Wednesday, January 31, 2024

City of Lights & (Il)legal vibes (3)

 


Chapter 1

“It doesn’t matter what you do. In the end, you are going to be judged, and all the times that you’re not at your most dignified are the ones that will be recalled in all their vivid, heartbreaking detail. And then of course these things will be distorted and exaggerated and replayed over and over, until eventually they turn into the essence of you: your cartoon.”

-         Dan Chaon, “Among the Missing”

December 19, 2022

Aloknagri

 

It was a work-day like all other days. A sunny, wintry day which can make you forget all your pains and sufferings. Conversely, it was the kind of day which can make some people’s desire to inflict pains and sufferings on others flare up.

 

I was working in my chamber, hunched in front of the computer, blissfully oblivious of someone’s devilish plans. A woman, in white salwar kameez and black waist-coat, presented a document. I pointed out a few lines which would result in the levy of a higher revenue. The woman introduced herself as a junior lawyer working under Debjyoti and said that she would strike through the same lines. All of a sudden, Debjyoti barged inside the office and started shouting as if the office was the stage of a theatre and he was a jester. I informed him that it was a government office and not a theatre company, in case he forgot it. He got even more angry and threatened to teach me a good lesson.

 

It was lunch time and sitting inside the inner chamber, I was having lunch when there was loud banging on the door. It was the peon. He informed me that the lawyers of Aloknagri Court wanted to meet me. They were not in a mood to wait even for a minute and threatened to break the door if not given immediate access. I washed my hands and came outside. It was a scene to behold. Debjyoti had brought with him a retinue of around fifty lawyers from the court. I didn’t know most of them, but all of them were clad in white shirts and black coats to let the world know of their professional identity. They started to holler, to fling all sorts of humiliating remarks to me, to damage the office paraphernalia. And they made sure that all those dreadful, demeaning words reached the ears of their intended recipient, i.e., me.

“She has secured the government job by paying bribes.”

“She probably belongs to the category of Scheduled Castes. That’s why she got the job.”

Because surely anyone who had the temerity to point out the errors of their great, learned friend, must be a nitwit, someone who, to secure a coveted job, needs to either bribe the authorities or belong to a caste that has reservations in government jobs.

 

What did I do? Did I react? Yes, I am a human being made of flesh and blood. But the shrewd Indranil came in the scene with his mobile phone and started to capture my every move – mobile clips that could easily become viral in social media sites. Swapnamoy took one of his shoes in his hands and rushed forward to beat me. Someone held his hand in a tight grip to prevent him from doing what he was about to do. Reporters from two news channels, “Independent TV” and “News 24*7” came in the office soon thereafter to probe why such a ruckus was being created in a government office, hampering public service delivery. Surely, the officer in question must be at fault. Months later, when some miscreants disconnected the electric supply to the office and normal office work was suspended for days on end, none of these reporters came to probe why public service was not being delivered in a government office. Apparently, these sort of issues are not sensational enough to qualify them for media attention. But what happened on that fateful day after the mediapersons came?  Debjyoti gave a statement to the media, with a poker face, that as the officer had demanded a bribe of ten thousand, he was there to protest against such corruption with his “learned” colleagues. His another “learned” friend, Aaradhana, claimed in front of the media that the officer had twisted her arms, that she had used slangs against her – slangs that insinuated the multiple sexual partners that she had.

 

All vision became blurred in front of my eyes. I cried, for the first time in my career.

 

Later in the evening, I tried to lodge an F.I.R. (First Information Report) against the miscreants at the local police station, but in vain. Only a General Diary no. was given, that too after much persuasion. One of the sub-inspectors of the local police-station took a picture of the written complaint in his mobile and promptly sent it to one of the miscreants via whatsapp.

(Note: Section 154(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, casts a duty upon the officer in charge of the police station to register an F.I.R. and initiate investigation upon receipt of information disclosing commission of cognizable offence. At this stage, there is no scope for preliminary inquiry by officer in charge to satisfy himself about the truthfulness of allegations. The police cannot defer the registration of F.I.R. on the pretext that they are conducting preliminary inquiry. Action can be initiated against a police officer who has failed to register an F.I.R. in cases where the factual matrix discloses cognizable offence.)


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