam Manorama, it continues to represent one of the more serious tensions that exist in the context of the rule of law and emergency that Hussain mentions in British colonial times. The Commission report attempts to resolve the tension between political exigencies and rule of law by restricting itself to being a procedural effort to deal with what is essentially a political and national security regime that ends up being curiously reminiscent of colonial strategies. In other words, rather than recognizing the role of extraordinary laws such as AFSPA in creating such situations, the report primarily recognizes procedural violations as responsible for the violence against Thangjam Manorama. The report then ends up being a paternalistic symbolic act that fails to acknowledge the political authority of the state in conflict areas and the regime of impunity created by the very existence of laws such as the AFSPA.
Yet, the Report provides us an occasion to explore the particular abilities of the postcolonial state to contain the tension between political exigency and legal rule. Is it merely a continuation of colonial policies, institutions, and discourse into a postcolonial context? 5 Is it an articulation of sovereign rule in a state of exception given the enormous powers of the armed forces in the Act? Or is there something emergent about the postcolonial discourse that is represented by this report and the legal discourse associated with the Act?
Hussain’s ideas on the nature of colonial rule in India in relation to the broader discussions on sovereignty and governmentality in postcolonial theory help us address the contours of colonial continuities. The Thangjam Manorama Report ultimately is unable to accept the inhuman violence, yet refuses to acknowledge the basis of it as the AFSPA and thereby limits itself to a procedural analysis similar to a colonial move. However, the theorization of hyperlegality that Hussain uses to examine Guantanamo Bay, Cuba may be useful to understand the AFSPA in the Northeast. I note that in the postcolonial context, the contestations of hyperlegality reflect a tension between a rejection of emergency provisions for the Northeast and an inability to embrace excessive violence that the Constitution otherwise prohibits. I argue that the postcolonial state is unable to contain this tension successfully between political exigencies and the rule of law in the Thangjam Manorama case due to the continued demands for accountability by those resisting this law and protesting her and other deaths. Regardless of the intent of the author, the report following this particular death appears to have generated a fissure in the postcolonial legal narrative that reveals the excessive violence embedded in the AFSPA regime that cannot be easily embraced and yet cannot be denied and becoming increasingly difficult to contain and legitimize.
I. AFSPA, Manipur, and the Northeast
The Government of India introduced the AFSPA in 1958 primarily in response to the demands for self-determination in the Northeast. While a longer history of Northeast and its relationship to India is beyond the purview of this article, Sanjib Baruah captures it well when he writes: “The AFSPA was adopted by the Indian parliament in 1958 to provide legal support for the army operations against independentist Naga rebels.” 6 Rather than deal with the substantive demands of the peoples’ struggles, the state response has been closely linked to AFSPA. 7 Under this law, an area can be declared as a disturbed area if the conditions are considered dangerous or disturbed such that the civil power require the aid of military forces. 8 Once the area is declared as disturbed, the armed forces can shoot or use force, even if it causes death, against someone if the person does not follow the law or order such as prohibition of assembly of more than five persons or carrying of weapons. 9 The armed forces can also arrest (without warrant) someone for a cognizable offense or if there is reasonable suspicion that the person has committed or is going to commit such an offense. 10 The law also allows search without warrant under such conditions. And the law protects the soldiers from prosecution through an explicit provision under Section 6 by requiring sanction for legal action resulting in enduring impunity. 11
Baruah has written extensively about the arbitrariness in declaring an area as disturbed sometimes extending to entire states despite the absence of any particular threat of insurgency. Referring to Nandini Sundar’s work, he notes that in the 1950s and 1960s, the AFSPA enabled the “village regroupings,” search operations and surveillance against the Naga and Mizo villagers. 12 As Baruah puts it: “The goal appears to be to provide the utmost flexibility to the army in its operations against so-called ‘insurgent’ groups – big and small.” 13 Above all, the Act has been considered as an important tool for enabling “fake encounters” where the armed forces (and sometimes the police) claim that the militants were killed during an unexpected encounter and state forces apparently kill the militants in self-defense without any injuries to themselves. 14 While such encounters are not just restricted to the areas where AFSPA exist, the provision that allows lethal force to be used in disturbed areas and the sanction required to file a case against the forces involved in such incidents are definitely seen as creating a more permissible regime. The impunity related to encounters and AFSPA is visible in the ongoing case of the Indian Supreme Court that is inquiring into cases of 1,528 extrajudicial executions or fake encounters in Manipur. 15
Debates on AFSPA have often focused on its colonial aspects. First of all, the very origins of the law are a colonial innovation. AFSPA is based on ordinances that were deemed necessary during World War II by the British colonial powers. 16 Second, Baruah notes a long history of colonial policing strategy where armed units were sent to police civil disturbances, something that has allowed the AFSPA to be consistently legitimized even in postcolonial times. 17 Third, one can sometimes assume a colonial relationship between the Northeast and mainland India recalling the lack of response of the Indian government to the demands and aspirations of the Northeast. 18 Finally, Baruah notes the racialized treatment of Northeastern people in the mainland and the popular tropes that are used to discriminate against them thus reflecting a prominent colonial strategy in postcolonial times. 19 That has led to an argument that this law primarily represents colonial continuity reiterating the understanding of scholars such as Anil Kalhan et al who also point to other such colonial continuities in extraordinary laws related to terrorism. 20 However, taking from Arudra Burra’s intervention in the essay “What’s Colonial about Colonial Laws?” I ask what exactly is colonial and postcolonial in the context of the Thangjam Manorama Inquiry Commission. 21 In other words, while acknowledging some colonial aspects of the law and how it operates in the Northeast in particular, I also point to the specifically postcolonial responses of the Indian state and its growing inability to contain the discourse on encounters and custodial deaths successfully.
