INFORMATION TIMES: http://www.informationtimes.com Sunday, June 20, 1999
Amnesty International 1999 Report on INDIA -- Covering events from January to
December 1998
Thousands of political prisoners, including prisoners of conscience, were
detained without charge or trial. Torture and
ill-treatment continued to be widespread, and hundreds of people were reported
to have died in custody. Conditions in
many prisons amounted to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.
"Disappearances" continued and hundreds of extrajudicial
executions were reported. At least 35 people were sentenced to death; no
executions were reported. Armed groups
committed grave human rights abuses, including torture, hostage-taking and
killings of civilians.
Following the fall of the United Front government in December 1997, general
elections were held in March 1998. The
Bharatiya Janata Party (bjp), led by A.B. Vajpayee and backed by several
regional parties, won a majority. The coalition
remained in power at the end of the year.
In May a Prevention of Terrorist Activities Bill (1998) was passed in the Tamil
Nadu state legislature. The legislation
allows for detention without charge for up to a year, widens the scope of the
death penalty and suspends other safeguards
normally available under India's criminal law. In November the President of
India returned the legislation to the state
government, requesting it to reconsider several provisions. Other legislation
that facilitates human rights violations
continued to be used in parts of the country, including the Armed Forces
(Special Powers) Act which gives the security
forces powers to shoot to kill and grants them virtual immunity from
prosecution.
The National Human Rights Commission (nhrc) continued to monitor human rights
abuses and make recommendations for
the promotion and protection of human rights. During the year state human rights
commissions were established in Kerala
and Manipur. In June a high level Advisory Committee was appointed by the nhrc
to look into provisions of the 1993
Protection of Human Rights Act under which the nhrc was established. Areas of
consideration included Section 19 of the
Act which restricts nhrc investigations of alleged human rights violations by
members of the armed and paramilitary forces.
In September the Supreme Court dismissed a challenge by the central government
to the nhrc's powers to investigate past
human rights violations in Punjab. The Court ruled that the nhrc would be acting
"sui generis" in such investigations and
that provisions of the Protection of Human Rights Act which prevent the nhrc
from investigating allegations of human rights
violations which are more than a year old, therefore, did not apply. The Supreme
Court had ordered the nhrc to investigate
violations in Punjab in December 1996 after hearing allegations by human rights
organizations that hundreds of bodies had
been illegally cremated by Punjab police (see Amnesty International Reports 1997
and 1998). By the end of the year the
nhrc had not begun investigations.
Armed conflict between government forces and armed groups continued in parts of
the country, including Jammu and
Kashmir, northeastern states and Andhra Pradesh. Civilians, including women and
children, were often the victims of
abuses by both sides.
Thousands of political prisoners, including prisoners of conscience, were
detained without charge or trial. They included
human rights defenders and people peacefully protesting against violations of
civil, cultural, economic, political and social
rights.
Thousands of people, most of them women, were arrested during the year in
connection with peaceful protests against the
Maheshwar Dam project in Madhya Pradesh. They were arrested under section 151 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure
which allows police to preventively detain people they suspect may commit a
crime. Many of those arrested were
reportedly beaten and some needed hospital treatment. Several women alleged that
they were told they would be stripped
naked if they protested again. Most of those arrested were released
unconditionally within a few days following widespread
protests at their arrest.
Many people were detained under the 1980 National Security Act (nsa), which
permits administrative detention for up to
one year on loosely defined grounds of national security. There were regular
reports of arrests under the nsa in Tamil Nadu
and Uttar Pradesh during the year. In Jammu and Kashmir, political leaders
peacefully protesting against human rights
violations were frequently detained without charge or trial under the 1978 Jammu
and Kashmir Public Safety Act and the
preventive detention provisions of the ordinary criminal law.
People defending their rights were also subjected to other forms of harassment
or intimidation. In Orissa, those protesting
against mining and other industrial projects in Rayagada district were attacked
and had their property destroyed, reportedly
by gangs acting in collusion with local authorities and police. In June several
activists of Agragamee, a non-governmental
organization working with tribal people in Rayagada district, were arrested on
what appeared to be false charges.
In February residents of two colonies, one of bonded labourers and the other of
a Scheduled Caste community, in the Kookal
Panchayat area of Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu, were attacked by police after they
announced they would boycott local elections.
