Chennai: A nondescript hamlet on the foothills of the Chitteri range of Eastern Ghats, Vachathi, erupted into jubilation with the bursting of crackers and distribution of sweets. The Malayali (hill) tribe of the village, 350 km from Chennai, have finally tasted justice in their long legal battle with Justice P Velmurugan of Madras High Court confirming the trial court judgment in the case pertaining to the horrendous mass rape, indiscriminate assault and plunder of the remote hamlet three decades ago.
The Chitteri range was then rich in sandalwood and under the pretext of recovering smuggled sandalwood, the forest, police, and revenue personnel carried out the raid, which resulted in wanton destruction on June 20, 1992. Neither women were spared of the lathi nor a single house was left without the scar of the atrocities. With the entire village forced to assemble under a banyan tree, 18 women, including a teen, were taken away and subjected to mass rape. But for the intervention and active support of the CPI(M), the brutality would not have come to light, and justice, though delayed, would not have been possible.
Dismissing the appeals of 126 forest officials, 84 police personnel, and 5 revenue officers, convicted and sentenced by the Dharmapuri District and Sessions Court, Justice Velmurugan also called for stringent action against the then Dharmapuri District Collector, Superintendent of Police, and District Forest Officer. Coincidentally, the judgment on the appeals was delivered on the same day that the trial court had pronounced its verdict in 2011.
After the raid, Vachathi turned into a ghost town and it was the late CPI(M)stalwart A Nallasivan who moved the Supreme Court to get the case investigated by the CBI. Initially, the Madras High Court had dismissed that plea, but on a direction from the apex court to hear the matter afresh, it gave the nod for a CBI probe. The Sessions court found 269 persons guilty but as many as 54 had died during the pendency of trial.