India's
Secret Army
by YesPakistan.com Staff
The following article
is based on Human Rights Watch/Asia's report, "India's Secret Army in Kashmir:
New Patterns of Abuse Emerge in the Conflict," May 1996, vol. 8, no.4
The war against the civilian
Muslim population in Kashmir is being waged by two armies. The obvious aggressors
are the Indian Security Forces but many people do not realize that there is
a second, and in some ways more dangerous, aggressor in Kashmir: the militias.
Working alongside Indian
security forces is a secret, illegal army; state-sponsored paramilitary groups
that are composed of captured and surrendered former militants who are described
as "renegades" by the Indian government. Many of these groups are
responsible for grave human rights abuses, including summary executions, torture
and illegal detention.
These groups are made up
of surrendered militants who then go to work for the Indian army. Because they
are from the local population and do not wear uniforms, in many cases it is
impossible to identify members. These groups are state-sponsored and act with
impunity. They have the protection of the army and often openly co-operate with
military personnel.
Many human rights agency
that have documented abuses in Kashmir have verified the existence of these
groups through interviews with civilians as well as government officials. One
witness, a police officer, told the human rights organization, Human Rights
Watch, that: "the government has recruited criminals who loot and steal
and extort and these criminals are living in security force camps. This is the
third force-the renegades. It is completely true that they exist. ... It is
100 percent true that police investigate crimes, arrest individuals and then
the army interferes and lets them go so they can work with the army as renegade
forces."
The government uses the
groups in a number of ways: as informers who watch and report on the activities
of the militants; as spies to infiltrate existing militant organizations; or
as members of paramilitary "renegade" organizations to attack members
of Jamaat-e Islami, Hezb-ul Mujahidin and other pro-independence groups. Members
of these militias are also used to support Indian government policies.
Both regular, uniformed
Indian army and federal security forces and state-sponsored paramilitary groups
have committed serious and widespread human rights violations in Kashmir. These
violations have characterized the behavior of regular troops since the conflict
began in 1990. While reports of some kinds of abuse have decreased since 1994,
such as the indiscriminate use of lethal force against unarmed demonstrators,
other abuses, notably summary executions and torture, have remained unchanged,
due in part to the activities of the state-sponsored militias.
Another witness, a Kashmiri
doctor, told Human Rights Watch: "when someone misbehaved, he was wearing
a uniform, so he was accountable. We could call his commander. Now, when these
renegades misbehave, there is no one to call. No one accepts responsibility
for them, though we know the government is sponsoring them."
The paramilitary militias
have principally targeted Hezb-ul Mujahedin militants and members of the banned
pro-Pakistan political party, Jamaat-e Islami. Like their counterparts in the
regular security forces, they have also killed civilians in reprisal for militant
attacks on their forces.
While attempting to reassure
the international community that they have taken steps to curb human rights
abuses in Kashmir, Indian forces have in effect subcontracted some of their
abusive tactics to groups with no official accountability. The extrajudicial
killings, abductions and assaults committed by these groups against suspected
militants are instead described as resulting from "inter-group rivalries."
But civilians have also
been their victims, and the militia groups have singled out journalists, human
rights activists and medical workers for attack. They have been given free rein
to patrol major hospitals in Srinagar, particularly the Soura Institute, the
Sri Maharaja Hari Singh (SMHS) hospital and the Bone and Joint Hospital.
They have murdered, threatened,
beaten and detained hospital staff; in some cases these abuses have occurred
in full view of security force bunkers or in the presence of security force
officers. They have also removed patients from hospitals.
In some cases, attacks by
these paramilitary groups appear to have been carried out on orders from security
officers. In other cases, the groups appear to operate on their own, within
broadly defined limits to their discretionary powers and the full expectation
on the part of the security forces that they will use their discretion to take
initiatives within the overall counterinsurgency strategy of fighting terror
with terror. Their actions are taken with the knowledge and complicity of official
security forces. When arrested by local police, members of these groups have
been released on orders of the security forces. Not one has been prosecuted
for human rights abuses.
Attacks on Human Rights
Activists
Human rights activists have increasingly come under attack in Kashmir. The impact
on Kashmir's human rights community has been devastating. Lawyers who had formerly
taken up petitions on behalf of victims of abuses no longer do so out of fear
of reprisals, particularly from the mercenary groups. Many have left Kashmir.
The few human rights activists who have continued to document abuses in Kashmir
do so at considerable risk to themselves.
