Asia | First the mob, then the law

Victims of rioting in India are bashed by the police and courts, too

Judges who decry anti-Muslim bias find themselves overruled or transferred

More menace than reassurance
|DELHI

LAST MONTH a judge in Mangaluru, in the southern state of Karnataka, did something increasingly unusual in an Indian court. Not only did he grant bail to 21 Muslim men charged with joining a riot, he also roundly condemned the police for fabricating evidence against them. They had failed to establish a link between the accused and any crime, he said. They had also failed to register even a single case on behalf of multiple witnesses who claimed that it was the police themselves who had shot dead two people in the city in December during a protest against controversial new citizenship rules. There appeared to have been “a deliberate attempt to cover up police excesses”, he concluded. Two weeks later, in much more typical fashion, the Supreme Court struck down the ruling, sending the men back to prison.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “First the mob, then the law”

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