News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International
AI INDEX: ASA 20/034/2003 3 December 2003
India: Jammu and Kashmir Government Must Uphold Promises to End Human Rights Abuses
One year after the publication of a government plan, the Common Minimum Program, which promised to end human rights
violations in Jammu and Kashmir, Amnesty International urges the state government to abide by its commitments to restore
the rule of law and protect the human rights of the population.
"Despite the promises made in the Program, security forces have reportedly been responsible for the killing of over 250
civilians in targeted and indiscriminate violence since the beginning of 2003", said Amnesty International in a letter
sent Monday to the Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir. "We call on the state government to ensure the immediate and
thorough implementation of the Common Minimum Program,"
While campaigning for the elections in September/October 2002, the People's Democratic Party - now part of the ruling
coalition - promised to put an end to the high level of human rights violations that have been taking place since the
emergence of the armed insurgency in 1989. Forty thousand people are believed to have died as a direct result of the
conflict.
Soon after the elections, the newly formed coalition government pledged to confront and remedy the cycle of human rights
violations in Jammu and Kashmir through the Common Minimum Program. The Program committed the government to, among other
things, investigate all allegations of human rights violations, release many of those detained under preventive
detention legislation and disband the Special Operations Group (SOG), a division of the police persistently accused of
committing wide scale human rights abuses.
However, expectations of a new era of respect for the human rights of the Kashmiri population have been disappointed.
Extrajudicial executions, "disappearances" and torture perpetrated by the security forces, including the SOG, continue
to be reported on a regular basis. The government has also failed to uphold its commitments to release more than a
handful of the scores of people who remain in preventive detention without charge or trial.
"Throughout the past year, the government has announced several probes into alleged human rights violations by security
forces, but to date the investigations have rarely resulted in the prosecution of members of the security forces," said
Amnesty International.
At the same time armed opposition groups continue to kill, torture, rape, and beat members of the civilian population. A
reported 344 civilians have died as a result of either targeted or indiscriminate attacks so far this year but hardly
any of those responsible for these crimes have been brought to trial.
"The spirit and substance of the Common Minimum Program must be respected by all sides to the conflict if the human
rights of the Kashmiri population are to be respected and effectively protected," said Amnesty International.
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For more information, please see: Open Letter to the Minister of Jammu and Kashmir on the Failed Promises of the Common
Minimum Program at
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