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Indian security forces murder Kashmiris in phony encounters
By Kranti Kumara
22 February 2007
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A police inquiry that led to the exhumation of the corpses
of several innocent civilians killed by Indian security forces
in the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) has shed
light on the murderous campaign the Indian elite and its henchmen
in the security apparatus have mounted in Indias only Muslim-majority
state for the past two decades.
The J&K police opened an inquiry upon receiving a complaint
from the family of a 35 year-old carpenter, Abdur Rehman Paddar,
who had gone missing on December 8, 2006 Utilizing the unique
phone identification number provided to them by the victims
family, the investigators traced the phone to an Assistant Sub-Inspector
(ASI) of police Farooq Ahmad Gudoo.
ASI Gudoo reportedly had given the phone to a person under
police protectionpresumably a surrendered Kashmiri secessionistafter
reactivating the phone using a newly obtained SIM phone card.
During interrogation, ASI Gudoo confessed that he had taken
the phone from Paddar soon after killing him. ASI Gudoo was part
of a Special Operations Group (SOG) team from Ganderbal
police station that had picked up Paddar from his native village,
Larnoo, and casually murdered him on Dec. 9. So as to justify
his killing and collect a reward, the SOG team then sought to
pass off Paddars corpse as that of a Pakistani
militant who, they claimed, had exchanged fire with them.
Indian and international human rights organizations have long-charged
that Indian security forces have used phony encounters with Pakistanis
and Kashmiri insurgents to execute captured anti-government
insurgents and to kill others deemed politically undesirable by
the authorities or who have run afoul of the police and security
forces.
Comprised of local police, village informers, and former insurgents
who have been bribed and coerced into working for the Indian state,
the SOG is generally considered to be the most ruthless of the
various Indian security forces active in Jammu and Kashmir. It
is widely reputed to have been involved in the disappearance of
thousands of Kashmiris, extortion, and custodial killings.
Paddars murder would appear to have been motivated by
money. The carpenter may have resisted demands from the Ganderbal
SOG team for protection money or the police may simply
have wanted to collect the government reward for killing an insurgent.
The killing of Paddar resulted in a reward of 120,000 rupees (about
$270) being paid to the SOG team.
After killing Paddar, the police announced publicly that they
had killed a Pakistani militant on whom they had found an AK-47
rifle, three magazines, 36 bullets and a grenade. Such routine
labeling of the victims of fake encounters with Indias
security forces as Pakistanis is standard procedure.
It is aimed at presenting the anti-Indian insurgency in Kashmir
as entirely due to the machinations of Pakistan, Indias
historic geo-political rival.
The brutality of the SOG is underscored by the state of Paddars
corpsehis face was all but totally mutilated by the shooting.
During the course of the investigation of Paddars disappearance,
other police murders came to light including that of two impoverished
street vendors, Nazir Ahmad Deka and Ghulam Nabi Wani. Deka, a
father of three children who sold perfume on the pavement for
a living, was picked up by the SOG and murdered in February 2006.
The police passed him off as a militant belonging to the Pakistani-based
Islamicist group Lashkar-i-Tayba. The briefcase that Deka used
to keep his perfume was reportedly found at the house of ASI Gudoo.
Ghulab Wani was picked up in March 2006 and murdered. He was
publicly identified as an Islamic terrorist who was
killed in a joint police-army operation.
All of these victims were poor and supposedly were forced to
pay bribes to the police for favorsfavors that
may have been as meager as permission to sell their wares in a
choice or preferred spot in a market.
In late January and early February the investigating police
exhumed bodies of several other victims in addition to those of
Paddar, Deka and Wani. These victims are also believed to be civilians
who were in no way connected to the insurgency against the Indian
state.
The public outrage over the killings has led to the arrest
of the Ganderbal Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Hans Raj
Parihar and of the Deputy Superintendent of Police(DSP), Bahadur
Ram.
Although there have been countless complaints from Kashmiris
and numerous reports from Indian and international human rights
organizations charging that the Indian government has allowed
its security forces in Kashmir to run amuck, these officers are
among the most senior, if not the highest-ranking, officers arrested
for human rights violations in Kashmir since the anti-Indian insurgency
began in 1989.
The Indian government, as part of its attempt to reach a rapprochement
with Pakistan, has recently sent out feelers to elements within
the Kashmiri opposition. Reining in the most brazen murderers
within the security apparatus may be a government maneuver aimed
at creating conditions more conducive to launching negotiations.
