The anguish of a milkman held under TADA
A 72-year-old man who has been languishing
in jail under the draconian Terrorist and Disruptive Activities
(Prevention) Act with 70 cases slapped on him, says he is
innocent and is "being held with only circumstantial evidence."
The septugenarian milkman, Arjun Sharma, who has been in and out
of jail several times, said he has ''lost'' his wife, children, and
even his herd of buffaloes while he was under detention.
Arjun was produced before a city court on Friday but the case
was adjourned till February 21.
His travails began in 1991 when he was picked up under TADA by the
authorities for allegedly having links with the United Liberation
Front of Asom after some guns were recovered from his
premises in Chapanala in Nagaon district of the state.
His house happened to be situated close to the ULFA camp which
was earlier raided by the police.
The milkman, of Nepali origin, claimed the guns that were seized
belonged to the ULFA cadres who had hidden them beneath the cowdung piles in his yard.
Despite his protests, he was arrested and taken to Nagaon,
thereby laying the foundation of his ruin.
Arjun said for two years after he was arrested, he languished in
jail without a clue as to what was happening to him. Uneducated and
with no legal assistance, he said he would have probably suffered
more had not a group of senior lawyers come to his help.
The advocates got him out on bail but a bigger shock awaited him
when he reached his house. He found that his wife and children were
''missing''. Also missing was his herd of buffaloes, his only source
of livelihood.
But before he could try rebuilding his broken life, he was
arrested once again and taken to jail. As luck would have it, he
was released on bail after some lawyers pooled their resources.
For the old man, freedom did not bring much satisfaction
since he had to attend the court almost every day. The daily
trudges, he claimed, had finished him physically and financially.
Soon, his health deteriorated to such an extent that one day he
found himself in a government hospital in Nagaon.
In the process he missed the summons to attend the hearings.
The police soon got wind of his admittance to the hospital and
once again he was apprehended in February and whisked away quietly
to Guwahati.
He was produced before a city court on Friday. It will hear five
of the several cases filed against him on the designated day.
In the twilight of his life, the bitter man has only one last
wish -- to walk out a free man once and for all.
''I am only a milkman, not a militant,'' he said fiercely, before
breaking down into tears on the court premises.
UNI
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