Getting to
Know Indian Held Kashmir
HRW
Documents Repression in Kashmir
By Parwini Zora & Daniel
Woreck
A
recent report by the US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) documents the systematic
human rights abuses carried out by the Indian security forces in the state of
Jammu and Kashmir with the protection of the Indian government and legal system.
HRW conducted
research for the report, titled
“Everyone Lives in Fear: Patterns of Impunity in Jammu and Kashmir,”
from 2004 to February 2006 in Indian-controlled Kashmir. It was the first time
since 1989 that the Indian government had allowed an international human rights
body to visit and report on the state. HRW also conducted research in
Pakistani-controlled Kashmir in 2005 and 2006.
The report provides
detailed accounts and interviews implicating the Indian security forces in
torture, disappearances, arbitrary detentions and summary executions, which are
concealed as “encounter killings”.
The report stressed
that the estimated 700,000 Indian soldiers and paramilitaries in Kashmir carry
out widespread repression with impunity. Indian laws protect members of the
armed forces and civilian officials involved in crimes against Kashmiris.
Soldiers responsible for murders and torture are rarely investigated or held
accountable for their crimes.
The Asian director
of Human Rights Watch, Brad Adams, told the press in September: “Human rights
abuses have been a cause as well as a consequence of the insurgency in
Kashmir.... Kashmiris continue to live in constant fear because perpetrators of
abuses are not punished. Unless the Indian authorities address the human rights
crisis in Jammu and Kashmir, a political settlement of the conflict will remain
illusory.”
The report also
covers in significant detail the massacres, bombings and political killings
committed by various armed groups opposed to Indian rule of Kashmir. While HRW
equates the violence of the Indian military and that of the militants, the
outbreak of the armed conflict in the late 1980s resulted from decades of
oppressive, anti-democratic Indian rule of the majority Muslim state.
The continuing
conflict in Kashmir underlines the inherently reactionary character of the 1947
partition of British India into the current Muslim Pakistan and a
Hindu-dominated India. The division of the subcontinent along artificial
boundaries that cut across national, ethnic and language groupings laid the
groundwork for future conflicts and wars that resulted in some 2 million deaths,
turned millions more into refugees and divided the Kashmiri region into Indian
and Pakistani-held areas.
Subsequently,
successive Indian governments have proved incapable of meeting the aspirations
of the Kashmiri Muslims for genuine democratic rights and decent living
standards. Seeking to ensure Indian domination over Kashmir, the Indian elite
rescinded an agreement to give more autonomy to the state. Kashmiris began to
take up arms in the late 1980s after the Indian government blatantly rigged
state elections in Jammu and Kashmir
Since 1989, at
least 20,000 Kashmiri civilians have been killed as a result of the armed
conflict and tens of thousands more have been injured according to the HRW
report. About 300,000 Hindu Kashmiris have been internally displaced and another
30,000 Muslim Kashmiris have fled to neighbouring Pakistan as refugees.
The report cited
evidence of summary killings of suspected militants. Police and army officials
told HRW that detained suspects were often executed rather than being brought to
jail, on the grounds that “keeping hardcore militants in gaol is a security
risk”. The deaths were often falsely recorded as the result of “encounter
killings”. One example was the case of five men shot supposedly in an armed
“encounter”. While the army and police claimed the men were responsible for
the massacre of 36 Kashmiri Sikhs in 2000, forensic tests later showed the men
to be innocent local villagers.
Indian security
forces have extensive powers under the Jammu and Kashmir Disturbed Areas Act and
the Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir) Special Powers Act to use lethal force
against anyone “who is acting in contravention of any law or order for the
time being in force in the disturbed area”. The report cited an incident on
February 23, 2006 in which soldiers in Handawara shot at a group of people
playing cricket because they suspected that a Kashmiri separatist was among
them. Four boys, including an eight-year-old, were killed.
Kashmiri human
rights defenders estimate that over 8,000 Kashmiris have simply
“disappeared” since 1989. Most were last seen in the custody of Indian
troops, who in turn denied holding the person. Many were tortured and then
executed.
One case involved
Manzoor Ahmed Mir, a 37-year-old state employee. A group of soldiers accompanied
by three masked men took him away on September 12, 2004. Manzoor’s brother
recognised the men as a police sub-inspector, with whom Manzoor had quarrelled,
and the sub-inspector’s two sons. Manzoor’s family filed a habeas corpus
petition in the Srinigar High Court but by February 2006 the police and army had
not responded.
