Tritiopokhkho

September 23, 2008

Some Questions about the Counter-Terror Operation at Jamia Nagar, New Delhi

Filed under: perspective — Tags: , , , — ujaan @ 1:02 am

A team comprising activists, academicians and journalists visited the site of the police operation against alleged terrorists staying in an apartment in Jamia Nagar in the afternoon of 20.09.2008 (Saturday). Two alleged terrorists Atif and Sajid, along with Mohan Chand Sharma, an inspector of the Delhi Police’s Special Cell died in the operation while a third alleged terrorist was arrested.

On the basis of our interactions with the local residents, eye witnesses and the reports which have appeared in the media, we would like to pose the following questions:

1)   It has been widely reported that in early August this year Atif, who is described by the Delhi Police as the mastermind behind the recent terrorist bombings in Jaipur, Ahmedabad and Delhi, underwent a police verification exercise along with his four roommates in order to rent the apartment they were staying in Jamia Nagar. All the five youth living in the apartment submitted to the Delhi police their personal details, including permanent address, driving license details, address of the house they previously stayed in, all of which were found to be accurate. Though the police is now denying the veracity of the verification form, Mr. Rehman, the caretaker of the flat, has vouched, on camera, that he accompanied Atif to the Police Station for the verification.

Is it conceivable that the alleged kingpin behind the terrorist Indian Mujahideen outfit would have wanted to undergo a police verification- for whatever purpose- just a week after the Ahmedabad blasts and a month before the bombings in Delhi?

2)      The four-storeyed house L-18 in Jamia Nagar, where the alleged terrorists were staying, has only one access point, through the stair case, which is covered by an iron grill. It is impossible to leave the house except from the staircase. By all reports, the staircase was taken over by the Special Cell and/ or other agencies during the counter-terror operation. The house, indeed the entire block, was cordoned off at the time of the operation.

How then was it then possible, as claimed by the police, for two alleged terrorists to escape the premises during the police operation?

3)      The media has quoted ‘police sources’ as having informed them that the Special Cell was fully aware about the presence of dreaded terrorists, involved in the bombings in Jaipur, Ahmedabad and Delhi, staying in the apartment that was raided.

Why was the late Inspector Mohan Chand Sharma, a veteran of dozens of encounter operations, the only officer in the operation not wearing a bullet proof vest? Was this due to over-confidence or is there something else to his  death during the operation? Will the forensic report of the bullets that killed Inspector Sharma be made public?

4)      There are reports that towards the end of the counter-terror operation,  some policemen climbed on the roof of L-18 and fired several rounds in the air. Other policemen were seen breaking windows and even throwing flower pots to the ground from flats adjacent or opposite to L-18

Why was the police firing in the air and why did it indulge in destruction of property around L-18 after the encounter?

5)      The police officials claim that an AK-47 and pistols were recovered from L-18.

What was the weapon that killed Inspector Sharma? Was the AK-47 used at all and by whom? Going by some reports that have appeared (see ‘Times of India’, 20.09.08), the AK-47s have been used by the police only. Is it not strange that alleged terrorists did not use a more deadly and sophisticated weapon like the AK-47, which they purportedly possessed, preferring to use pistols?

We feel that there are far too many loose ends in the current story of the police encounter at L-18 in Jamia Nagar. We demand that a fair, impartial and independent probe into the incident be initiated at the earliest to answer the above questions as also any other ones that arise from the contradictions of the case.

Signed/- Shabnam Hashmi (Anhad), Satya Sivaraman (Independent Journalist), Manisha Sethi (Forum for Democratic Initiatives), Tanweer Fazal (Forum for Democratic Initiatives), Arshad Alam (Jamia Millia Islamia), Neshat Quaiser (Jamia Millia Islamia), Pallavi Deka (General Secretary, JNU Students’ Union)

Sukhia Sab Sansar Khaye Aur Soye
Dukhia Das Kabir Jagey Aur Roye

The world is ‘happy’, eating and sleeping
The forlorn Kabir Das is awake and weeping

September 22, 2008

Delhi shootout drama – a timeline

Filed under: news — Tags: , , — ujaan @ 11:15 pm

Submitted by Tarique Anwar on 19 September 2008 – 6:13pm.