The authorities are also acutely aware of the depth of the
popular anger in Kashmir. While many Kashmiris are repelled by
the reactionary Islamicist ideology espoused by many of the anti-Indian
insurgents, especially those most closely connected to Pakistan,
there is also a visceral popular feeling against the Indian authorities
because of the bloody authoritarian methods they have employed
in upholding Indian rule.
The current Congress Party and Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP) state coalition government came to power in 2002 by making
grandiose promises to the electorate. These included promising
to heal the physical and psychological wounds
inflicted upon the Kashmiri people by a decade and half of brutal
Indian military operations. They also promised to show zero-tolerance
to human rights violations and to investigate all cases of custodial
killings by police.
As the fate of Paddar clearly illustrates, none of these promises
have been kept. Human-rights violations and killings by security
forces and the police have continued unabated over the last four
years.
In the wake of the exposure of the Paddars murder as
an SOG fake-encounter, there have been angry demonstrations
demanding that the chiefs of police who have overseen the practice
of fake or phony encounters be severely punished. Thousands of
people, including the families of several of the victims, have
taken to the streets demanding justice.
On February 6 the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF),
a major separatist group, called for a bandh (a shutdown)
that paralyzed life in Srinagar, the summer capital of the state
Members of the All-Party Hurriyat Conference, an amalgamation
of 26 Kashmiri political, religious and civic organization that
also support Kashmiri separatism, also held demonstrations in
Srinagar.
Even the exposure of these heinous crimes has not resulted
in any pause in police repression. The peaceful protest was met
with a salvo of tear gas by the police.
The roots of the current Kashmir tragedy are to be found in
the 1947 communal partition of South Asia, when Indias departing
British colonial overlords joined forces with the bourgeois Indian
National Congress and the Muslim League to create a Muslim Pakistan
and a predominantly Hindu India.
War soon broke out over the fate of Jammu and Kashmir, a princely
state with a Muslim-majority adjacent to Pakistan, but whose Hindu
princely ruler and largest political party favored accession to
India.
For the six ensuing decades, Kashmir has been split into Indian-
and Pakistani-controlled regions with the two states continuing
to stake their rival claims to all of Jammu and Kashmir and engaging
in countless subterfuges to realize their ambitions.
While Pakistan long-sought to fan opposition to the Indian
government in Indian-held Kashmir, a popular insurgency only broke
out in 1989, two years after the Indian authorities had once again
rigged an election in the state. In the years prior to the launching
of the Kashmir insurgency, Indias Congress Party government
had whipped up Hindu chauvinism while brutally suppressing a Sikh
fundamentalist agitation in the Punjab and the Hindu supremacist
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had emerged as a major political
force across north India..
Like Indias north-east, Jammu and Kashmir has long suffered
economic neglect. Both regions are wracked by separatist insurgencies
fed by youth who face a bleak future either of unemployment or
working at marginal jobs.
Although the secessionist movements are fundamentally reactionary,
they nevertheless arise out of festering socio-economic and political
grievances. Incapable of tackling the root causes of these grievances,
the Indian bourgeoisie has relied upon anti-democratic legislation
to empower the military and police forces to crush the insurgencies
through a rampage of killing, kidnapping, and rape.
In J&K, the Indian government has utilized the repressive
Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir) Special Powers Act of 1990 to
suppress the militancy This legislation grants almost unchecked
power to the armed forces to declare an area disturbed,
arrest people at will, and to open fire at their discretion.
The results have been catastrophic, with at least 60,000 people
killed, thousands of women raped, and hundreds if not thousands
of people kidnapped. Many of the latter have ended up dead like
the victims mentioned above. Most of this human toll can be laid
directly at the feet of the Indian security forces.
It is impossible to convey in the short space of this article
the repression and tragedy the population of J&K has been
subjected to at the hands of the Indian government over the past
two decades. Every month many women whose husbands have disappeared
hold demonstrations at which they silently hold up their husbands
photographs so as to demand that the authorities inquire into
the whereabouts of their loved ones. These women cannot collect
pensions or inherit property belonging to their missing husbands
without an official record of their deaths.
The recently exposed police murders in J&K are not isolated
incidents but instead are part of a long-term systematic violation
of the most basic human rights of the people of Jammu and Kashmir
by the Indian state. At most a handful of the perpetrators have
been prosecuted. Instead, the security forces have been showered
with rewards and promotions for chalking up kills.
See Also:
Indias judiciary seeks to burnish
its reputation with some belated guilty verdicts
[3 February 2007]
Government report
concedes Indias Muslims are a socially deprived, victimised
minority
[30 December 2006]
International report
documents repression in Indian-controlled Kashmir
[30 November 2006]
India: Stop the state
murder of Mohammed Afzal
[14 November 2006]
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