The HRW report
stated that thousands of Kashmiris have been arbitrarily and illegally detained.
One of India’s Additional Advocate Generals recently stated there were 4,500
suspected militants awaiting trial in jail. Many have been held for 10 years or
more without being brought before a court. Indian authorities often detain
Kashmiris under the Jammu and Kashmir Public Safety Act, which allows for
detention without trial for up to two years, because they have no evidence of
guilt.
Many people have
been detained beyond two years by simply rolling over preventative detention
orders. Amnesty International reported on the case of Farooq Ahmad Dar, who was
detained in November last year under his ninth consecutive PSA order. He has
been in continuous detention since 1991.
Based on
information from Mian Abdul Qayoom, president of the Jammu and Kashmir High
Court Bar Association, HRW reported that individuals had filed at least 60,000
habeas corpus petitions since 1990 to contest detentions or
“disappearances”. However, according to HRW, there are few, if any, cases in
which “officials have been held responsible for failing to respond in a timely
manner to a court order in a habeas corpus case or for failing to release a
detainee pursuant to a court order in Jammu and Kashmir”.
Those in state
custody are commonly tortured. “Relatives of militants are also taken into
custody and tortured, either to discover the whereabouts of a suspect, or as a
way of forcing the militant to surrender,” the report stated. The brother of a
wanted Kashmiri told HRW that Indian forces had beaten him and given him
electric shocks while in custody to try to force his brother to surrender. The
torture only stopped when soldiers killed his brother.
Legal Immunity
Most cases of
serious human rights abuse in the Jammu and Kashmir region are not officially
investigated. In the rare instances where abuses are probed, there has not been
a single individual in the Indian army, paramilitary or the police convicted of
a criminal offence. In fact, since 1989 only 134 army personnel, 79 members of
the Border Security Force and 60 policemen have been subjected to
“disciplinary action”.
There is no
civilian control over the proceedings of the military justice system. In
addition, the provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code of 1973 protect any
member of the armed forces from arrest for “anything done or purported to be
done by him in the discharge of his official duties except after obtaining the
consent of the central government”.
Section 197(2) of
the Criminal Procedure Code is a sweeping immunity provision that applies
throughout India. In the words of the HRW report, this code “makes it
mandatory for a prosecutor to obtain permission from the federal government to
initiate criminal proceedings against public servants, including armed forces
personnel”. According to Amnesty International, the Jammu and Kashmir
government had made almost 300 requests for permission to prosecute last year,
but none were granted.
Security forces
have used the Jammu and Kashmir Disturbed Areas Act and the Armed Forces (Jammu
and Kashmir) Special Powers Act to justify firing indiscriminately on peaceful
demonstrations, including protests in January and October 1990 in Srinagar and
in 1993 in Beijbehara.
The HRW report is
one more account of the widespread and sustained use of repression for over a
decade in Jammu and Kashmir. There is no reason to believe that the current
Congress-led government in New Delhi will take any more notice of its
recommendations than any of the previous calls for justice.
The
report underscores the fact that in India, which is commonly referred to as
the world’s largest democracy, the systematic abuse of basic democratic
rights is widespread.
Kashmir
is not real estate to be given to India or Pakistan; Kashmiris are a people with
the same hopes and dreams as every other people. They are a beautiful people of
a beautiful land. It was a Kashmiri – Allama Iqbal - who furnished the
foundation of a modern polity for a post-imperial Islamic Nation State to the
Muslim world; yet it is the Kashmiris alone who are denied the fruits of that
polity and of freedom. The Kashmiris have been struggling against foreign rule
since well before 1947. Their present rulers – India – have been the
cruellest that has martyred 90,000 Kashmiris, raped countless women, and
dynamited thousands of homes. They have done that because they believe that if a
Muslim majority Kashmir can be state within India, why not Pakistan and
Bangladesh. India says that the ‘majority’ of Muslims of Kashmir accepts its
rule and that constitutes a proof that India is a ‘secular’ state. In fact,
it proves the exact opposite. It proves that India is held together by force and
coercion. India bars the world press from Kashmir and commits war crimes against
civilians that should land the leaders of India in front of International
Criminal Court rather than be welcome among leaders of the ‘free world’.
Authentic Voices of South Asia, Introduction (Page 8) Published by
London Institute of South Asia.