HUMAN RIGHTS IN JAMMU AND KASHMIR
by M. L.
Kotru
HUMAN RIGHTS IN
JAMMU AND KASHMIR
Pakistan's
unrelenting offensive against India has been conducted on two fronts ...
sponsoring terrorism in India and conducting a worldwide propaganda campaign.
In the context of Jammu and Kashmir, the propaganda disseminated by Pakistan
has concentrated on alleged violations of the Human Rights of the Kashmiris
by the Indian Government and its security forces.
The first and
foremost Human Right is the right to life, And it is the bounden duty of
any State to take necessary action to safeguard the life, property and
dignity of its people. In the context of Kashmir it is essential to examine
who is responsible for the creation of an environment where human rights
can be violated. After all the Indian security forces have been present
in the State of Jammu and Kashmir since 1947 and never was any hint of
any human rights violations of the people voiced. On the contrary the presence
of the Indian security forces state has been a source of assurance to the
people of a state that has been subjected to repeated aggression by Pakistan.
The people of Jammu and Kashmir, including those of the Valley refused
to be duped by Pakistan's blandishments in the three wars with Pakistan-
eloquent testimony to the people's faith in the Indian security forces
and the Indian polity.
What then is
the new element that has been introduced that has triggered off the whole
debate on the question of Human Rights in Jammu and Kashmir? The answer
has been given by International Human Rights organizations such as Amnesty
International and Asia Watch who have had to acknowledge the pervasive
presence of terrorism in the Valley and have documented the depredations
of the terrorists.
The Vienna
Declaration passed at the end of the World Human Rights Conference in 1993,
the resolution adopted by the Third Committee of the UN General Assembly
also in 1993, the Resolution 1993/48 adopted by the Commission on Human
Rights, all stress the need for the international community to combat terrorism
and condemn terrorist activities as a gross violation of Human Rights.
The real question
that needs addressing is the continuous assault on democratic institutions
perpetrated by the armed terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir acting at the
behest of Pakistan.
Terrorists
in training.
In his book
"Future of political violence" General Richard Clutterbuck states
"..
The ultimate civil right, however, is the right to live. A violent minority,
whatever its politics, has no right to kill, and no claim to such a right
must ever be allowed to override the right of the majority to live in peace..
". It is precisely this right that the a violent minority has arrogated
to itself in the State of Jammu and Kashmir.
The pillars
of a free democratic society are the judiciary, the press and free political
activity.
Terrorists
in training.
The Indian
press has been lauded internationally for its freedom. Freedom of expression
is a norm in Indian society, jealously guarded by the representatives of
the Fourth estate. In fact Amnesty itself has acknowledged that a great
deal of its information has been culled from the Indian media. But muzzling
and manipulating the press has been a regular practice followed by the
terrorists in the Valley. Prominent media personalities have been killed.
Details of the repression of the media by the terrorists are given in a
separate chapter.
An independent
judiciary has been one of the hallmarks of Indian democracy. It has been
a champion of Human Rights. At the height of the forcible armed occupation
of the Hazratbal Shrine by armed militants in late 1993, it was the Indian
Supreme Court that ordered the Government to provide sustenance to the
people inside the shrine. The independence of the Indian judiciary has
been lauded world wide ... and it is the representatives of this institution
who have been targeted by the terrorists.
There has been
targeted killing of political leaders and workers, including former legislators
of the State. Three top political leaders, Maulvi Mohd. Farooq, Chairman
of the Awami Action Committee, (May 21, 1990), Abdul Jabbar, a former Minister
(April 18, 1990) and Maulana Masoodi, State level National Conference leader
(December 1990) were gunned down by terrorists. Many former legislators
of the Congress and the National Conference have fallen victims to militants'
bullets. Prominent citizens and opinion makers have been selectively eliminated
to prevent any scope for dissent against the activities of the terrorists.
The minority
community of Hindus has been selectively targeted leading to an exodus
from the Valley.
Refugee
camp for Kashmiri Pandits in Jammu.
Countless civilians,
including Muslims, have been raped tortured and killed for being " informers"
or for refusing to join the ranks of the militants or to assist them. The
oppression of civilians by the terrorists has heightened as disenchantment
with the latter's activities has increased.
A sustained
effort has been made by the terrorists to change the very tolerant character
of Islam practiced for centuries in the Valley. The Islam being introduced
by the terrorists throws acid on women who do not wear the "burqa", an
all encompassing robe. 400 schools have been destroyed and education disrupted
so that children are "freed" from the mainstream and turned into rabid
fundamentalists, particularly by the pro-Pakistan groups like the Hezb-ul-Mujaheddin.
Foreign
mercenaries in Kashmir.
As disenchantment
with militancy grows in the Valley and on occasion the people of the Valley
have voiced their opposition to acts of terrorism, Pakistan has begun to
send in armed foreign mercenaries to re-inforce the "Jehad".
Humanitarian
institutions such as hospitals in the Valley have been subjected to intimidation
with doctors being threatened; hospital premises being used to hide weapons;
doctors and nurses being kidnapped and killed in order to compel obedience
to the terrorists' diktats. The situation has forced many reputable medical
practitioners to leave the Valley and to seek employment elsewhere.
SUBVERSION
OF DEMOCRACY
An assessment
of the Human Rights situation in the State of Jammu and Kashmir must take
the involvement of Pakistan in providing sanctuary, arms and training and
finance to terrorists to operate in Indian territory as its starting point
since, having created a situation of armed terrorism and subversion of
the democratic polity, Pakistan now seeks to exploit the resulting situation
by raising the bogey of Human Rights.