*       Indian <http://www.twocircles.net/news/indian-muslim>  Muslim

By IANS,
New Delhi : Following is the sequence of events, according to Delhi Police,
of Friday’s shootout in which two suspected terrorists were killed, two
managed to escape and one was captured:
Around 10 a.m.:
* A team of 20 people led by Assistant Commissioner of Police Sanjeev Yadav
reaches Jamia Nagar. The team takes position on the buildings around
apartment block L-18.
Between 11-11.45 a.m.:
* Inspector Mohan Chand Sharma, who was not wearing a flak jacket, knocks on
the front door of an apartment on the fourth floor of L-18 building.
* Sharma asks the inmates to come out for police verification. Occupants
open fire from a .3 mm pistol.
* Three bullets hit Sharma; two pass through his body. Sharma falls down as
the policemen take shelter.
* Head Constable Balwan Singh suffers injury on right hand.
* Sharma is taken to the nearby Holy Family Hospital, where doctors
immediately wheel him into the operation theatre to remove a bullet lodged
in his stomach.
* Senior police officials, including Joint Commissioner of Police (Special
Cell) Karnal Singh and Deputy commissioner of Police (Special Cell) Alok
Kumar arrive at Jamia Nagar.
* Various teams of the Special Cell are pressed into the service along with
a platoon of elite National Security Guards commandos.
* Teams wearing protective gear once again try to move into the apartment.
* As both side trade fire, police asked people in the area to remain
indoors.
* Police fired a total of 22 rounds; occupants of apartment retaliate with
eight rounds.
* Two suspected terrorists are gunned down, even as two others managed to
flee from the rear of the apartment, apparently by jumping onto the roof of
an adjoining building; one man is captured as police move into the
apartment.
* Police teams remove the bodies of the dead and take away the captured man
to an undisclosed location.
Around 11.45 a.m.:
* Police declare the firefight over.
* People come out of the their houses and chant anti-police slogans,
expressing their anger to reporters for wrongly reporting that terrorists
were hiding in a nearby mosque.
4 p.m.:
* Delhi Police Commissioner Y.S. Dadwal holds press conference to announce
that one of the dead was Asif, mastermind of Delhi bombings.
7 p.m.
* Inspector Mohan Chand Sharma, grievously injured in the police raid, is
dead.

September 21, 2008

Malaysian Bar Rejects Draconian Internal Security Law

Filed under: news — Tags: , — ujaan @ 11:00 am

It is instructive that while a section of civil society in India is
clamoring for more POTA-like laws, despite well documented abuses of such
laws by the government (e.g. long incarceration of Vaiko in Tamilnadu and
the incarceration of many Muslims in Gujarat for the Godhra violence even
after admissions of several people that they gave false eye-witness
reports), Malaysian civil society is unified in opposing its version of
POTA, the ISA.

Regards,

Raju Rajagopal

——————————

——————-

A unified Bar rejects ISA

S Pathmavathy | Sep 20, 08 5:59pm

In the end, the decision was unanimous. Malaysian lawyers stood united
against the Internal Security Act and want the draconian legislation out of
the way.

At its extraordinary general meeting today, held especially to condemn the <!–
D(["mb","\u003cbr\u003e\nabuse of the ISA, the Malaysian Bar unanimously voted for its abolishment..\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nThe close-door meeting in Kuala Lumpur garnered a massive turnout of more\u003cbr\u003e\nthan 700 participants when a quorum of only 500 is required. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nThe bar reiterated its stand on oppressive laws such as the ISA, Emergency\u003cbr\u003e\nOrdinance (EO) and Dangerous Drugs Act to be repealed immediately and called\u003cbr\u003e\nfor the release all those detained under them.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nSome of the guests at the EGM today were Seputeh MP Teresa Kok and ISA\u003cbr\u003e\ndetainees\u0026#39; wives S Pushpaneela and Norlaila Othman. They recounted\u003cbr\u003e\nchronicles of their sufferings and hardships faced by their families. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;We are deeply concerned by the instances shared with us by our three guests\u003cbr\u003e\nas well as other members of the bar who have had contact with detainees\u003cbr\u003e\nunder the ISA, as to the manner of their treatment,\u0026quot; Bar Council chairperson\u003cbr\u003e\nS Ambiga told a press conference after the EGM. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;We are appalled by the manner in which the ISA detainees are being treated\u003cbr\u003e\n- six to eight (feet) cells without windows, unacceptable food, and lack of\u003cbr\u003e\ncontact to the outside world and sleep deterioration,\u0026quot; said Ambiga. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nThe bar also reiterated their stand by calling for the unconditional release\u003cbr\u003e\nof Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) leaders M Manoharan, P Uthayakumar, R\u003cbr\u003e\nKengadharan, V Ganabatirau and K Vasantha Kumar.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nFormer Bar chairperson Sulaiman Abdullah, present at the press conference,\u003cbr\u003e\nstressed that the government should take into consideration the challenges\u003cbr\u003e\nand trauma faced by the families of detainees. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;It\u0026#39;s about time the government repeals the ISA since it can be abused\u003cbr\u003e\nagainst those opposing the government,\u0026quot; he said.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nBesides their firm declaration against the ISA, Ambiga added that the\u003cbr\u003e\nresolution also condemned the issuance of the three show-cause letters to\u003cbr\u003e\nSin Chew Daily, theSun and PKR\u0026#39;s Suara Keadilan. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;The bar calls upon the government to uphold its pledges to the United",1]
);

//–>
abuse of the ISA, the Malaysian Bar unanimously voted for its abolishment..

