Subscribe: by email or Podcast

Enter your Email to Track Changes in OSINFO


Powered by FeedBlitz

SEARCH SITE
NEWS & ARCHIVE
SOME INTERESTING PAPERS

TilTul

Particls InTouch

Link to Podcast (RSS feed) for this blog

Subscribe to Open Source Information News on your cell phone

Receive IM, Email or Mobile alerts when new content is published on this site.

BlogMailr Enabled

Add to any service

Advertisement

Login
« FORGING AHEAD | Main | Stop in the name of the law! »
Monday
24Mar

The impact of paradigm changing events on legal systems 

From: With A Grain Of Salt!

Posted: 24 Mar 2008 06:43 AM CDT

Countries faced with terrorism are currently struggling with how to establish legal precedents, so that they can handle terrorists. Because there is no clear cut answer, you get situations which range from outright human right abuses of legal systems, such as Guantanamo Bay all the way to situations where terrorists are released only to commit terrorism acts again right after they have been let loose. This is not unusual. Legal systems down the ages have had major systemic shocks, such as this and the power of a liberal democracy lies in the fact that it is able to incorporate these shocks and re-emerge stronger. If you do not believe me, see how the British Indian Legal System reacted when it was faced with the “Thugs”.

Thugs were a group of criminals, who ran rampant in India and killed an estimated 50,000 to couple of million Indians from circa 1250 to circa 1850. The number actually does not matter, just like Stalin said, death of a million is just a statistic. But in this particular case, the situation was very bad indeed. Gangs of thugs ranged far and wide, from current Pakistan down to South India, to the foothills of the Himalayas next to Nepal to due east into Bangladesh, a very wide area indeed. Over the many centuries, that we are talking about, their area of operation covered hundreds of native states, and the decaying Mughal Empire as well as the rapidly up and coming East India Company ruled areas. All this is before 1857, the great war of Independence or the Great Mutiny (take your pick).

These Thugs were professional murderers, with techniques and training passed around in special villages and in certain hereditary families. They would be protected, trained and funded in many cases by the local ruler/landlord in return for a significant cut of the proceeds. Gangs had specialised roles, some would be the confidence boosters, others would be the grave diggers, some would specialise in the actual murder etc. They had strong rituals surrounding their equipment (specially the pick used to dig the grave), religious rituals to the goddess, etc. And their modus operandi, while difficult to generalise, would roughly go like this. They would befriend fellow travellers, who they know were carrying valuables (they picked up the information from the market places or from guardsmen, etc.) and then will travel for extra-ordinary distances with the victims, sometimes up to 100s of kilometres. And then, at a carefully selected time and place, they would generally strangle the entire party, then strip them completely, mutilate the bodies and cut them open (so that the bodily gases do not expose the body after being dumped in a well), and then hide them down a gorge, a grave, well or ditch. Then the monies and goods will be divided amongst the gang (and the sponsor) and off they will go to get the next victim(s) for hundreds of years.

How on earth did they manage to get away with it all? Well, there were many reasons. First was the fact that they had local protection, so nobody could get to them as the only “authority” in that locality was that local zamindar (landowner) and if he himself had given protection, then there was no way you could get to the thugs. Second given the fact that many bodies were hidden, nobody knew where the victims were. Given the very bad roads, lack of communication, insular population, fragmented country, that is not a surprise. Further to that, given the frequent incidents of fatal illnesses, it was not surprising that people would assume that their loved ones have died on the road and had been buried by someone else or were eaten by wild animals. So no victim, no crime!


PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend