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Behind the
Kashmir Conflict
Mohammed Amin was killed
slowly over three days, kicked, pummeled, beaten, cut. They asked him where
he had hidden the weapons. He said he had no weapons. They tortured him. They
asked again, "where did you hide the weapons?" And again, he said
he had no weapons. And again they tortured him. He was taken to his house so
he could show the soldiers where the weapons were buried. But there was nothing
to show. And again, they tortured him. The soldiers took Mohammed to the outskirts
of his village, tied him to a tree, and emptied their cartridges into his body.
They left him there, still tied, slumped over, full of holes, covered in blood.
And this is how his family and friends found him. "...his body was riddled
with bullets, his bone protruded from his forehead, one eye was out, and all
the fingers of his left hand were missing. His cape was full of holes."
That is the description a witness gave to the human rights organization, Human
Rights Watch, which documented Mohammed Amin's killing.
Amin had been a member of
the Hizb-ul-Mujahedin since 1993. In 1995, he was arrested and detained for
one month. During that time, his family was not allowed to see him. When he
was finally let go it was clear he'd been badly beaten. He was given electric
shocks, his body had been crushed under heavy weights, and he'd been forced
to drink his own urine. Over the next year, Amin was arrested and tortured eight
times, each time leaving him a broken man.
His final arrest came on
February 20, 1997. On that fateful day, Amin was called in to the local army
base to see the commanding officer, Major Shekawar. Three days later, villagers
found Amin's body. His family was not allowed to untie and bury him. The army
came back and took the body to the police station where an officer filled out
a report saying Amin was a released militant who had been re-arrested. The report
says Amin was asked to take the army to a hidden cache of arms and that he did
so. On the way back to the base, says the report, Amin tried to shoot soldiers
using one of the guns from the cache and was killed. A witness attempted to
file a second report on Amin's behalf but police refused saying a report was
already on record.
Human Rights Violations:
The Kashmir conflict continues
to produce serious human rights violations including summary execution, rape,
and torture. Until 1996, Indian forces were concentrated in the Kashmir valley.
But after Pakistani-trained militants started crossing over into Indian-occupied
territory, India's focus has turned to the border areas.
Militants have engaged in
kidnapping and killing civil servants and suspected informers. These actions
have led India to be even more determined to eliminate security threats through
any means necessary.
The brutal tactics being
used by the Indian Security Forces (ISF) in the border districts resemble those
used in the early 1990s in the Kashmir valley: indiscriminate shootings and
assault, rape, and arson.
The Indian army, operating
under the Jammu and Kashmir Disturbed Areas Act and the Armed Forces (Jammu
and Kashmir) Special Powers Act, continues to conduct cordon-and-search operations
in Muslim neighborhoods and villages, detaining young men, assaulting other
family members, and summarily executing suspected militants.
In January 2000, after conducting
its own investigation, the Indian army announced 56 of its personnel in Kashmir
would be punished for human rights violations. The punishments ranged from discharge
to denial of promotion. The national and state human rights commissions, were
barred from investigating army and paramilitary personnel.
Custodial Killings:
The account of Mohammed
Amin's "custodial" killing is not unique in Kashmir. The way he died
is all too common in this Indian-occupied land. According to Human Rights Watch,
custodial killings, the summary execution of detainees, are a central part of
the Indian government's strategy for dealing with the current insurgency in
Kashmir.
Because of the immense difficulty
associated with documenting such killings, human rights groups are unable to
give exact numbers. But groups in Kashmir and elsewhere in India estimate that
such torture killings number in the thousands.
There has been no effort
on the part of the Indian army to curb these killings. Indeed, they have the
sanction of senior Indian officials who justify them by maintaining that there
is no other way to deal with serious "terrorist" threat.
"Disappearances"
and Torture:
"Disappearances"
remain a serious problem. People who have been detained on the suspicion of
some type of "terrorist" behavior or those simply taken in for questioning
often disappear without a trace. Families attempt to locate their loved ones
through the court system but almost without exception they are unsuccessful.
There is no accountability for the hundreds of cases of "disappearances"
that have taken place since 1990.
The ISF also engages in
brutal forms of torture which have the sanction of senior officials. They justify
the practice on the grounds that there is no other way to obtain information
from a suspect. In fact, torture is also routinely used to punish suspected
militants and their supporters and to extort money from their families. In virtually
all of the cases of "disappearance" in Kashmir, it is likely that
the victim was executed and the body disposed of in secret.
The security forces routinely
flout legal protections that would provide safeguards against disappearances.
Detainees are frequently moved from one detention facility to another, sometimes
under the authority of different security agencies; records of arrest are either
not kept or falsified; security forces ignore writs of habeas corpus and refuse
to produce detainees even when ordered to do so by the Jammu and Kashmir High
Court. According to the Jammu and Kashmir Bar Association, hundreds of writs
are pending before the court, some dating back several years.
Rape:
Indian Security Forces have
raped Kashmiri women during search operations, particularly in remote areas
outside major cities and towns. The documentation of such cases is difficult.
The victims are unlikely to seek medical attention unless their injuries are
severe and they are reluctant to report assaults because of the shame and stigma.
The army authorities have demonstrated some concern about rape and have initiated
a number of courts-martial of soldiers for rape. However, the many reports of
rape, particularly those committed by federal or local police forces, are never
investigated. The prosecution of security personnel is rare.
Summary:
Despite the election of
a civilian government in Jammu and Kashmir in September 1996 and claims by the
Indian government that "normalcy" has returned to the region, abuses
by the army, federal paramilitary forces, and the newly constituted police are
rife. Indian forces also continue to arm and train countermilitant militias
to assassinate suspected militant activists and intimidate local residents.
The ongoing brutality and repression by Indian troops continues to fuel popular
discontent and fear.
As they have gained greater
control of the cities, Indian forces and countermilitants have fostered a climate
of repression. While retaliatory shootings of civilians are less, targeted executions
continue. Detention and "disappearances" have left residents fearful
of talking to international human rights organizations. Little human rights
documentation is done because activists and lawyers have been killed or threatened
as have doctors who treat torture victims.
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:05:35 AM
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