II. Postcolonial Indian State: The Inquiry Report in the Thangjam Manorama Case
In this section, I analyze the Inquiry report focusing on the torture, sexual assault and death of Thangjam Manorama. While the focus of the article is on the Inquiry Commission in the Manorama case, it may be useful to recall the role that Inquiry reports can play more generally in state discourse. In a particularly memorable article, Shiv Visvanathan analyzes the Lentin Report headed by Judge Lentin of the Bombay High Court to investigate into 14 deaths in 1986 at the JJ hospital, Bombay due to contaminated glycerine. 22 Visvanathan compares the bureaucratic report written in 1988 to a Great Indian Novel. He writes that a report is “both a detective story and a sociologist’s investigation. It interrogates both the individual and the system.” 23 Ultimately, however, he notes that the report ends in tragedy, since reports such as these start off as being “factual” and “normative” until they become pedagogic and “rituals of restoration.” 24 As I discuss the Inquiry report on Thangjam Manorama’s case, we will see a number of similar elements, yet I suggest that the fact that it remained hidden for almost a decade points to the much more revelatory aspects of this report and its forced publicity due to a judicial intervention gives it a very different meaning, even beyond the explicit recommendations of the report.
The Thangjam Manorama Inquiry report was written by Upendra Singh, a retired district and sessions Judge (Manipur) in 2004 but was only released in 2014. 25 The report is a strong indictment of the Assam Rifles for Manorama’s death clearly stating, “This is one of the most shocking custodial killing of a Manipuri village girl so savagely, that also after inhuman torture. The custodial death, according to Hon’ble Supreme Court of India, is perhaps one of the worst crimes in a civilized society governed by the Rule of Law.” 26 Manorama was raped and killed in the Northeast region, within an AFSPA regime and the official narrative is similar to those used in “fake encounters” with even a deliberate attempt by the Assam Rifles to use the sanction provision mentioned in the AFSPA to bypass the judicial inquiry. Thus, AFSPA is central to the story of Thangjam Manorama’s life and death and any enquiry into the incident is expected to consider this law as linked to her death. However, as we shall observe, the otherwise revelatory report fails to consider the central role of the AFSPA even as it points to the procedural safeguards that have been violated in the particular case.
1 Thangjam Manorama’s life and death
On July 11, 2004, members of the 17th Assam Rifles, a paramilitary force, led a midnight raid into the house of Thangjam Manorama at Bamon Karnpu Mayai Leikai, P.S. Irilbung Imphal East District of Manipur by breaking down the door and taking her into custody. Thwarting the efforts of her mother and two brothers to intervene on her behalf (all of whom were subsequently locked in a separate room), Manorama was brought into the courtyard and the family members reported that she was slapped, held by her hair, doused with water (waterboarding) and a knife was reportedly used inside her undergarments. She was continuously tortured and interrogated and then formally arrested and the family members witnessed her swollen face and evidence of torture and a kitchen knife stained with blood. The family was given an arrest memo and was forced to sign a “no claims certificate” indicating that she was legally arrested. Manorama’s brother filed a FIR (police complaint) about her disappearance the next morning, but soon after her body was found in a field with gunshot wounds especially in the lower part of the body. 27 No persons were arrested, no culprits identified and no weapons used in the shooting of Manorama were ever found according to the Commission.
The Commission accepted the family’s version of events that Thangjam Manorama was tortured and sexually assaulted due to the multiple injuries on her body and squarely rejected the official account. The Assam Rifles version was that when they were transporting her, she got down to urinate and then tried to run away and she was first given a warning and when she did not stop, shots were fired on her legs and she succumbed to her injuries. However, the Commission notes, based on postmortem evidence, that she could not have run in her heavy clothes (phanek – a traditional Manipuri dress) with her hands tied.
