Whistleblower Who Wrote About Sexual Abuse of Minors By Chhattisgarh Police is Suspended
New Delhi: Citing ‘indiscipline’, the Chhattisgarh government on May 6 suspended state prison official Varsha Dongre, who had posted on Facebook about gross human rights violations by the state. The deputy superintendent of Raipur central jail, in a Facebook post which she deleted later, had alleged that state security personnel indulged in widespread torture and sexual abuse of minor Adivasi girls inside prisons.
At a time when the April 24 Maoist attack on Central Reserve Police Force personnel stationed in Bastar’s Sukma had focused political and media attention on the need for a purely military strategy to handle the conflict in Adivasi-dominated Bastar, Dongre’s allegations set off alarm bells in Raipur and Delhi.
She called for “introspection” on the part of state authorities and had raised critical questions about government’s role in handling the conflict between Maoists and the state.
While the video news agency ANI first tweeted about her suspension, state officials later confirmed the government’s decision.
“Ms. Varsha Dongre has been suspended and charge-sheeted after it was found in a preliminary inquiry that her conduct was in violation of service rules and other rules,” Girdhari Nayak, the director general of police (jail administration) was quoted as saying in The Hindu.
Immediately after Dongre’s social media post, the state police had ordered a probe under DIG (Jail) K.K. Gupta.
Gupta, who confirmed her suspension, said that Dongre was asked to provide an explanation for her social media post within two days but had failed to do so. He also said that she remained absent from duty without taking permission to go on leave.
He said that Dongre had violated the state government’s directions, which prohibits all officials from sharing personal opinions on state policy.
Twenty-five CRPF personnel were killed in the Maoist ambush on April 24, which drew heavy criticism from all sides. However, the government has since then used the incident to target human rights activists.
In this context, Dongre’s post, which made serious allegations of human rights violations by the state in Bastar, may have riled the government. Her post said (translated from Hindi):
Though the state government has suspended Dongre for ‘indiscipline’ and violation of ‘service’ rules’, it has been lenient towards other state officials, notably senior police officer S.R.P. Kalluri, whose controversial and unauthorised use of social media prompted the Chhattisgarh government to send him on medical leave in February, 2017 but not suspend or charge-sheet him. In March, Kalluri was served two showcause notices and one warning letter on grounds of indiscipline for attending a private company’s event in Jagdalpur and subsequently posting messages on social media that were allegedly a violation of the state government’s social media policy. This was the same event where Kaluri’s colleage, Indira Kalyan Elesela, who is the Sukma superintendent of police, said that human rights activists should be “crushed on the highway using advanced motor vehicles”.
Neither Kaluri nor Elesela have been suspended, suggesting that when it comes to enforcement of service rules, the Chhattisgarh government has one policy for those who are whistleblowers and expose official wrongdoing, and another policy for those who condone or advocate the violation of law.
https://thewire.in/132869/chhattisgarh-jail-official-suspended/
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