Editorial:-
The news report of a gang of around six persons, most of
whom are in their early to mid twenties, ambushing a 74 year old in a
reasonably remote part of rural Sikkim was front-paged in yesterday’s edition of
this newspaper was not only for its sensationalism value. The story is
admittedly sensational, but the need to highlight it was the dangerous trend it
points towards – the worry that there are youth around who can, irrespective of
the provocation, set upon a septuagenarian like a pack of animals. What
prompted the attack is not clear, it could have been a robbery or even payback
for some slight. But the reason is not as important as the fact that something
like this happened. A society where its young can resort to such violence should
be worried.
Sikkim has often heard its leaders, both in the ruling and
the Opposition camps, hold forth on how the State could witness a violent
movement if the unemployment situation was not contained. In fact, after the
experience of the recent elections, the word “youth” now connotes almost the
same negativity as “police” or “politician”. But to claim that unemployment
will somehow deliver a violent “movement” to Sikkim is too simplistic and even
misplaces inference. While unemployed, and therefore frustrated youth, do
provide the fodder for such ‘movements,’ Sikkim does not have a history of
violent uprisings. It is unlikely that history will be rewritten on this front.
What is cause for more worry is the dangerous trend of the rising graph of very
violent and absolutely senseless acts of crime [like the one mentioned above].
These are reported often in normal times and also delivered two violent deaths
in the run up to the elections. The two deaths were clearly a result of
“political violence”, but that was a violence unleashed not due to ideological
differences, but mad rage and a disregard for consequences. This is the trend and
mindset that needs to be curtailed.
As mentioned earlier, it would be too simplistic to suggest
that the crimes were the handiwork of unemployed and desperate youth.
Unemployment does not lead everyone to crime, a weak social fabric does. There
will be those who point out that most crimes are committed by “outsiders,” but
when they do so, they are only covering up for the failures of society which
has developed yawning gaps through which such violent crimes find expression.
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