The Commission did provide a powerful indictment of the excesses committed in the case, which is unusual particularly in conflict areas such as the Northeast region that has experienced a number of independence and autonomy movements since Indian independence in 1947. Furthermore, the Supreme Court in December 2014 ordered the central government to pay Rs. 1 million (USD 16,557) to the family of Thangjam Manorama based on this report even as it forced the report to become public, which is a significant step and has strengthened the movement against the AFSPA. But, as I will illustrate in the next section, all these observations are only possible because of a completely procedural reading of the law. I analyze the technicalities that are being drawn upon by the Commission to indict the Assam Rifles and the inadequacies of such an analysis in its recommendations that ultimately ends up reinforcing the continuation of a political regime sustained by an extraordinary law – the AFSPA.
2 Errors in procedure
The Commission report occasionally refers to the AFSPA but identified procedural irregularities as crucial reasons for Thangjam Manorama’s death. According to the Commission: 1. D K Basu safeguards were not followed – that each time an arrest is made, the family or a local representative has to be consulted; 28 2. She was not taken to the nearest police station and no civil authority was consulted before the raid; 3. No women police were taken to arrest her; 4. No warning was given to her in her own language before firing; 5. Firing is just meant to restrain someone and not kill.
The procedural irregularities were identified from three different sources: the Supreme Court D K Basu case on custodial deaths and torture; the NPMHR case on the constitutionality of the AFSPA; and the regular Criminal Procedure Code (CrPc) pointing to the multiple legal regimes that coexist in this space. One of the prominent aspects of the procedural violations is linked to the D K Basu safeguards that were the result of a Public Interest Litigation in 1996 to prevent illegal detention, torture and custodial deaths. 29 The Supreme Court required the arresting authority to create an arrest memo and either ask the family or a respectable member of the locality to sign the document. 30
The Report identified an improper arrest memo as a major procedural deficiency. In this case, the arresting authorities mentioned in the arrest memo were lower level officials – havildar and two riflemen, who subsequently claimed that the Major just asked them to sign the document and they did not know when the woman was even arrested and never saw her. Thus, the Commission held the arrest memo improper since neither the family members nor any respectable authority were actually asked to sign the document, only the family was given a copy which could have been technically created even later.
Another major source of irregularities was identified based on the NPMHR case in 1997. 31 The case is often considered a failure of the judiciary as far as dealing with immunity and impunity is concerned because the Indian Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the AFSPA. 32 Ironically, the Commission turns to this decision to recall the “dos and donts” mentioned in that opinion to deal with the excesses in the Manorama case. For instance, the Commission noted that paragraph 53 of the NPMHR judgment states “… before launching any raid/search, definite information about the activity be obtained from the local civil authority … And as far as possible coopt representative of local civil administration during the raid.” 33 The Assam Rifles did not even attempt either of these actions. The local police station claimed that they had no information about the raid. Indeed, while normally judges are willing to accept the police or official versions of identifying militants, here the Commission ends up arguing that if Manorama had been a People Liberation Army militant having many arms and involved in blasts and killings, there would have been cases filed against her in the police station, which did not exist. The fact that the Commission is unwilling to believe the military version is remarkable considering the widespread impunity regarding any case that comes under the realm of AFSPA.
The paramilitary and armed forces are legally not supposed to arrest and detain but rather have to hand over the person to the nearest police station but this was also not done in Thangjam Manorama’s case. Similarly, the Commission criticized the lack of women police in the actual late night raid. The Commission thus found that the arresting party led by Major Dagar violated sections of the regular CrPC which requires “whenever it is necessary to cause a female to be searched, the search shall be made by another female with strict regard to decency.” 34
The Commission consequently called the Assam Rifles version of Thangjam Manorama’s arrest and death “a naked lie.” The Commission rejected the official version and expressed surprise that she could escape the custody of 13 strongly armed personnel especially after been tortured. Even if warning was given, it wasn’t given in the local language as required by the NPMHR case and once she fell, it wasn’t clear why the firing continued. The Commission thus concluded unequivocally that “the version of trying to escape by the victim Thangjam Manorama by running is found a concocted story which (can) not be accepted.” 35 The Commission chairman shows his empathy for the victim when he writes, “I am pained to note that the firings were unnecessary, a valuable life had been made to suffer harshly on the hands of the reckless armed Assam Rifles persons.” 36 The Commission found the post mortem reports confirming that Manorama was shot in the front rather than her legs or back and from a close distance of 2–3 feet so the “firing while escaping story” was further ruled out and it was clear that many of the shots were fired when the detainee was lying down. The Report states “… most of the injuries will reveal that they were shot with an intention while the victim was in prone, while lying, bending positions with an intention to kill and even after she was in helpless condition.” 37 Here the Commission reiterates another major effort at ensuring accountability by stating that the onus of proof to explain the injuries – physical assault or sexual abuse on the body – lies on the Assam Rifles; a recommendation that has been reiterated by a range of judicial and other institutions over time though still not a part of the law. Both the Law Commission (in a 1985 report on custodial crimes) and the National Human Rights Commission (in its annual reports) have agreed with the Supreme Court on the principle that the burden of proof should be on the police (or other armed forces) if a detained person disappeared or died while in their custody. They recommended that the principle should be codified by amending Section 114B(1) of the Indian Evidence Act and indeed this provision is included in the Torture Bill currently pending in the legislative process. 38