The close-door meeting in Kuala Lumpur garnered a massive turnout of more
than 700 participants when a quorum of only 500 is required.

The bar reiterated its stand on oppressive laws such as the ISA, Emergency
Ordinance (EO) and Dangerous Drugs Act to be repealed immediately and called
for the release all those detained under them.

Some of the guests at the EGM today were Seputeh MP Teresa Kok and ISA
detainees’ wives S Pushpaneela and Norlaila Othman. They recounted
chronicles of their sufferings and hardships faced by their families.

“We are deeply concerned by the instances shared with us by our three guests
as well as other members of the bar who have had contact with detainees
under the ISA, as to the manner of their treatment,” Bar Council chairperson
S Ambiga told a press conference after the EGM.

“We are appalled by the manner in which the ISA detainees are being treated
- six to eight (feet) cells without windows, unacceptable food, and lack of
contact to the outside world and sleep deterioration,” said Ambiga.

The bar also reiterated their stand by calling for the unconditional release
of Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) leaders M Manoharan, P Uthayakumar, R
Kengadharan, V Ganabatirau and K Vasantha Kumar.

Former Bar chairperson Sulaiman Abdullah, present at the press conference,
stressed that the government should take into consideration the challenges
and trauma faced by the families of detainees.

“It’s about time the government repeals the ISA since it can be abused
against those opposing the government,” he said.

Besides their firm declaration against the ISA, Ambiga added that the
resolution also condemned the issuance of the three show-cause letters to
Sin Chew Daily, theSun and PKR’s Suara Keadilan.

“The bar calls upon the government to uphold its pledges to the United <!–
D(["mb","\u003cbr\u003e\nNations Human Rights Council to promote and protect human rights and\u003cbr\u003e\nfundamental freedoms and to promote a free media, including in cyberspace,\u0026quot;\u003cbr\u003e\nsaid Ambiga. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nISA abuse amounts to state terrorism \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nAmbiga added that the participants gave standing ovations to the guest\u003cbr\u003e\nspeakers and wholly rejected all the oppressive laws.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;It amounts to an abuse of the ISA and can be termed as state terrorism.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;The authorities must be held accountable for the way in which these persons\u003cbr\u003e\nare being treated in custody,\u0026quot; she said.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nSpecifically referring to the continued detention of Malaysia Today editor\u003cbr\u003e\nRaja Petra Kamaruddin, Ambiga added that the Bar is concerned about the\u003cbr\u003e\nclaims of mental torture that he is undergoing. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nThe latest ISA \u0026lt;\u003ca href\u003d\"http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/89544\" target\u003d\"_blank\" onclick\u003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"\u003ehttp://www.malaysiakini.com/\u003cWBR\u003enews/89544\u003c/a\u003e\u0026gt; crackdown began\u003cbr\u003e\nwith controversial blogger Raja Petra when he was taken into custody on Sept\u003cbr\u003e\n12. Raja Petra\u0026#39;s detention was then followed by the arrest of Tan Hoon\u003cbr\u003e\nCheng, a journalist for the Sin Chew Daily, who however, was released after\u003cbr\u003e\n18 hours. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nMatters gravitated when Teresa Kok, who is also the Selangor senior\u003cbr\u003e\nexecutive councillor, was picked up on the same day after attending a\u003cbr\u003e\nfunction. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nKok was released yesterday after seven days of detention, purportedly for\u003cbr\u003e\ninterfering with matters of Islamic concerns. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nSulaiman then commended the role of the media as source information for\u003cbr\u003e\npublic education and credited the release of Tan and Kok as an effort by the\u003cbr\u003e\npress. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;We acknowledge the fact that the media has credibility to educate people in\u003cbr\u003e\nunderstanding their freedom and rights,\u0026quot; said Sulaiman.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;Never underestimate the power of the press,\u0026quot; he added. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nAsked whether the resolution will be heeded by the authorities concerned or",1]
);

//–>
Nations Human Rights Council to promote and protect human rights and
fundamental freedoms and to promote a free media, including in cyberspace,”
said Ambiga.

ISA abuse amounts to state terrorism

Ambiga added that the participants gave standing ovations to the guest
speakers and wholly rejected all the oppressive laws.

“It amounts to an abuse of the ISA and can be termed as state terrorism.

“The authorities must be held accountable for the way in which these persons
are being treated in custody,” she said.

Specifically referring to the continued detention of Malaysia Today editor
Raja Petra Kamaruddin, Ambiga added that the Bar is concerned about the
claims of mental torture that he is undergoing.

The latest ISA <http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/89544> crackdown began
with controversial blogger Raja Petra when he was taken into custody on Sept
12. Raja Petra’s detention was then followed by the arrest of Tan Hoon
Cheng, a journalist for the Sin Chew Daily, who however, was released after
18 hours.