Lord Howe speaking
in the British House of Lords on the question of human rights observed
"... the important question of human rights ... is an inevitable and legitimate
question for societies such as our own that are struggling with the uneven
balance between, on the one hand, the forces and agencies of Government
charged with the uncomfortable duty of upholding the rule of law- all of
whose decisions are open to challenge, open to appeal, open to debate .
. . and on the other hand terrorists who are subject to no such constraints;
they act as self appointed prosecutors, self appointed judges, self appointed
jury and self appointed executioners.."
Democracy,
with its concomitant principles of freedom of expression and faith is the
surest protector of human rights. Dwelling on human rights, when the very
institutions which can guarantee human rights are the target of terrorism
spawned and supported from across a State's borders, is self destructive.
It diverts attention from what should be the primary focus - the preservation
of the human rights of all citizens, not only a gun wielding minority.
The Government
of India is extremely conscious of the need to protect the human rights
of all its citizens.
When India
became free in August 1947 it gave itself a representative Government,
chosen on the basis of adult suffrage. Its Constitution drew inspiration
from the French and American Constitutions while retaining the best of
British Conventions which ensure the rights to Freedom and Liberty. It
inherited a judicial system from the British, which is based on natural
justice and the principles of jurisprudence.
India, has
been in the forefront of the struggle against colonialism and apartheid.
It is a signatory to the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, and has
acceded to the two International Covenants on Civil and Political Rights
and on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in 1979. In fact the Indian
constitution guarantees almost the entire gamut of Civil and Political
Rights, and the Directive Principles of State Policy, which form a part
of the Constitution, require the Government to promote social and economic
rights.
Strange then
that India should come under criticism for alleged violations of Human
Rights.
No one disputes
the fact that at times, faced with the violence perpetrated by the terrorists,
some violations have been caused by the security forces also. The question
arises have the excesses been condoned? What are the safety valves? The
institutions of democracy - the legislature, the judiciary and the press
- have played a vital role, in putting a break on the executive and ensuring
the Human Rights are not violated with impunity. The Parliament of India
and the State Legislatures keep the Executive under close scrutiny. India
has an independent Judiciary and a free Press. Alleged excesses have been
exposed in the Press, and taken up by the Legislatures and in some cases
followed up suo-moto by the Judiciary. In the recent past, the country
has also seen the emergence of many non-Government organizations, which
have taken up the cause of Human Rights. And more importantly a National
Human Right Commission was set up recently.
The Indian
Security Forces have had to fight the terrorists, particularly in Jammu
and Kashmir, under very difficult conditions with grave danger to their
lives. Whenever they are under pressure, the terrorists resort to a deliberate
disinformation campaign making all types of wild allegations against the
Security Forces, to demoralize them and deflect the thrust of their operations.
One of the
allegations leveled against India is that the Armed Forces (Special Powers)
Act and the Terrorists and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act confers
immunity on the Security Forces for "anything done or purported to be done"
under the Act. Such conclusions are grossly irrational. The special powers
conferred on the members of the Armed Forces do not keep them out of the
purview of the law of the land. They are accountable for their actions.
All allegations
against the security forces are investigated fully and pursued vigorously.
Most of the allegations made against the Security Forces have been found
to be inaccurate, highly exaggerated and fallacious. Punitive action has
been taken whenever proved to be true. Despite the fact that over 700 security
force personnel have lost their lives in encounters, grenade attacks and
mine explosions, action has been taken against 174 personnel of the Security
Forces. The punishment ranged from imprisonment upto 10 years, dismissal
from service, suspension and forfeiture of seniority.
Because of
orchestrated propaganda, an impression has gained currency that the Government
of India is not seriously concerned about the violation of Human Rights.
This is not true, and the impression needs to be dispelled. A National
Human Rights Commission was established through an ordinance, and later
confirmed by an Act of Parliament in 1993. The Human Rights Bill provides
for the setting up of Human Rights Commission at State levels too.
The National
Human Rights Commission has come into being with a former Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court of India as its Chairman. The Commission has also
taken cognizance of the recent events in the Valley, and has invited information
about the violent incidents in such sensitive spots like Bijbehara.
Allegations
of Human Rights violations have been leveled against India by Pakistan
to gain international support in its proxy war against India. The method
followed is simple. Whenever they are under pressure, the terrorists in
Jammu & Kashmir resort to a deliberate disinformation campaign, making
all types of wild allegations against the Security Forces. Besides the
threats of killing, extortion and kidnapping, the terrorists often browbeat
the ordinary citizens, into making bizarre allegations. Based on the stories
inspired by the terrorists and also on a few occasions when Security Forces
may have overstepped their limits many Human Rights organizations have
published exaggerated reports of alleged excesses. The reports published
in the local Press in the Valley under threat of militants are fed to agencies
across the border who use it in their anti-India campaign. They are also
used by international Human Rights organizations.
In Kashmir
alone action has been taken against 174 officers and men of the Security
Forces. They include imprisonment upto 10 years for 67 members of the Security
Forces, (ii) dismissals, removal from service, or compulsory retirement
for 16 personnel (iii) reduction in rank or loss of seniority for 7, (iv)
other departmental penalties for 44 personnel and (v) suspensions and arrests
pending enquiry for 36 personnel.
But while the
institutions of Indian democracy make the government apparatus answerable
for human rights violations, is there any similar mechanism for controlling
the terrorists? Debating the human rights issue without answering this
pertinent question will remain a futile exercise devoid of any relevance
to the conditions in Jammu and Kashmir.
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