@saiyan0321
My position is completely different.
Modi was morally responsible for riots, for the killing of a minority in these riots, killing by an organised mob, but he was not guilty of murder as many of us like to put it at the cost of our own credibility, and he was very tightly organised about wiping out the evidence, including telephone company records, including destroying the careers and lives of recalcitrant police officials who would have testified against him.
So why do I blame him, again and again and again? Because of his violation of his sworn oath to uphold the constitution. It is famous that when Vajpayee went to Gujarat after the riots, in his departing press conference, he said in his cryptic, inflected way that Raj Dharma ought to be followed, very clearly implying that it was not followed. It was then that Modi, who was present, broke in, something most extraordinary for a Chief Minister of a State to do to the Prime Minister of the country, and said forcefully,"Wohi toh ho raha tha!" and a nonplussed Vajpayee heard him, kept silent, and waddled back to Delhi.
Modi did not follow Raj Dharma; that is to be interpreted as the constitutional oath of office. It will be noticed immediately that there is no direct link to the Constitution in our laws, other than when a statute defines penalties in its drafting. Other than that, we see every action not in terms of the provisions of the Constitution so much as in terms of the much older Indian Penal Code and the Criminal Procedure, that predated the Constitution, and even the Government of India Act, by nearly half a century.
If we are to stabilise, the proper adherence to the Constitution needs to be handled separately by a permanent bench of the Supreme Court hearing these matters in original, and armed with a series of statutory remedies to these crimes - the breaches in question are nothing short of crimes, in this case, crimes against the state. The business of encounters, for instance; there is no reasonable way in which an ordinary citizen can object to this dangerous practice of the police, and no way in which a citizen can pursue the matter and get the practice stopped, or even get a particular instance investigated and the proven perpetrators handed over to justice.
I think we need to seriously re-align our methods of recognising breaches of the constitution, including violations of the oath of office, and of pursuing these easily and conveniently with the full backing of the state itself in a separate avatar in a progressive and fast-paced court.
Yes, that is the crux of the problem. It is termites like you who are destroying the state.