Matters gravitated when Teresa Kok, who is also the Selangor senior
executive councillor, was picked up on the same day after attending a
function.

Kok was released yesterday after seven days of detention, purportedly for
interfering with matters of Islamic concerns.

Sulaiman then commended the role of the media as source information for
public education and credited the release of Tan and Kok as an effort by the
press.

“We acknowledge the fact that the media has credibility to educate people in
understanding their freedom and rights,” said Sulaiman.

“Never underestimate the power of the press,” he added.

Asked whether the resolution will be heeded by the authorities concerned or <!–
D(["mb","\u003cbr\u003e\nignored like previous attempts and the Bar\u0026#39;s next course of action, Sulaiman\u003cbr\u003e\nsaid \u0026quot;when you bang, you bang against the wall you start making noise\u0026quot;.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;(And) as the noise keeps on somebody is bound to come and investigate why\u003cbr\u003e\nthere is a noise and we need to keep up this noise,\u0026quot; he said.\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n\u0026quot;The Bar Council is the custodian of civil liberties and justice in\u003cbr\u003e\nMalaysia,\u0026quot; Sulaiman asserted. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\n \u003c/div\u003e \n \u003cdiv\u003e\n \u003cdiv\u003e\n \u003ca href\u003d\"#11c8457744d7d671_toc\"\u003e\n Back to top \u003c/a\u003e\n \u003c/div\u003e \u003ca href\u003d\"mailto:rajurajagop@yahoo.com?Subject\u003dRe%3AMalaysian%20Bar%20Rejects%20Draconian%20Internal%20Security%20Law\" target\u003d\"_blank\" onclick\u003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"\u003e\n Reply to \u003cspan\u003esender\u003c/span\u003e\n \u003c/a\u003e |\n \u003ca href\u003d\"mailto:indiathinkersnet@yahoogroups.com?Subject\u003d+Re%3AMalaysian%20Bar%20Rejects%20Draconian%20Internal%20Security%20Law\" target\u003d\"_blank\" onclick\u003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"\u003e\n Reply to \u003cspan\u003egroup\u003c/span\u003e\n \u003c/a\u003e |\n \u003ca href\u003d\"http://groups.yahoo.com/group/indiathinkersnet/post;_ylc\u003dX3oDMTJyY2o5NmVjBF9TAzk3MzU5NzE1BGdycElkAzE4NDAwMjUEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzA1MDQzNjI4BG1zZ0lkAzE2NzkzBHNlYwNkbXNnBHNsawNycGx5BHN0aW1lAzEyMjE5OTEwMzY-?act\u003dreply\u0026amp;messageNum\u003d16793\" target\u003d\"_blank\" onclick\u003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"\u003e\n Reply \u003cspan\u003evia web post\u003c/span\u003e\n \u003c/a\u003e \u003cbr\u003e\n \u003ca href\u003d\"http://groups.yahoo.com/group/indiathinkersnet/message/16793;_ylc\u003dX3oDMTM3Y2RpMDBuBF9TAzk3MzU5NzE1BGdycElkAzE4NDAwMjUEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzA1MDQzNjI4BG1zZ0lkAzE2NzkzBHNlYwNkbXNnBHNsawN2dHBjBHN0aW1lAzEyMjE5OTEwMzYEdHBjSWQDMTY3OTM-\" target\u003d\"_blank\" onclick\u003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"\u003e\n Messages in this topic \n \u003c/a\u003e (1)\n \u003c/div\u003e \u003c/dd\u003e\n \u003c/dl\u003e\n \u003cdl\u003e\n \u003cdt\u003e4a. \u003c/dt\u003e\n \u003cdd\u003e \n \u003ch2\u003e\n \u003ca href\u003d\"http://groups.yahoo.com/group/indiathinkersnet/message/16794;_ylc\u003dX3oDMTJyM2htZXExBF9TAzk3MzU5NzE1BGdycElkAzE4NDAwMjUEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzA1MDQzNjI4BG1zZ0lkAzE2Nzk0BHNlYwNkbXNnBHNsawN2bXNnBHN0aW1lAzEyMjE5OTEwMzY-\" name\u003d\"11c8457744d7d671_4a\" target\u003d\"_blank\" onclick\u003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"\u003e",1]
);

//–>
ignored like previous attempts and the Bar’s next course of action, Sulaiman
said “when you bang, you bang against the wall you start making noise”.

“(And) as the noise keeps on somebody is bound to come and investigate why
there is a noise and we need to keep up this noise,” he said.

“The Bar Council is the custodian of civil liberties and justice in
Malaysia,” Sulaiman asserted.