On sexual assault, while one of the doctors did not give any definitive conclusion despite the injuries on the victim’s hymen, and semen on the clothes and the other doctor said it couldn’t be ruled out, the Commission concluded that most likely sexual assault not only took place, but her genitals were fired at to hide the evidence of sexual assault and rape. “It appears to me that this aspect exposes not only barbaric attitude but also their attempt to fabricate false evidence with a view to cover up the offense committed by them.” 39 Hence the Commission concluded that Major Dagar – the Commander of the arresting team – was directly or vicariously responsible and four others of the arresting team were directly responsible for the killing of Thangjam Manorama since it was not done to stop her from escaping but to intentionally kill her. The Commission report is a landmark in terms of acknowledging the intentional killing of Manorama by even identifying the culprits directly. In some ways, it is counter to what Surabhi Chopra has rightly noted with case of rapes and murders under the national security laws: namely “Indian governments, both at the national and state levels, misapply statutory immunity provisions to shield security forces who commit violence against women.” 40
However, as I will show in the later part of the article, drawing on Hussain’s writings, it ends up being a limited effort due to its critique being restricted to procedural violations. But before that, a brief discussion on Nasser Hussain’s work that has insights for this article is appropriate.
III. Hussain’s Insights on Colonial Rule of Law and Violence
I turn to Hussain’s book Jurisprudence of Emergency to emphasize two particular aspects – one that procedure becomes the colonial state’s way to respond to the need to introduce the rule of law even though in practice the procedures could be modified to suit the colonial needs; second, how his work exemplifies the tension of the colonial state with violence.
One of Hussain’s biggest contributions to understanding both colonial and postcolonial state and law is the constant tension between sovereignty as determined by necessity and the rule of law which represents some constraints on this power; or as Hussain puts it “the discourses of modern law that form the potential conflict between state power and legal authority, between what the state perceives as a necessary power for survival at certain moments and what the law makes available …” 41 For him such a tension exists in an accentuated manner in the colonial context but actually is constitutive of the modern thereby making emergency a “jurisprudential problem in understanding modern law and the state.” 42 Even though the colonial attempt to the rule of law came precisely to counter and replace the discourse of Oriental despotism, Hussain ultimately shows the constant need to “invent” the despotism while trying to differentiate it from “personal discretion” that played a role in colonial authority.
Utilizing Schmitt and Agamben, Hussain considers the close relationship between rule of law and the state of emergency by claiming that “… it would be an error to consider the state of emergency as categorically outside the rule of law.” 43 Rather he thinks of it both as a juridical as well as a political power and that precisely makes it an enduring feature of colonial law and postcolonial law in general. Sovereignty is unlimited but submits to law in order to claim an unlimited authority making that relationship a persisting though difficult one. Drawing on Peter Fitzpatrick and more specifically Partha Chatterjee, Hussain is able to point to the role that “colonial difference” plays in understanding the formation and the limits of the rule of law. 44
Here Hussain’s interventions become particularly pertinent in explaining how the British respond to both the need to enforce the rule of law by an emphasis on procedure. The colonial state tries to combine sovereignty (gained legitimacy through law) and governmentality – “… full of rules that hierarchicalize, bureaucratize, mediate, and channel power.” 45 Hussain draws on David Scott’s work Refashioning Futures, arguing that although both sovereignty and governmentality do play a role in colonial rule, the racial distinction does make that experience different. 46 Thus, debates on codification of the rule of law in India were ultimately resolved by emphasizing legal procedure over substance. As Hussain puts it, “Legal procedure was to be the ultimate answer to the question of what it meant to bring law to India. It was to be the form of a civilized despotism, for it would both declare to subjects that their identity, offenses, their grievances, all began and ended in the authority of the law, and would reflect the morality of publicity and process lacking in the authority of a native despotism.” 47 An excellent example of such a procedural act indeed linked to liberty was the writ of habeas corpus which as Hussain brilliantly points out initially appears to be an oxymoron – a “writ of liberty” in a regime of conquest – but it is possible to understand it in the following way. While ultimately representing a way to question custody, initially it appears as a way to “secure their presence in custody.” 48 The inconsistent use of writ in the colonial context (as in England) thus for Hussain is the logical culmination of the rule of law. As he eloquently puts it “To the extent that habeas is a protection from state power, the situation of emergency that allows for the suspension of that protection is deeply written into the logic of the rule of law.” 49 Thus, a procedural form as a safeguard of liberty exists but is both inherently limited and more substantively constrained in a colonial context.