More than 100 police officers, aided by supporters of the Dravida Munnetra
Kazhagam, a political party standing in the
elections, entered the colonies and beat men, women and children, and destroyed
property. Sixteen women and nine men
from the colonies were then arrested on charges of attempted murder and dacoity
(criminal theft). A human rights activist,
Henry Tiphagne, who supported the victims, was subsequently harassed by the
authorities and in March charged with
dacoity.
Several human rights defenders were arrested in Punjab. There were concerns that
the arrests were connected with their
involvement in the Punjab Committee for Coordination on Disappearances, a
network of lawyers established in recent years
to pursue the issue of redress for "disappearances". Among those
arrested were Jaspal Singh Dhillon, Rajinder Singh
Neeta and Daljit Singh Rajput, who were detained in July and accused of
conspiring to secure the escape of prisoners.
Jaspal Singh Dhillon, Chair of the Human Rights and Democracy Forum and closely
involved with the Punjab Committee for
Coordination on Disappearances, previously "disappeared" for a month
in 1993 and was only released after an international
campaign. All three men remained in judicial custody at the end of 1998.
Torture, including rape, and ill-treatment continued to be endemic throughout
the country. Three employees of a society
dealing with disadvantaged women and children in Rajasthan, which had been
involved in state-wide protests about the
treatment of rape victims, were reportedly tortured after their arrest in
August. Abdul Sattar was taken to Bassi police
station in August and reportedly stripped naked and beaten. For the next five
days he said he was tortured, including with
electric shocks to his hands, feet and genitals. Sita Ram and Satya Narain were
repeatedly beaten by police. All three were
threatened and reportedly forced to confess to serious crimes and to implicate
other employees of the society. They were
subsequently charged and were awaiting trial at the end of the year.
There were continuing reports of rape by members of the security forces in
various parts of the country. In June Naorem
Ongbi Thoinu Devi was reportedly raped by a soldier in her house in Kakching
village in Manipur. An investigation was
carried out by members of the armed forces under the Army Act which allows
members of the armed forces to be tried by
court martial rather than by a civil court. The outcome of the investigation was
not known at the end of the year.
Hundreds of people were reported to have died in custody. The nhrc continued to
monitor deaths in police and judicial
custody and to call for reports from the authorities about steps taken to
investigate such deaths and bring those responsible
to justice.
Prison conditions amounted to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment in many
facilities, including juvenile homes. Severe
overcrowding, lack of medical facilities, poor sanitation and ill-treatment by
prison staff continued to be reported. nhrc
recommendations issued in 1996 calling for reform of prison legislation had not
been implemented by the end of the year
(see Amnesty International Report 1997).
"Disappearances" continued to be reported during the year _
predominantly in Jammu and Kashmir, Assam and Manipur.
Legislation protecting members of the security forces from investigation and
prosecution continued to prevent the
determination of the fate of the "disappeared".
In Manipur, five separate inquiries were carried out into the
"disappearance" of 15-year-old Yumlembam Sanamacha
following his arrest by members of the 17th Rajputana Rifles in February from
his home in Angtha village, Thoubal district,
Manipur. Two brothers _ 15-year-old Bimol Singh and Inao Singh _ who were
arrested with him, said that they had last
seen him shortly after arrest being tortured by army personnel at the side of
the road. The authorities initially denied that
Yumlembam Sanamacha had been arrested, then said that he had escaped from
custody. Moves by the central government
to prevent the state government from investigating the case meant that no
members of the armed forces had been
prosecuted for his "disappearance" by the end of the year.
In August Haleema Begum and her 14-year-old son, Shakeel Ahmed, were shot dead
by unidentified gunmen in their
home in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir. Since the "disappearance" of her
son, Bilal Ahmad Bhat, following his arrest by the
security forces in December 1992, Haleema Begum had campaigned to highlight the
issue of "disappearances" in Jammu
and Kashmir and the plight of relatives of the "disappeared", many of
whom suffer severe economic disadvantage because
of the loss of male members of their families. No investigation had been carried
out into the deaths of Haleema Begum and
her youngest son by the end of the year.