September 18, 2008

Manufacturing ‘Terrorists’ The Indian Way

Filed under: perspective — Tags: , — ujaan @ 5:12 am

Yoginder Sikand

Almost every other day, newspapers are agog with stories about ‘dreaded Muslim terrorists’ being nabbed across the country. At the same time, savage violence unleashed by Hindutva groups continues unabated without any effective steps being taken against them. In the on-going ‘war on terror’. globally as well as within India, Muslims have come to be framed  collectively as ‘terrorists’, while terrorism engaged in by people belonging to other communities is generally condoned or ignored altogether or, at least, is not described in the same terms. In India today, Muslim youths are being indiscriminately picked up and tortured by the police, in many cases falsely accused of being terrorists. Many of them have been languishing in jails for years now and yet no one ever seems to care.]

Take the case of Muhammad Parvez Abdul Qayyum Shaikh of Gujarat. According to his aunt, Qamar Jahan, on the 2nd of April 2003, while he was on his way to fit a water appliance, he was arrested by CBI officer Tarun Barot and others. For three days his family knew nothing his whereabouts. On the fourth day, she says, ‘We saw the news and realized that Parvez had been arrested under allegations of having a Chinese made pistol and some gun powder. However, this powder is used for cleaning the Aqua Guard machines.’

Parvez, she says, was brutally beaten and tortured by the officers, with Officer Vanzara allegedly asking Parvez to refer to him as Khuda (God) and beating him ruthlessly. While in jail they forced him to sign on blank papers. He was reportedly taken by the CBI officers to Gandhinagar where he was further tortured for 21 days. He was then charged in the DCP-6 case, Tiffin bomb blast case and in the Haren Pandya murder case (the last mentioned of which, incidentally, Pandya’s own father accuses Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi as having instigated). He was sentenced to fourteen years in jail for the last-mentioned case, although his aunt maintains that he is innocent.

27 year-old Sardar, a Muslim youth, works as a plumber in Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu. He was arrested at the age of 17, some months after the February 1998 Chennai bomb blasts. The initial accusation against Sardar was that he had been involved in a street fight. He was apparently kept illegally imprisoned for a month, and only after that was an FIR was lodged against him. This time he was accused of carrying two pipe bombs and rioting. The offence was non-bailable. He was remanded and kept in the Vellore Jail for first fifteen months, even though there were no witnesses against him. The special court set up for the bomb blasts refused to let him be tried as he was a minor. Eventually, nine and half years later, in the final judgment the court apparently found him not guilty of any of the charges put on him and he was acquitted, but only after having spent almost a decade languishing in jail, where he was brutally tortured. Even after his acquittal the
police have allegedly not stopped harassing and hounding him, and they still restrict his movements.

Noor ul-Hoda, the son of a desperately poor daily-wage labourer from Malegaon in Maharashtra, is yet another hapless Muslim man who has, so he insists, been falsely implicated as a terrorist by the police.  In September 2006, he was picked up by the police from his home. On the same day, they brought him back , searched the house (without producing a search warrant), and, finding nothing, took him back into police custody. The next day the police charged Noor with possession of twenty books considered as ‘illegal literature’. While in police custody, he is said to have been forced, through torture and threats by his interrogators that they would kill his family, to sign a blank piece of paper, which was later used as evidence of a ‘confession’. This was, it is claimed, used to charge him under the draconian MCOCA for allegedly being a member of the team that carried out the Malegaon bombings. This, he says, is completely false as he was at the local
mosque on the day of the bomb blasts. The local special executive officer has given an affidavit validating this. Noor claims that Police Inspector Sachin Kadum had threatened him thus: ‘Although I am aware of the fact that you are not involved in the bomb blast, we will still capture you and we will see if you can get out of this situation.’

In October 2006 Noor was taken to Bangalore for brain mapping and narco-tests. These proved negative, but the experience was harrowing. During the narco-test he was given powerful electric shocks and was badly beaten. His ribs were also battered. The doctor, Malti , asked him to say what the police wanted him to say or else he would be more deeply implicated in the bomb blast case. ‘When I did not repeat the words electric shocks were given to my ear’, he says. While he was in the custody of the Nasik police, they tortured him severely at the ATS office, saying that he should state what the police wanted him to—in other words, to give a false ‘confession’.  ’In the month of Ramzan while I was fasting I was beaten so much that I fainted’, he says. ‘Inspector Sachin Kadum and Inspector Khan Gekar used to abuse me and say that if you do not confess we will bring all your sisters here. We will make them naked and photographs will be taken and they will
also be beaten,’  he adds. They also threatened to implicate Noor’s brother in the case. Finally, they were able to force him to make a false ‘confession’ by taking his signature on a blank piece of paper, but he later retracted this ‘confession’.