Hussain’s work also helps us understand the “problematic relation between law and violence” in the colonial context. 50 A more prevalent narrative of colonial rule as exerting “dominance without hegemony” as Ranajit Guha puts it, has been extremely influential in analyzing the colonial state and also suggests a direct connection between the violence of the colonial and the postcolonial state. 51 Yet despite its dominance based on instruments of coercion and an ideology of “colonial difference,” one finds that the colonial state has to occasionally explain its relationship with violence especially with respect to the rule of law. Anupama Rao, in her discussion of the torture and death of Gunnoo (accused of robbing and drowning his five-year-old niece), notes that it was important for the colonial government to ensure an inquiry and initiate the punishment of the foujdar (official). 52 This act was essential for the colonial state because of its need to differentiate its own rule from the natives who were known to be “… associated with practices of physical mutilation and disfigurement understood to have been prevalent in Old Regime politics …” 53 As Rao and Pierce explain, the problem of violence was the “paradox of colonial discipline.” 54 Similarly, the famous Madras Commission Report on Torture that investigated the complaints of torture in 1855 was unusual in terms of its scope and emphasis. As I have argued earlier, two ways that the colonial state distanced itself from the systematic patterns of torture was to “first, the state ensured that torture was not seen … as being the result of a colonial policy. Second the perpetrators of torture were understood to be only those who enforce the law, in this case the native policemen.” 55 More importantly, Anuj Bhuwania identifies the ideological need for the British to investigate into accounts of torture in order to maintain colonial rule while distancing themselves from the violence in their name. As he puts it: “… the use of violence to extract confessions was normalized in British minds and the colonial context erased, with the Europeans emerging as knights in shining armour, trying against all odds to humanize the Indians: somehow, to save them from themselves.” 56
Hussain adds another dimension to this discussion by emphasizing the difficulty that excessive violence itself creates even in the context of martial law or as he puts it “contradictions in a colonial martial law” apparent in the Hunter Committee Inquiry into the Jallianwalla Bagh massacre in Punjab. 57
In 1919, a British general, Reginald Dyer, ordered his troops to open fire on a peacefully protesting crowd. The 1,650 rounds that were fired with no warning killed at least 379 people and injured thousands according to official records. In describing the horrific nature of the Jallianwalla massacre in 1919, Hussain notes that although the attack was committed for the political imperative of continuing colonial rule, the British were not able to completely defend the “excessive force” committed by the General. 58 This is because martial law represented an excellent example of how it is a legal issue but represents really the suspension of law or “law’s absence.” 59 In that sense, it always requires a decision about necessity but which is always determined through rules though the rules themselves actually vary. As Hussain puts it “… a state of emergency not only requires a special law but threatens something fundamental about law in general that we must try to explicate.” 60 There is a situation that necessitates it and required some explanation but needs an “impossible demand for precision of force …” though in a colonial situation, the violence absorbed could be higher and for a longer duration because of the racial difference. Martial law in that sense for Hussain – referring to Walter Benjamin – is really about “restoration of the general authority of the state.” 61 And yet this is precisely that cannot be accepted by the colonial state publicly in the Jallianwalla case report (Hunter Committee Majority Report) though it also cannot acknowledge General Dyer’s defense of the excessive violence as being required for creating the authority of the state.
In the colonial context, as Vinay Lal notes in the context of Hunter Committee Report on the “Crawling Order” that Dyer gave in response to the attack on a Missionary woman – Miss Sherwood, the Colonial Inquiry reports get the last word. 62 As he puts it: “It is not that colonialism does not allow the other to speak but rather that it reserves the last word for itself, reserving it by the process, as I have suggested, of constituting certain incidents as ‘events’ which are then inscribed into history.” 63 In the postcolonial Lentin report, Visvanathan calls the Inquiry report a Great Indian Novel that is more “archives of democracy” than anything else. 64 How does the Inquiry Commission report in the Thangjam Manorama case fare in terms of these characterizations? And more importantly, how does the Commission address questions of procedure and violence?
