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“Pronounced guilty by seekers of TRPs”: Activist Disha Ravi hits back

New Delhi: Twenty-two-year-old climate activist Disha Ravi, whose arrest last month earned the Delhi Police one of its most embarrassing judicial rebukes in recent times and triggered an international outcry about the crackdown on dissent in India, released her first statement on Saturday.

Picked up by the police late in the night on February 13 from her Bengaluru home in connection with an online document that canvassed support for the farmers’ protest, she was granted bail 10 days later by a Delhi court that shamed the cops for their “scanty and sketchy evidence”.

In a statement published on her social media pages on Saturday evening, Disha Ravi detailed her arrest and custody, saying she felt her autonomy had been violated and she had been pronounced guilty by ratings-hungry news channels.

“I had coerced myself into believing that the only way I would be able to live through this was by tricking myself into thinking that this wasn’t happening to me – the police did not knock on my door on 13 February 2021; they did not take my phone and laptop, and arrest me,” she said.

Ravi recalled how she was not provided with a lawyer in the first hearing in court and sent to police custody in a move that had appalled legal and civil rights experts.

“As I stood in that courtroom, desperately searching for my lawyers, I came to terms with the fact that I would have to defend myself. I had no idea whether there was legal assistance available… Before I knew it, I was sent to 5 days in police custody,” she said.

“It’s no surprise that in the days that followed, my autonomy was violated; my photographs were splashed all over the news; my actions were pronounced guilty – not in the court of law, but on flat screens by seekers of TRPs [Television Ratings Points]. I sat there, unaware of the many abstractions made of me in order to satiate their idea of me,” she said.

Saying she was “aware of every minute and every hour” inside the jail cell, the activist added that she “wondered when it became a crime to think the most basic elements of sustenance on this planet”.

“My grandparents, who are farmers, indirectly birthed my climate activism,” Ravi wrote, explaining in detail why climate activism and the farmers’ protest against the three federal laws resonated with her.

“Climate Justice isn’t just for the rich and the white. It is a fight alongside those who are displaced; whose rivers have been poisoned; whose lands were stolen; who watch their houses get washed away every other season; and those who fight tirelessly for what are basic human rights. We fight alongside those actively silenced by the masses and portrayed as ‘voiceless’, because it is easier for savarnas to call them voiceless. We take the easy way out and fund saviourism rather than amplify the voices on ground,” she said.

While expressing gratitude to those who supported her, the activist said she was concerned about “all those still in jail whose stories are not marketable” and “the marginalized that are not worthy of your screen time”.

Charged with sedition for her alleged role in the creation of an online “toolkit” that police said contained action plans used to foment violence during the farmers’ protest, Disha Ravi was freed on February 23 by the court which said, “Sedition cannot be invoked to minister to the wounded vanity of the government.”

The judge said he did not find Ravi’s link to the toolkit or a Canada-based group called the Poetic Justice Foundation (PJF) objectionable.

The toolkit, which offered basic advice on joining the farmers’ protest on the ground and information on how to show support on social media, had been shared by Swedish climate crusader Greta Thunberg. Ravi is a founder of the local chapter of Thunberg movement.

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News Live Odisha

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