Muhammad Hanif Adul Razzak Shaikh from Gujarat is yet another victim of state terrorism. On the 28th of April, 2003, around two dozen men rushed into Hanif’s house, but since Hanif was said to have been away attending a friend’s funeral in Himmatnagar, they dragged his brother, Yasin, to the police station where he was beaten up. They picked him up without an arrest warrant and detained him for twelve days until the 3rd of May, when Hanif came back and presented himself at the Crime Branch. He was immediately put into detention and the CBI searched his factory but recovered nothing.

Mohammad Hanif was in the business of making bags. The police claimed that the bomb which was used in the Tiffin bomb blast and in another such blast had been made in his factory. But when Hanif refused to accept these allegations, the police tortured him severely and even threatened to arrest his brother Yasin if he did not comply with their orders. After this, they allegedly forced a false ‘confession’ out of him to implicate him in the blasts. His interrogators tortured him mercilessly and he was then presented in court on the 10th of May 2003. There, Hanif refused to accept the charges against him, which allegedly prompted the magistrate to say that the police should take Hanif in for some more khatirdari (‘hospitality’), by which was meant even greater torture. During this remand, Hanif was said to have been subjected to third degree torture, brutally beaten and forced to sign numerous false statements. The forced ‘confession’ was apparently used as
evidence to prolong his remand stay. He retracted his statement in the court but after appearing in court for the second time the judge ordered that he should be treated to some more ‘hospitality’. After this, he is said to have been compelled to sign another ‘confession’, on the basis of which he was sentenced to 10 years in jail. During the five years he has spent in jail so far Hanif’s wife as well as his mother died. A father of four, one of his daughters has tuberculosis. His small bag-making unit has been closed ever since he was put into jail and his family now lives in abject penury.

Maulana Mohammad Naseerudin of Hyderabad was arrested in August 2004 immediately after addressing a meeting of fellow Muslims at a local mosque. The Anti-Terrorism Squad accused him of conspiring to blow up a Hindu temple in Hyderabad, a charge that he denied. The next month he was released on bail, but on the condition that he would report to the CID office on a weekly basis. On 31st  September, 2004, when the Maulana reached the CID office he found the Gujarat police waiting for him. They took him into custody, accusing him of  incitement violence in Gujarat in his speeches in the mosque. In actual fact, so it is said, he had preached for relief and aid for Muslims in Gujarat who had been brutalized by the state, the police and Hindutva forces. The police failed to give any evidence at the time of his detention and subsequent trial, simply claiming that he was inciting communal hatred during his sermons.

The news of the Maulana’s arrest spread quickly and he was put into a bus and given a drug to incapacitate him. The protestors asked the police for the arrest warrant. 23 year-old Mujahid Saleem Azmi, a friend of the family, started questioning the procedures during the arrest, and, after some prompting by the expanding crowd, the police released the Maulana. A heated exchange between Police Officer Narendra and Mujahid began. The officer shamelessly shouted at Mujahid, ‘Have you people forgotten Gujarat? I will finish you all off.’  Mujahid replied that he was not scared of his threats and that the officer should conduct himself on the basis of the law. The police officer then said that if he was looking for a warrant he would show him a warrant and took out his gun and fired point blank at Mujahid. The rest of the police officers started firing in the air. They pushed the Maulana back into the van and drove off. The ATS provided safe passage for the
police to flee Hyderabad. Meanwhile, Mujahid, 23, was pronounced dead at the hospital.

Thousands of people collected outside the hospital and they asked for a case  to be filed against the police. Several different Hindutva organizations came together to try and disrupt the funeral procession the following day. The police used their special division – the Greyhound Task Force – normally used to combat Naxalism to beat and tear gas the processionists. The Greyhound Task Force forced their way into Mujahid’s house and attacked the family with sticks.

Meanwhile, the Maulana was transferred to a prison in Ahmedabad, where, it is said, he was forced him to make a ‘confession’ . He appealed against it, but the special POTA court denied the appeal and accepted the ‘confession’ of Maulana produced by the Gujarat police. His first bail application took four long months to be heard from the day of his judicial custody. A judgment on the bail application took another year. The application was rejected on the grounds that he was ‘anti-American and pro Osama bin Laden’. Another year passed and the high court upheld the POTA court’s order. Six months  later, the Supreme Court asked for a swift trial, but rejected bail. Two years have passed since the Supreme Court’s order and yet nothing has happened. The Maulana continues to languish in jail and is presently seriously ill. He has only one kidney, a thyroid problem, and early signs of arthritis, none of which has been taken into consideration during his time in
prison. His illnesses have worsened. He cannot walk or handle food that he has to chew, but yet, despite several appeals, the authorities continue to refuse to send him to hospital. In the meantime, the police have also arrested two of his sons for allegedly conspiring to take revenge for his arrest.