1 Analyzing the Thangjam Manorama case in postcolonial India
In the postcolonial period, even in the Thangjam Manorama case Inquiry report, one observes a similar inability to address the political exigencies that have led to the AFSPA and the limiting of its analysis to procedure. Despite its revelatory potential in unequivocally accepting the “suspected militant” as worthy of protections, one of the reasons the Commission ultimately fails to regain the legitimacy of the rule of law is because of its unwillingness to accept the role of the AFSPA in Manorama’s death. There are occasional moments of transgression in this postcolonial state report when it comes close to identifying the AFSPA as the sovereign act due to political exigency but then stops short. For instance, the best example of impunity unaddressed by this Inquiry Commission is the very provision that was being used by the Assam Rifles to refuse to appear in front of the Commission stating that a sanction under Section 6 of the AFSPA from the central government was required in order to have an inquiry. While this Commission bypassed the provision by claiming that the Assam Rifles brought it up too late in the inquiry (once they had already been asked to appear as witnesses), at the same time, the sanction was accepted as being applicable once the fact finding has been completed. The Commission noted, “… in an Inquiry, before the Inquiry Commission, constituted under the Commission of Inquiry Act, there is no lis (sic), no prosecutor or accused, It is a fact finding body. The question of obtaining sanction will come after the completion of Inquiry, if, those members of Arms Forces involved were found wrong.” 65 It is noteworthy that the Commission failed to even recognize the reality that the sanction provision has been one of the most prominent reasons for not taking up the question of prosecution and has led to widespread impunity. The Commander of the 17th Assam Rifles – Major Dagar – did file a writ petition in the court so that he could be exempted successfully from the inquiry though others were not.
One also wonders whether the gendered nature of the attack created a more critical report but from a more paternalistic judicial actor than a critic of the law causing impunity. For instance, on the question of “outraging the modesty” and sexual assault, the Commission notes that the events prior to her arrest in the name of interrogation clearly amount to “modesty of an unmarried girl … {being} severely outraged.”
66
Elsewhere the condemnation is linked to a reference to Thangjam Manorama as “a Manipuri village girl” even though at the time, she was 34 years old.
67
Here again the Commission turns to the violation of the “dos and donts” that the NPMHR decision of the Supreme Court had stated namely that “After arrest of a person by a member of the Armed forces,
But the ultimate analytical limit lies in the recommendations of the Report that most powerfully brings up only the procedural issues. In condemning the “sordid and shocking incident of killing of a girl while in custody … after indecent assault and torture at her house,” the Commission concludes: “If they had followed the direction of the Hon’ble Supreme Court, in this regard, while making search and arrest, they had cooped {coopted} representatives of the local civil administrations, and if it was made in the presence of female police, such ugly incident might not have been occurred.” 70 What follows then is the reiteration of all the rules, guidelines and the laws that have been flouted by the Assam Rifles, which were seen as directly responsible for the death of Thangjam Manorama. It is almost as if the impunity that is more generally enjoyed by both the law that defines this area – the AFSPA – and the number of extrajudicial killings or encounter killings by police elsewhere are completely missing from this narrative. In many instances, the postcolonial state issues denials of torture or custodial deaths are explained away as deaths due to illness, escape from custody, during transportation etc as for instance in the National Crimes Research Bureau Reports or in Home Ministry explanations. 71 In this instance, the procedural mistakes that lead to custodial deaths can be revealed precisely because the “reason of state” cannot be accepted. The impunity assumed by the Assam Rifles is only mentioned in passing in the Commission Report and AFSPA is only referred in terms of its sanction provisions not in terms of its permissibility. That, I argue, is one of the most limiting aspects of the Thangjam Manorama Inquiry Report. As K G Kannabiran has noted in another context of conspiracy cases, judges often ignore larger political and/or constitutional questions because of a tendency to “disaggregate the evidence” rather than evaluating it as a whole. 72 Here the attempt is to emphasize the technical or procedural violations as opposed to the overall impunity structure that enables and sustains the AFSPA. Yet, regardless of the intent of the author of the Inquiry report, does the acceptance of the procedural violations indicate more than what the postcolonial state wants to reveal especially since the report remained a secret until the Supreme Court forced its release during the hearing of a case on encounters? 73
IV. Distinguishing the Colonial and the Postcolonial
Hussain argues that the tension between political exigency and the rule of law sometimes results in limits on justification of excessive violence in the colonial context; he also recognizes that despite a combination of sovereignty and governmentality in colonial rule, the rule of law remains mostly procedural than substantive because of racial hierarchy and colonial difference. Such insights would be, at first glance, compatible to a reading of the AFSPA operating in the Northeast as an example of colonial practices continuing in postcolonial contexts. Scholars have consequently attempted to understand the region and the introduction of the Act more in terms of state of exception where ordinary laws are suspended and instead laws such as the AFSPA operate with impunity against particular people challenging the mainland Indian state. 74