Hundreds of extrajudicial executions were reported in many states. In September,
a judicial inquiry ordered by the
Maharashtra High Court into three incidents among scores of so-called
"encounter" killings of armed criminal suspects by
the Mumbai (Bombay) police (see Amnesty International Report 1998) found that
the police version of events was false
and that there was evidence to suggest that the three men concerned were
extrajudicially executed.
In September a 10-year-old boy was killed and several others were injured during
a cordon-and-search operation in
Nowpora village in Jammu and Kashmir. Parents were delivering their children to
school when members of the Border
Security Forces opened fire, reportedly indiscriminately. An investigation was
reported to have been ordered, but had not
been completed by the end of the year.
At least 35 people were sentenced to death. Among them were 26 men and women
sentenced to death by a special court in
Tamil Nadu in January after what appeared to be an unfair trial. Most had been
arrested in
1991 in connection with the assassination of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi
and were tried under the lapsed Terrorist
and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, which included provisions that
contravened international fair trial standards.
One of the women sentenced, A. Athirai, was reported to have been only 17 years
old at the time of her arrest. Appeals
against the sentences were still before the Supreme Court at the end of the
year.
No executions were reported during the year but the Home Minister referred on
several occasions to government plans to
extend the use of the death penalty for crimes including rape, child rape and
the carrying of explosives.
Two men under sentence of death in Andhra Pradesh (see Amnesty International
Report 1998) had their sentences
commuted to life imprisonment by the President in May.
There were increasing reports of attacks on religious minorities including
Christians and Muslims, most notably in Gujarat
state. Many of the attacks were reportedly carried out by members of militant
Hindu groups. The National Commission for
Minorities investigated reported incidents in Gujarat in August and expressed
serious concern about the situation, pointing
to violations of fundamental rights. Its recommendations included increased
training of police in order to ensure respect for
the rights of minorities.
In August, in response to public pressure, the state government of Maharashtra
published the report of the Srikrishna
Commission of Inquiry set up in 1993 to investigate the circumstances
surrounding riots between members of the Hindu and
Muslim communities in Mumbai in December 1992 and January 1993 following the
destruction of the mosque at Ayodhya
(see Amnesty International Reports 1993 and 1994). The report pointed to
communalism within the police force which led
to discrimination against members of the Muslim community during the riots and
incitement to riot by members of the Shiv
Sena political party. The government of Maharashtra, a Shiv Sena-bjp alliance,
dismissed the majority of the
recommendations which had been made in the report.
Armed groups continued to commit grave human rights abuses, including torture,
hostage-taking and deliberate and
arbitrary killings of civilians. In the north of Assam, violence between armed
Bodo groups and non-Bodo tribal people
escalated during September and October. More than
140 people were reported to have been killed between 1 September and 10 October.
In December, 23 Muslims were shot
dead by suspected members of an armed Bodo group in Kokrajhar district. In
January unidentified gunmen shot dead 23
civilians, including four children, in the village of Vandhama, near the town of
Ganderbal in Jammu and Kashmir, before
setting fire to a Hindu temple. Similar incidents continued to occur throughout
the year in Jammu and Kashmir.
Hostages abducted by armed groups in previous years remained held. The fate of
Sanjay Ghosh, a social and environmental
activist detained by the United Liberation Front of Assam in July 1997, remained
unknown (see Amnesty International
Report 1998). Hostage-taking by armed groups continued at an alarming rate in
the state of Tripura.
Amnesty International published a number of reports, including India: Manipur _
the silencing of youth in May and India: A
mockery of justice in April. Amnesty International also raised concerns about
the human rights of children in South Asia in a
report, Children in South Asia: Securing their rights, in April.
In October Amnesty International submitted its comments on deficiencies in the
1993 Protection of Human Rights Act --
under which the nhrc was established -- to the Advisory Committee established by
the nhrc in June to review the Act.
Amnesty International members took part in campaigns against sexual abuse of
women and children by members of the
security forces in Assam and Manipur and on a range of legal issues, including
provisions of the ordinary criminal law which
facilitate impunity for the police and security forces.
Throughout the year Amnesty International called on armed groups in Jammu and
Kashmir and northeastern states to abide
by the principles of international humanitarian law.
[Copyright Amnesty International Publications]
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