Scores of cases of innocent Muslims being deliberately targeted by agencies of the state, in addition to Hindutva forces, abound across the country, and the situation seems to be getting worse with every passing day. This is not to say that none of the several blasts that have occurred in India in the last several years could have been the handiwork of Muslims. Sympathisers of some fringe radical Islamist outfits or Muslims seeking to take revenge for the atrocities and large scale slaughter of their co-religionists, as in Gujarat, might well have planned some of these, and Muslim leaders themselves have rightly called for stern punishment for their perpetrators. However, the mounting indiscriminate arrests, torture and detention of vast numbers of innocent Muslim youth across the country in the name of countering terrorism not only makes a complete mockery of our claims to secularism and democracy but is a perfect recipe for making Muslim terrorism a
self-fulfilling prophecy. And, to make matters worse, at the same time as the hounding of innocent Muslims continues, Hindu mobs are allowed to operate free of any effective restraint, lionised as ardent ‘nationalists’ as they continue to wreak murder,  mayhem and naked terror on Muslims, and now, as in Orissa and Karnataka, Christians. That, surely, is no way to combat terrorism. Far from it, it can only further exacerbate the problem.

Note: The details of the above-mentioned cases have been procured from the testimonies submitted to the jury of the People’s Tribunal on the Atrocities Committed Against Minorities in the Name of Fighting Terrorism organised by Anhad and the Human Rights Law Network in Hyderabad, 22-24th August, 2008.

ARC report copies BJP plan on terror

Filed under: news — Tags: , , , , — ujaan @ 5:09 am

Pioneer News Service
Sept. 17, 2008

The Administrative Reforms Commission (ARC) has admitted that existing laws are inadequate to deal with terrorism, in the process virtually endorsing the BJP’s demand for tough federal legislation to deal with terror.

“Terrorism is an extraordinary crime. Ordinary laws of the land may not be adequate to book a terrorist. This may require special laws and effective enforcement mechanism, but with sufficient safeguards to prevent its misuse,” ARC chairman Veerappa Moily told newspersons here on Tuesday.

The commission, headed by the senior Congress leader, contradicts the UPA Government’s stand that existing laws were adequate to deal with terrorism. Moily, who also heads the Congress media department and future challenges committee, came out with the recommendations of the panel when the noose tightened around the UPA to revive a POTA-type law.

Moily said the report had been submitted to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Union Home Minister Shivraj Patil two months back and he had “authentic information” that the Government was working on it (a tough law). The ARC, opposed to a POTA-type law, had suggested a comprehensive and effective legal framework to deal with all aspects of terrorism that could be incorporated in a separate chapter in the National Security Act, 1980. “What was not there in POTA, we are providing it here. It is not POTA, not TADA, not MCOCA-it is a standalone,” Moily clarified.

The timing of the release of the report, though it was submitted two months back to the Government, indicated that the Government might be finally contemplating action on the Opposition’s demand for a tougher anti-terror law to distract attention from its all-round failure on internal security front. The recommendation of the ARC may come up for discussion before the Union Cabinet’s special meeting on Wednesday.

Ironically, however, many of the ARC recommendations were parts of POTA. For example, the panel suggested that no person accused of an offence punishable under NSA should be released on bail and confession before the police be made admissible in the court.

“The commission is of the view that there is no need to dilute the provisions of bail as they existed in POTA,” the 18th report of the ARC on combating terrorism reads. On page 58 of the same report, the ARC recommends, “POTA tried to achieve a fine balance (between CrPC and TADA) as far as these time limits of (remand) were concerned. Therefore, the commission feels the provisions of POTA regarding remand and completion of investigation may be restored and incorporated in the new law.”

On shifting the burden of proof on the accused, the ARC admitted that both TADA and POTA had provisions wherein the court was under obligation to draw adverse inference, provided certain facts were established. “The commission feels that such presumptions should be made a necessary part of the new anti-terror law,” it recommended.

The Moily-headed panel suggested a federal agency to investigate terrorist offences and recommended that a special division be created in the CBI to deal with terror cases. Setting up of special fast track courts for exclusive trial of terrorism-related cases was also recommended.

The ARC maintained that there was a need to define “more clearly” the criminal acts which can be construed as “terrorist” in nature and should deal with the use of firearms and explosives to cause damage to life and property, assassination of public functionaries, including such attempts, and providing finances for such activities.

Moily rejected the demand for MCOCA-type laws in Gujarat and Rajasthan, saying such ad hocism was not an answer to terrorism.

