http://www.hindustantimes.com/Vachati-Dalit-rape-victims-get-justice-19-years-later/Article1-751500.aspx
 
 TN: 19 yrs on, 215 guilty of atrocities on tribals
 HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times
 Chennai, September 29, 2011
 
 Thursday saw the culmination of a two-decade long fight for justice by
 uneducated, impoverished tribals against the might of the police,
 forest officials and the local administration - that ended with the
 conviction of 215 officials with sentences ranging from one year to 17
 years after they were
 held guilty of torture, unlawful restraint, misue of office, looting
 and rape. http://www.hindustantimes.com/Images/HTEditImages/Images/30-09-11-metro13.jpg
 
 Sentencing the 126 forest department officials, 84 policemen and five
 revenue department officials to jail terms ranging from one year to 17
 years, principal district judge S Kumaraguru offered token relief to
 the 18 rape victims of what has become known as the Vachathi case.
 
 Forest department officials with the help of police and revenue
 department officials had let loose a reign of terror on hapless tribal
 (adivasi) villagers of Vachathi for three days starting June 20, 1992.
 
 The maximum punishment was handed out to 17 convicted of rape (17
 years each to 12 rapists and seven years each for the other five).
 They were immediately sent to jail. The others who were convicted got
 bail.
 
 The judgement, holding all the accused guilty, was pronounced in an
 open court, that was packed with over 200 accused, over 100 victims
 and police officials.
 
 Four forest officials were convicted of committing crime under the
 SC/ST act for atrocities against tribals. They were punished for
 destruction of evidence and obstruction of justice.
 
 Advocate Kamalanathan, representing Hari Krishnan, chief conservator
 of forests, said that "he would move the high court in appeal against
 the judgment after studying it in detail. We have got a month's time
 to take appeal, which we will surely."
 
 Describing the judgment as "historic" advocate P Shanmugam, said he
 would not describe it as happy or sad. Justice has been done but there
 has been delay and the case progressed inch by inch, under the
 constant supervision of the high court.
 
 Which is why, no appeal against the trial court judgment would make
 any difference, he said but added "in fact the court failed to offer
 financial compensation   to the victims."
 
 "I would move the courts for financial compensation for the
 incalculable loss suffered by the villagers," Shanmugam told Hindustan
 Times.
 
 Out of the 18 women who were raped, ten were unmarried. One of them
 was just 13 years at that time. All but one later got married to
 relatives.
 
 "I only hope that the high court does not reduce the sentence for
 anyone found guilty. All of them deserve to be in jail, especially the
 ones who dishonoured us" said one of the rape victims.
 
 Another one said, "I am not happy as our lives have got shattered. It
 would have been better if the court had given us some money so that we
 can lead our lives that have been destroyed."
 
 In fact it was Shanmugam, in his avatar as the Tamil Nadu Tribal
 Peoples Association president, who forced action against the forest
 officials and the policemen. The police had turned a blind eye to the
 victims'plight as did the then Jayalalithaa government.
 
 It was the efforts of Shanmugam and CPM state secretary A Nallasivan
 who took up the matter to the Madras high court, which ordered a CBI
 probe into the incident in 1995.
 
 Since then it has been a torturous journey for these tribals, he said.
 
 Shamugam had taken their case to the SC/ST Commission that awarded
 compensation of Rs 1.25 crore to the victims in 2007. This sum was
 distributed among 500 villagers.
 
 Some 133 villagers were arrested by the police and jailed illegally.
 But almost every villager suffered, said Shanmugam.
 
 "The court did not offer any financial relief to the victims, except
 Rs 15,000 each to the rape victims, and that too out of the fines
 collected. Which is why I am going to file a petition seeking
 financial compensation to all the villagers, who lost their
 livelihood, cattle, houses destroyed besides trauma," Shamugam told
 Hindustan Times.
 
 The forest officials and police roped the special task force (STF)
 that was constituted to nab sandalwood smuggler Veerappan just to
 paint the repressive action the colour of an operation, when in
 reality it was just and plain act of terror against helpless tribals,
 he said.
 
 Reacting to the verdict S Perumal (70) who was the village chief on
 the day of the incident, said that justice has been done at last.
 
 "Many of the victims may not be alive today but their souls will
 finally rest in peace," he said.
 
 The judge began reading out charges against each of the 215 accused at
 11 am and could complete all the accused by 4pm.
 
 He also simultaneously held the accused guilty as over 100 victims,
 all of them from Vachathi village of Dharmapauri district, some 350 km
 south west of Chennai waited patiently for this day for the past two
 decades or so.
 
 It was on June 20, 1992 that a forest officials team accompanied by
 police raided the Vachathi hamlet on the foothills of Sitheri Hills
 close to Dharmapuri town and turned it into a ghost town in three days
 of pure terror - raping women and young girls, beating up men and even
 children.
 
 The team comprising 155 forest officials, 108 policemen and six
 revenue department officials were raiding the village in search of
 sandalwood they suspected the villagers to have hidden.
 
 In the name of search and inquiry, the villagers, most women were
 dragged out of their homes and fields, assembled under a banyan tree
 and beaten up mercilessly, recalled a victim N Muthu.
 
 Later the women were bundled into the Forest Rangers Office in Harur
 (Taluka hqrs), where they were subjected to savage brutality and
 raped. In all 18 women were raped by the different people.
 
 The sensational Vachathi case has become a shining example of justice
 delayed - 54 of the accused died during the investigations and trial
 and 34 victims passed away so far.
 
 The then Jayalalithaa government underplayed the episode and it was
 the CPM that forced the issue by taking it to the court.
 
 The high court ordered a CBI probe.
 
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