The Murder of Jalil
Andrabi
The body of Jalil Andrabi, a prominent human rights lawyer and pro-independence
political activist associated with the JKLF, was found in the Kursuraj Bagh
area of Srinagar on the banks of the Jhelum River. According to press reports,
the body was in a burlap bag. Andrabi, who was forty-two, had been shot in the
head and his eyes had been gouged out. He had apparently been dead for at least
one week.
The murder sparked widespread
protests in Kashmir and condemnation from civil liberties groups in India and
abroad. In Srinagar, a protest march was broken up by police who beat up members
of the crowd, smashed a number of reporters' cameras and seized the body. The
police also fired shots in the air to disperse the crowd.
Since 1984, Andrabi had
filed petitions in the High Court on behalf of detainees and had publicized
the fact that the security forces routinely ignored High Court orders to produce
detainees in court. At the time he was abducted, he was preparing for a trip
to Geneva to attend the meeting of the UN Human Rights Commission where he hoped
to raise concern about the human rights situation in Kashmir.
Attacks on the Press
Ikhwan-ul Muslimoon and other state-sponsored armed groups in Kashmir have demonstrated
a particular antipathy toward the press. In July 1995, four journalists with
the dailies Greater Kashmir and Naida-I Mushraq were abducted by Ikhwan-ul Muslimoon
forces and held for four days. After ordering several newspapers to temporarily
cease publication in November 1995, the group's leader, Koko Parray, accused
all of the Kashmir journalists of being militants: "There is little difference
between the editors and the Hizbul Mujahidin. Journalists are writing posters
and pamphlets for them." After several days, the papers were permitted
to resume publication.
Attacks on Medical Workers
Ikwan-ul Muslimoon forces have been patrolling the Soura Institute and the Bone
and Joint Hospital since mid-1995. Ikhwan-ul Muslimoon patrols are sometimes
carried out jointly with other security forces. Their activities inside the
hospitals, including assaults on staff and detentions of staff, patients and
visitors, are carried out with the knowledge of BSF forces, who maintain bunkers
at the entrances of the hospitals.
A Jammu and Kashmir police
station is also located at the entrance to the Soura institute. Ikhwan-ul Muslimoon
forces enter the hospital on a regular basis and patrol it armed with automatic
weapons. They often carry walkie-talkies and speak into them in the course of
their searches and patrols. They have threatened and harassed hospital staff
and patients, looking for militants, and have taken suspects away to "camps."
Before mid-1995, BSF forces
themselves used to patrol the hospital, looking for militants. They would conduct
search operations, known in Kashmir as "crackdowns," inside Soura,
ordering all staff to line up and be searched. Any staff member or patient who
is suspected of being involved with the militants is taken away; anyone who
resists or objects is threatened or beaten.
Conclusion
Since 1993, the Indian government has embarked on a campaign to improve its
image which has been severely tarnished by the appalling human rights record
of its police and security forces.
The vast majority of security
personnel responsible for abuses are never punished or are subjected only to
mild disciplinary measures. The Indian government has done nothing to curb the
most flagrant abuse-summary executions and torture-or punish those responsible.
Instead of ensuring that its troops abide by the rule of law, India has sponsored
irregular militias that operate completely outside the law to carry out its
counterinsurgency operations.
Compounding the tragedy
in Kashmir is the fact that many of India's trading partners, eager to embrace
one of Asia's greatest "emerging markets" or concerned more with South
Asian security relations than with human rights, have muffled earlier criticisms
that had served to force India to acknowledge the need for reform.
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:05:46 AM
Readers'
Comment
donald: 5/22/2006 10:55:26 AM
This ofcourse i can say is a forged report by some unscrupulous reporters of yours.There might be incidents pertaining to the level what you have reported but not by the indian people but by the people trained by your government(isi).Look at what had happened yesterday at a function in Sher-e-kashmir(park).A militant opened fire at the crowd indiscriminantly killing innocent civilians.Now what is this ,is this an act of jihad or a true violation of human rights.First try to solve the problems faced by the people of your country and then turn towards the neighbours.Every country has the right to protect it's boundaries ,once it reaches the limit ,you know what you even will do .We will do the same.This is not a threat but an advice from the part of your former brother.Please consider this .Atleast you(the media)could stay away from the false propogandists of your country.GOOD LUCK TO YOU(THE PEOPLE OF PAKISTAN)AND YOUR COUNTRY.
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