Yet there is a distinct aspect of this postcolonial strategy, which just doesn’t fit the exception argument. As Baruah notes, “the paradigm of the state of exception that has come to dominate the study of emergencies, and informs the model of derogation spelt out in human rights treaties, is clearly at odds with the institutional practices that shape the AFSPA.” 75 The Indian Constitution does have the provisions for the declaration of an emergency. While mostly it is used to declare emergency when there is an external aggression, there has been at least one instance when internal disturbances was used as a pretext to declare an emergency in 1975–77. Indeed, it was one of the more difficult periods of Indian politics and society since fundamental rights and liberties of citizens were completely undermined legally. 76 Thus, a major argument in the legal discussion on the constitutionality of the AFSPA has been on why emergency provisions of the Indian Constitution have not been used in the Northeast instead of introducing this Act. The postcolonial state had a difficult role to play in this scenario because it could not admit this area could be declared under emergency either due to armed rebellion that threatens the security of the country (Article 352) 77 or internal disturbance (Article 356) that allowed the President to take over the governance of a state. Instead, it had to come up with a different way to argue the constitutionality of the Act. Ultimately, the Act is justified under Article 355, and Entry 2A of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution that the Union Government can in the event of internal disturbance intervene in order to enable military aid to civil power as a way to justify the AFSPA. 78
One of the reasons the postcolonial state may have resorted to this kind of reasoning is to avoid questions raised by obligations under the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) which requires that public emergency be declared, exceptional and temporary and with safeguards (that the Indian Constitution also requires). The Indian government insists that the AFSPA doesn’t come under the emergency provision. 79 As Baruah explains, “The AFSPA permits a localized form of indefinite emergency rule; but since it is not called that it is not subjected to the limits that democratic constitutionalism seeks to impose on emergencies.” 80
Thus, following Baruah’s argument, and Nasser Hussain’s very creative use of the term “hyperlegality” in his essay on Guantanamo I argue that any attempt to analyze cases such as Thangjam Manorama’s and spaces such as the Northeast as examples of state of exception as many scholars have done does not actually address the complexity of the situation. 81 As Nasser Hussain notes, Guantanamo is more of a legal loophole than a “legal black hole.” Deploying the term “hyperlegality,” he explains, “It is empirically the case that what one witnesses in contemporary emergency is a proliferation of new laws and regulations passed in an ad hoc or tactical manner, administrative procedures, and the use of older laws and cases tweaked and transformed for newer purposes.” 82 Hussain helps us recognize that old-style suspensions on law for a brief period of time is not actually what is occurring in these spaces just as AFSPA is not a declaration of the martial law. Rather what you see is proliferation of classifications and procedures that represent hyperlegality.
Baruah quotes Hussain in explaining why the colonial strategy may fail in postcolonial contexts: “how feasible is a counterinsurgency strategy without the support of colonial institutions and practices?” 83 This view assumes “a closed economy of transgression and punishment, disturbance and the restoration of order.” 84 In the absence of such colonial continuity, the reading of the legal cases and reports in the postcolonial context may actually reflect a particular kind of tension that may be becoming more unsustainable over time. In other words, I ask whether the tension between a colonial strategy and postcolonial constitutional order that has to consistently confront the challenges posed by excessive violence have the ability of creating a fissure in the relationship between law and violence? I examine whether the explanations that have been previously given to sustain the defense of the AFSPA (for instance by the Supreme Court in its 1997 judgment upholding the constitutionality of the Act) are intentionally or unintentionally undermined by the Thangjam Manorama Report in 2004, the Jeevan Reddy Committee Report in 2005 and the 2016 judgment insisting on the need to inquire into fake encounters in Manipur. 85
Despite the inability to consider the Act as similar to declaring an emergency, the state still needed to explain why exceptional powers were given to military forces in the disturbed areas and the routine powers within the criminal procedure code weren’t adequate. Thus, there are some interesting ways in which it acknowledges the internal disturbance and the presence of armed groups but simultaneously tries to contain the boundaries of the Act as not representing an emergency. For instance, the Jeevan Reddy Committee in 2005 notes,
It must be recognised, at the same time, that the deployment of armed forces or para military forces of the Union to restore public order in any part of the territory of India, or to protect a State from internal disturbance is, and ought to be, an exception and not the rule … the armed forces of the Union should not be so deployed, since too frequent a deployment, and that too for long periods of time, carries with it the danger of such forces losing their moorings and becoming, in effect, another police force, a prey to all the temptations and weaknesses such exposures involve. Such exposure for long periods of time may well lead to the brutalisation of such forces – which is a danger to be particularly guarded against.
86
And such a conceptualization about this Act as being an exception needs to be balanced with the Committee’s concern about the inadequacy of existing provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code to deal with disturbances to justify a permanent legal provision.
These are situations, which arise unexpectedly or on account of a sudden incident or event like the examples stated above {referring to riots}. Such situations must be distinguished from those arising in the North Eastern States like Manipur, Nagaland or Assam where the militants not only challenge the authority of the State but by their composition, strength, aims and objectives present a problem which is spread over a large geographical area and is long term in nature. In situations of the latter kind, the provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code would not be adequate. A permanent legal provision would be required which permits the army and the other Central forces to operate over an extended area and time period – of course, consistent with the rights and interests of the citizens and the security of the State.
