Comment by 0x5FC3
> Impartiality factors less when the entire Federal government apparatus is used to investigate some one for more than a decade. Also, by that reasoning should we start believing in the principle "guilty before proven otherwise"?
No, it was a 3 member "Special Investigation Team" and not the "entire federal apparatus" that acquitted him. [0]
"According to R. B. Sreekumar, police officers who followed the rule of law and helped prevent the riots from spreading were punished by the Modi government. They were subjected to disciplinary proceedings and transfers with some having to leave the state. Sreekumar also claims it is common practice to intimidate whistleblowers and otherwise subvert the justice system, and that the state government issued "unconstitutional directives", with officials asking him to kill Muslims involved in rioting or disrupting a Hindu religious event." [1]
> Who decided that those riots were a progrom? That term itself is misleading.
Hundreds of historians and scholars. [2]
> I am not fan of this step but the problems it's designed to tackle are huge in India and it's very much an option unless there are solid alternatives.
There are students jailed from 2020 without a trail for protesting against CAA-NRC with the explicit purpose of a "chilling effect" against dissent. People are constantly jailed for simple memes, "hurting religious sentiments" and other vapid reasons on a daily basis and you think this is an end to the means type of situation?
If I had to wager a guess, you don't live in India, advocating for oppression you don't have to go through.
[0][1][2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002_Gujarat_violence