Just instant meting out of “justice” through “crossfires” is bound to give birth to problems. Today a confirmed criminal is killed, tomorrow a suspect is mowed down, then comes someone thought to be a criminal and then an innocent man.
Many societies are tackling the militant problem today but not in our way. The West especially has been successful to the extent that it can be termed so. They did not have to send the militants to “crossfires”. Their criminal and justice system is such that the militants are tried and that the militants are closely watched once out of the jail. Their political powers never utter any statements that may qualify the militants’ atrocities.
Here, we have not made any reforms to the system. We have not produced expert prosecutors and investigators. It is often found that militants get bail as the investigators and prosecutors fail to produce enough prove for the court to hold them down.
Our political leaders often make statements that may seem to be justifying the militants’ work especially when it is against people who write controversial things on religion. When in response to a killing of a blogger a minister says that the deceased’s web site and Facebook page have to be examined does not it amount to indirect justification of the killing?
But a society cannot continue on such brute, arbitrary and whimsical dispensation of “justice” by “crossfires”.
Source: The Daily Star