87
Thus, while acknowledging the use of armed forces should be an exception not a rule because of its danger of brutalisation, the report simultaneously notes the need for a permanent legal provision that is required to show the inadequacy of the existing criminal procedure provisions. 88 Baruah calls it a circular argument “… that AFSPA and the legal immunities for armed forces are necessary so long as there are situations that, in the government’s judgment, require the ‘use of armed forces in aid of the civil powers.’” 89
However, here I want to depart a little from both Hussain and Baruah to think about whether in the postcolonial context, this contestation between two versions of hyperlegality – one that accepts the logic of the national security regime allowing for unrestricted discretion and the other that constantly tried to bring it within the purview of constitutional protections – has the potential of unraveling over time at least at the level of the legal discourse. The 1997 judgment of the Court upholds the constitutionality and mostly the competence of the Union to introduce such a law even while accepting the integrity of the provisions such as Section 4 that gave wide-ranging powers to use force. As Kikon captures this conception more generally, “Under the AFSPA, the state legitimises lawlessness through legal decisions and establishes them as precedents.” 90 By 2005, the Jeevan Reddy Committee is willing to acknowledge the need to repeal the Act even though it ends up recommending another extraordinary law – the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act – that has been the subject of much criticism. But the recommendation for repealing AFSPA, for the most part, is based on the argument that “the Act, for whatever reason, has become a symbol of oppression, an object of hate and an instrument of discrimination and high-handedness.” 91 This language and legal moment reflects a strong rebuttal of the state narrative. In the Thangjam Manorama case, which is also the pretext for the Jeevan Reddy committee in 2005, you also see the two contestations of hyperlegality. The Assam Rifles emboldened by the impunity of national security regimes merely think that the classification of Manorama as a militant and justification of an encounter of her escaping alongside a sanction clause is adequate for the closure of the case. The Commission instead resists that by suggesting that procedurally the armed forces failed to follow the rules and regulations that emerge from the routine context such as the D K Basu case. In other words, even if the Thangjam Manorama report intended to focus only on procedural violations, it ended up undermining the arguments used in defending the AFSPA regime at least in this particular case.
The 2016 Supreme Court judgment also does not address the constitutionality of the Act but considers the extrajudicial executions committed in its name, and the Court is even willing to acknowledge that “(t)he deployment of the armed forces is intended to restore normalcy and it would be extremely odd if normalcy were not restored within some reasonable period, certainly not an indefinite period or an indeterminate period.” 92 Once again the skepticism of the Court is apparent here and in other parts of the judgment.
Even though national security legislations are allowed due to the preventive detention provisions of the Indian Constitution, the Courts have increasingly struggled with questions of excessive violence. 93 And even with the most egregious Section 4 of the AFSPA allowing the use of force, the legal discourse consistently notes that it has to be minimal force. Indeed it is the challenge of combining civil and military power – use of constitutional and procedural mechanisms from ordinary criminal procedure code and the national security legislations – that make it a little difficult to sustain the excessive force. The language of state of exception and suspension of law sometimes takes away from both what is occurring in terms of legal practice but also in terms of the state’s own inability to separate the routine from the more exceptional contexts which is particularly relevant in the postcolonial context. Thus, while the exception is meant to capture a suspension of law or a threshold space both inside and outside that is difficult to demarcate, what is accommodated within the law and determined and contested procedurally is much more significant than what is captured by a state of exception formulation.
Thus, despite the limits of both the Jeevan Reddy Report and the Thangjam Manorama Report, the postcolonial state was hesitant to release both reports due to their intentional or unintentional undermining of the AFSPA legal regime. The former was leaked to a newspaper and the latter was only shared once the Court insisted. Furthermore, the AFSPA continues to be under attack in the ongoing Supreme Court case on encounters;
To this we may add that ordinarily our armed forces should not be used against our countrymen and women … If members of our armed forces are deployed and employed to kill citizens of our country on the mere allegation or suspicion that they are “enemy” not only the rule of law but our democracy would be in grave danger.
94
Until the reality of tortures, fake encounters and custodial deaths in practice are challenged, and the extraordinary law repealed, the significance of such words is limited. What remains perhaps is recognition of the fissure in the legal discourse that at the very least indicates the postcolonial state’s more difficult relationship with rule of law, violence and the exception. Even though the Thangjam Manorama Inquiry Report was sought to be similar to a Great Indian Novel as the Lentin Report that Visvanathan writes about – to be tucked away as “archives of democracy,” it did not remain secret and in the process continues to unravel the state narrative on the excessive violence enabled by the AFSPA.
Footnotes
Acknowledgements
This article is dedicated to the memory of a dear mentor and continued inspiration Nasser Hussain. I also thank the participants of the Thinking with Nasser Hussain Conference for their comments and especially Adam Sitze and colleagues at Amherst College for organizing the conference and for inviting me. I am grateful for the opportunity to engage with Nasser’s work in relation to some of our common concerns. I also thank Amrita Basu for her comments and Ruchi Chaturvedi for her engagement and the reviewer for the extremely comprehensive comments.
