News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International
4 May 2005
India: Amnesty International calls for repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958
AI Index: ASA 20/020/2005
Today Amnesty International wrote to a committee convened by the government of India to review the Armed Forces (Special
Powers) Act (AFPSA) to recommend that the government of India repeal this Act and to ensure that any future legislation
complies fully with international human rights and humanitarian law treaties to which India is a state party.
Amnesty International is concerned that the Act violates non-derogable provisions of international human rights law,
including the right to life, the right to remedy and the rights to be free from arbitrary deprivation of liberty and
from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (ill-treatment). These rights are enshrined in the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which India is a state party since 1979, and other
treaties and standards.
In a full set of recommendations, Amnesty International also urges the government of India to ensure the training of
security forces in international standards that protect human rights, to invite independent international human rights
monitors, and to fully investigate reported cases of human rights abuses.
In addition, Amnesty International calls on armed groups to respect minimum human rights standards and principles of
international humanitarian law and to halt killings of civilians, torture, ill-treatment, hostage-taking and other
abuses.
Background
Amnesty International is concerned that the AFSPA, a law operative in "disturbed areas", including large parts of the
Northeast region of India and Jammu and Kashmir, violates international human rights law by giving the security forces
(but not police) wide-ranging powers and has facilitated grave human rights abuses, including extrajudicial execution,
disappearance, rape and torture.(1)
Concern about the AFSPA has been voiced both domestically by human rights groups, and internationally. In response to
India’s third (and most recent) periodic report in July 1997, the UN Human Rights Committee remained "concerned at the
continued reliance on special powers under legislation such as the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, the Public Safety
Act and the National Security Act in areas declared to be disturbed and at serious human rights violations, in
particular with respect to articles 6, 7, 9, and 14 of the Covenant, committed by security and armed forces acting under
these laws as well as by paramilitary and insurgent groups." (2) Abuses in the areas under discussion are also
perpetrated by police officials and armed political groups.
After months of protests and bandhs (strikes) in the state of Manipur calling for repeal for the AFSPA, the Prime
Minister of India Manmohan Singh visited Manipur in November 2004. A day before the visit, his government appointed a
five-member committee to review the AFSPA.
1. The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958 is in force in parts of the Northeast. In 1990, a version of the Armed
Forces (Special Powers) Act was brought in force in parts of Jammu Kashmir.
2. CCPR/C/79/Add.81, para 18.
View all documents on India: http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maadt65abgGyDbb0hPub/
ENDS