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India: Time to
Deliver Justice for Atrocities in
Punjab
Investigate and
Prosecute Perpetrators of ‘Disappearances’ and Killings
The Indian
government must take concrete steps to hold accountable members of its
security forces who killed, “disappeared,” and tortured thousands of
Sikhs during its counterinsurgency campaign in the Punjab, Human
Rights Watch and Ensaaf said in a new report released today.
"Impunity in
India
has been rampant in Punjab, where security forces committed
large-scale human rights violations without any accountability."
Brad Adams, Asia
director at Human Rights Watch
In order to end the
institutional defects that foster impunity in Punjab and elsewhere in
the country, the government should take new legal and practical steps,
including the establishment of a commission of inquiry, a special
prosecutor’s office, and an extensive reparations program.
The 123-page report, "Protecting the Killers: A Policy of Impunity in
Punjab, India," examines the challenges faced by victims and their
relatives in pursuing legal avenues for accountability for the human
rights abuses perpetrated during the government’s counterinsurgency
campaign. The report describes the impunity enjoyed by officials
responsible for violations and the near total failure of India’s
judicial and state institutions, from the National Human Rights
Commission to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), to provide
justice for victims’ families.
Beginning in the 1980s, Sikh separatists in Punjab committed serious
human rights abuses, including the massacre of civilians, attacks upon
Hindu minorities in the state, and indiscriminate bomb attacks in
crowded places. In its counterinsurgency operations in
Punjab from 1984 to 1995, Indian security forces committed
serious human rights abuses against tens of thousands of Sikhs. None
of the key architects of this counterinsurgency strategy who bear
substantial responsibility for these atrocities have been brought to
justice.
“Impunity in
India
has been rampant in Punjab, where security forces committed
large-scale human rights violations without any accountability,” said
Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “No one disputes that
the militants were guilty of numerous human rights abuses, but the
government should have acted within the law instead of sanctioning the
killing, ‘disappearance,’ and torture of individuals accused of
supporting the militants.”
A key case discussed in detail in the report is the Punjab “mass
cremations case,” in which the security services are implicated in
thousands of killings and secret cremations throughout
Punjab to hide the evidence of wrongdoing. The case is currently
before the National Human Rights Commission, a body specially
empowered by the Supreme Court to address this case. However, the
commission has narrowed its efforts to merely establishing the
identity of the individuals who were secretly cremated in three
crematoria in just one district of Punjab. It has rejected cases from
other districts and has ignored the intentional violations of human
rights perpetrated by
India’s security
forces. For more than a decade, the commission has failed to
independently investigate a single case and explicitly refuses to
identify any responsible officials.
“The National Human Rights Commission has inexplicably failed in its
duties to investigate and establish exactly what happened in Punjab,”
said Adams. “We still hold out hope that it will change course and
bring justice to victims and their families.”
The report discusses the case of Jaswant Singh Khalra, a leading human
rights defender in Punjab who was abducted and then murdered in
October 1995 by government officials after being held in illegal
detention for almost two months. Despite credible eyewitness testimony
that police chief KPS Gill was directly involved in interrogating
Khalra in illegal detention just days prior to Khalra’s murder, the
Central Bureau of Investigation has thus far refused to investigate or
prosecute Gill. In September 2006, Khalra’s widow, Paramjit Kaur,
filed a petition in the Punjab & Haryana High Court calling on the CBI
to take action against Gill. More than a year later, she is still
waiting for a hearing on the merits.
“Delivering justice in Punjab could set precedents throughout India
for the redress of mass state crimes and superior responsibility,”
said Jaskaran Kaur, co-director of Ensaaf. “Indians and the rest of
the world are watching to see if the current Indian government can
muster the political will to do the right thing. It if fails, then the
only conclusion that can be reached is that the state’s institutions
cannot or will not take on the security establishment. This has grave
implications for Indian democracy.”
Victims and their families seeking justice face severe challenges,
including prolonged trials, biased prosecutors, an unresponsive
judiciary, police intimidation and harassment of witnesses, and the
failure to charge senior government officials despite evidence of
their role in the abuses.
Tarlochan Singh described the hurdles he has faced in his now 18-year
struggle before Indian courts for justice for the killing of his son,
Kulwinder Singh:
"I used to receive
threatening phone calls. The caller would say that they had killed
thousands of boys and thrown them into canals, and they would also do
that to Kulwinder Singh’s wife, kid, or me and my wife...
"The trial has been proceeding ... with very little evidence being
recorded at each hearing, and with two to three months between
hearings. During this time, key witnesses have died."
After Mohinder Singh’s son Jugraj Singh was killed in an alleged faked
armed encounter between security forces and separatists in January
1995, he pursued numerous avenues of justice. He brought his case
before the Punjab & Haryana High Court and the CBI Special Court, but
no police officer was charged. A CBI investigation found that Jugraj
Singh had been killed and cremated by the police. However, 11 years
and a few inquiry reports later, the CBI court ended Mohinder Singh’s
pursuit for accountability by dismissing his case in 2006. Mohinder
Singh describes his interactions with the CBI:
“On one occasion
when [the officer] from the CBI came to my house, he told me that I
wasn’t going to get anything out of this. Not justice and not even
compensation. He further said that: ‘I see you running around pursuing
your case. But you shouldn’t get into a confrontation with the police.
You have to live here and they can pick you up at any time.’ He was
indirectly threatening me.”
Human Rights Watch and Ensaaf expressed concern that the Indian
government continues to cite the counterinsurgency operations in
Punjab as a model for preserving national integrity.
“The government’s illegal and inhuman policies in the name of security
have allowed a culture of impunity to prevail that has brutalized its
police and security forces,” said Kaur.
The report suggests a comprehensive framework to address the
institutionalized impunity that has prevented accountability in
Punjab. The detailed recommendations include establishing a commission
of inquiry, a special prosecutor’s office, and an extensive
reparations program.
“The Indian government needs to send a clear message to its security
services, courts, prosecutors, and civil servants that it neither
tolerates nor condones gross human rights violations under any
circumstances,” said Adams. “This requires a comprehensive and
credible process of accountability that delivers truth, justice, and
reparations to its victims, who demand nothing more than their rights
guaranteed by India’s constitution and international law.”
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