India: AFSP Act is a deepening blotch on democracy - AHRC
Draconian legislation like the Armed Forces (Special Powers)
Act,
1958 and the concept of democracy do not go
together. While democracy
nurtures values of justice,
equality and fraternity, laws like the AFSPA are synonymous
with injustice, discrimination and hatred. A report that
analyses the legislation's complete incompatibility with
India's domestic and international human rights obligations
is released today in India, Hong Kong and London. Human
Rights Alert, a human rights organisation working in
Manipur, India; REDRESS Trust, a human rights group based in
London, UK; and the AHRC, a regional human rights body based
in Hong Kong have jointly authored the report.
The report
is titled: The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958
in
Manipur and other States of the Northeast of India:
Sanctioning
repression in violation of India’s human
rights obligations
(http://www.humanrights.asia/countries/india/reports/AFSPAReviewAugust2011.pdf).
The report can be downloaded here.
The
report while analysing the Act draws extensively upon
international and domestic human rights jurisprudence, that
India is mandated to follow. The report exposes the visibly
different standards even the Supreme Court of India has
adopted while deciding the constitutionality and thus the
compatibility of the law with India's international and
domestic human rights obligations. Despite repeated calls to
repeal the law immediately by government-sponsored
Committees that have studied the law, the Government of
India is yet to take any steps in that direction.
International human rights bodies like the Human Rights
Committee and the Committee on Racial Discrimination have
expressed concern about the law and its implementation in
India, suggesting that the law should be repealed.
The
law has attracted, repeatedly, wide-ranging criticisms
from
jurists, human rights activists, and even
politicians within India and abroad. Organisations like the
AHRC and Human Rights Alert have documented more than two
hundred cases, over the past eight years, where the state
agencies operating under the statutory impunity provided by
the Act has committed serious human rights violations in
states like Manipur. Most of these cases has been reported
by the AHRC through its Urgent Appeals Programme and brought
to the attention of authorities in India and within the
United Nations. Yet, so far not a single military or police
officer has been prosecuted for the human rights abuses they
have committed under the cover of impunity provided by this
law.
The report also places emphasis upon the unique form
of protest by
Ms. Irom Chanu Sharmila, through her
decade-long hunger strike, which has been largely ignored by
the national media in India. The AHRC in a function held in
Hong Kong today, has released the report.
The Asian Human Rights
Commission is a regional
non-governmental organisation
that monitors human rights in Asia,
documents violations
and advocates for justice and institutional
reform to
ensure the protection and promotion of these rights.
The
Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984. www.humanrights.asia.
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