ARC’s recommendations

The law should have adequate safeguards to prevent its misuse

Clearly define criminal acts that can be construed as being terrorist in nature

Give priority to defeating political subversions

The capacity-building exercise should extend to the intelligence gathering machinery, security agencies, civil administration and the society

Amend Prevention of Money Laundering Act

Block flow of funds to terror outfits

The new law may incorporate provisions regarding freezing of assets, funds, bank accounts, deposits and cash when there is reasonable suspicion of their intended use in terrorist activity
Six-year-old Simran, whose father was killed and mother was critically injured in the Delhi serial blast, taking part in the protest to condemn terrorism in New Delhi on Tuesday – PTI http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?main_variable=front%5Fpage&file_name=story1%2Etxt&counter_img=1

India seeks Israeli forces’ help in Kashmir

Filed under: news — Tags: , , , — ujaan @ 5:06 am

Sep 14, 2008 21:04 | Updated Sep 15, 2008 1:47
India seeks IDF help in Kashmir conflict
By YAAKOV KATZ
Jerusalem Post

OC Ground Forces Command Maj.-Gen. Avi Mizrahi paid an unscheduled
visit to the disputed state of Kashmir last week to get an up-close
look at the challenges the Indian military faces in its fight against
Islamic insurgents.

Mizrahi was in India for three days of meetings with the country’s
military brass and to discuss a plan the IDF is drafting for Israeli
commandos to train Indian counterterror forces.

Under the proposed agreement, the IDF would send highly-trained
commandos to train Indian soldiers in counterterror tactics, urban
warfare and fighting in guerrilla settings.

Mizrahi’s visit to Kashmir was reportedly kept secret at the time
since India feared it could spark violence in the disputed state; it
was subsequently reported widely in the Indian and Pakistani press.

Media reports said Mizrahi spent several hours at the Akhnoor Military
Base in Kashmir where he gave a lecture to senior officers on
counterterror operations.

India is the largest importer of arms from Israel and since 2002 has
bought more than $5 billion worth of equipment.

While Mizrahi’s visit did not spark violence it did upset Kashmir
nationalists. The Israel’s Counter-Terrorism Bureau has recommended
that Israelis refrain from visiting Kashmir.

Farooq Ahmad Dar, a senior leader of the Jammu Kashmir Liberation
Front, told an Indian Qeb site the visit was “part of plan under which
India intends to suppress the ongoing intifada movement in Kashmir by
dint of power, and change Kashmir’s demography.”

On Friday, tens of thousands of Muslims participated in
pro-independence rallies across Indian Kashmir, leading to scattered
clashes with government forces that left at least two protesters dead
and dozens wounded.

Separatist leaders have warned Indian authorities that the situation
could spiral out of control if they “use force to break peaceful
protests.”

More than two months of angry protests, some of the biggest anti-India
demonstrations in two decades, have left at least 43 people dead in
Indian-controlled Kashmir, most of them killed when soldiers opened
fire on Muslim protesters.

Anti-India sentiment runs deep in Kashmir, India’s only
Muslim-majority state, where most people favor independence from
mainly Hindu India, or a merger with Pakistan.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since 1947, when
the two countries fought their first war over the region in the
aftermath of Britain’s partition of the subcontinent. Both countries
continue to claim all of Kashmir.

Separatist movements in Indian-controlled Kashmir remained peaceful
until 1989, when Islamic insurgents took up arms.

An estimated 68,000 people have been killed in the fighting.

August 23, 2008

Fact finding mission on illegal arrests of terror suspects: Teesta

Filed under: news — Tags: , — ujaan @ 10:36 am

Fact finding mission on illegal arrests of terror suspects: Teesta
<http://www.twocircles.net/2008aug21/fact_finding_mission_illegal_arrests_terror_suspects_teesta.html>

*By Md. Ali, TwoCircles.net*

<http://www.twocircles.net/2008aug21/fact_finding_mission_illegal_arrests_terror_suspects_teesta.html>

Human rights activist Teesta Setalwad is planning to take the cases of
terrorism suspects, those who have been illegally arrested and tortured and
detained in India’a ‘war on terror.’ TwoCircles.net’s Md. Ali spoke to her
about her views on terror investigations and plans for defending terror
suspects.

*TwoCircles.net:* There are some reports in media that you are going to take
up the case of Abu Bashiar Islahi, the alleged mastermind of the Ahmadabad
serial bomb blast.

*Teesta Setalwad:* We are first of all going on a fact finding mission.
Because it is not only the case of Abu Bashar but a series of cases that
have emerged recently in India in which there have been illegal arrests and
torture on the name of “fight against Terror”.

In fact there have been a series of cases in which the empirical evidences
have been let go by the authorities. Like the use of Ammonium Nitrate in the
bomb blasts in Panwal and Thane and there are lots of others.

There are lots of loop holes in the manner the investigative agencies have
conducted the process of investigation. For instance the hasty departure of
Kenneth Haywood from Delhi though he has been given a look out notice. For
us it is extremely mysterious and we are finding that no political party has
spoken against it.

>> Read more
<http://www.twocircles.net/2008aug21/fact_finding_mission_illegal_arrests_terror_suspects_teesta.html>

http://www.twocircles.net/2008aug21/fact_finding_mission_illegal_arrests_terror_suspects_teesta.html


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