B
HAGAT Singh's trial is one of those episodes in the
history of India's freedom of which little is known. Historians and his contemporaries' writings have thrown
much light on certain facets of his personality and his outlook
which his amazing courage and commitment tended to overshadow. A man of intense feeling, he was also a man of remarkable intellectUal qualities who was ever ready to learn and unlearn.
But far less is known of the darker aspects of the trial. This
·boo� seeks to explore them. It is not a defmitive work on the
subject. It, however, raises certain issues which have not received
the attention they deserved. The farcical character of the trial was
not studied in depth; perhaps because Bhagat Singh's culpability
in the Saunders' murder was not in question. But the Lahore
Conspiracy Case merits study for its own sake as a classic case of
abuse of the judicial process for political ends. On May 1, 1930
the Governor-General promulgated an Ordinance establishing· a
Special Tribunal to try the case while taking good care to deprive
the accused of the right of appeal to the High Court and to its
confirmation of death sentences.
A little over six months later the Punjab Government got
enacted a special statute to set up. a Commission to try certain
persons on charges as grave and the same Governor-General
secured enactment of a Central law conferring on the accused
those very rights of appeal to and confirmation by the High Court.
The animus against Bhagat Singh and his comrades could not