India (Jammu/Kashmir): Impunity for Special Operations Group unacceptable
Amnesty International is disturbed by recent press reports that the government of Jammu and Kashmir is to break the
promise made in its recently published Common Minimum Program to investigate all reported cases of custodial killings
and violations of human rights and to identify and punish appropriately those found responsible.
In an address to new trainee police recruits on 5th January, Chief Minister Mohammad Sayeed reportedly stated that
members of the Special Operations Group, a division of the police dealing with armed insurgency which has been accused
of human rights violations, would simply be 'reoriented', implying that wide scale allegations of human rights
violations made against them in the past would not necessarily be investigated. He reportedly went on to say that an
amnesty would be available to those who have perpetrated abuses.
Amnesty International wrote to Chief Minister Sayeed in December 2002 welcoming the Common Minimum Program as an
opportunity for the new government to strengthen the people's trust in the rule of law and their commitment to uphold
the human rights of the population in Jammu and Kashmir. The organization is disappointed that the government may be
retreating from its commitment to uphold human rights.
View all documents on India on http://click.topica.com/maaaLg3aaVdJEbb0hPub/