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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 6, 2019
Killings Under Protection
The people of Indian Held Kashmir have no trust and no confidence in the investigation agencies and even in the courts.
Yes they proved it by murdering a Chemistry teacher that all is fair in
love and war. His name was Rizwan Asad, age 28. He worked at a private
school in Awantipora area of the Pulwama district, south Kashmir. The
National Investigative Agency of India arrested this young teacher in
the second week of March during a so-called crackdown on socio-political
and religious organizations. According to media reports, Rizwan was
kept at the dreaded anti-insurgency Special Operations Group
head-quarter, commonly known as Cargo Camp, in Srinagar. He could not
bear brutal violence there and died during the intervening night of 18th
and 19th March. Commenting on the brutality committed in the name of
investigation and inquiry, a top Kashmiri human rights’ activist Khurram
Parvez said talking to media, “There have been several thousand
custodial killings and custodial disappearances by Indian forces in
Kashmir. None of them has received any justice; it is because of the
complete lack of accountability and total lawlessness.”
The people of Indian Held Kashmir have no trust and no confidence in the
investigation agencies and even in the courts. The recent court-verdict
in the Samjhauta Express burning case has added a lot of disbelief and
suspicions to the self-claimed impartiality of the judicial system in
India. According to media reports, a few days back, an Indian court
after hearing the case for more than ten years, acquitted four people,
including prime accused Swami Aseemanand, in the Samjhauta Express
burning case. The court said it could not find any solid proof against
the accused ones. It was February 18, 2007 when a train named Samjhauta
Express was burnt to ashes along with it passengers when it was on its
way to Lahore from New Delhi. More than 70 passengers were killed in
that brutality; most of them were Pakistanis, most of them the Muslims.
In short, the investigation agencies of India, the courts and above all
the government authorities, all have lost people’s trust and confidence.
Rizwan Asad’s brother, Zulqarnain has also expressed his distrust in the
concerning authorities regarding investigation of his brother’s murder.
He said talking to the media-men, “My brother has been killed in police
custody in cold blood. We want an investigation of it but we know
nothing is going to happen. We've all seen investigations for the last
20 years.” The Al-Jazeera says, “Rizwan's death adds to the more than
70,000 killings, more than 8,000 enforced disappearances, as well as
thousands of torture and sexual violence cases in Indian-administered
Kashmir over the past three decades.”
Custodial killings are no doubt a very horrible element making the lives
of the helpless Kashmiris more painful and more agonizing. A report
published in Greater Kashmir says, ‘There is no record of custodial
deaths for 1947-1975.The custodial killings became a routine in 90s.
According to human rights defenders around 12000 custodial killings have
been reported during the past twenty-six years.’ According to a
data-report prepared by Research Section of Kashmir Media Service,
Indian troops in their unabated acts of state terrorism martyred 95,265
innocent Kashmiris during the past 29 years. Of those martyred, 7,120
were killed by the troops in custody. As many as 145,504 people were
arrested by Indian forces during the period. The troops destroyed
109,201 residential houses and other structures. The Indian forces’
personnel molested and gang raped 11,111 women during the period. The
situation of atrocities particularly of custodial killings was the same
even in 1995. Amnesty International said in a report published
twenty-four years back, “In the period 1990-1994 more than 715 detainees
died in the custody of Indian security forces in the state of Jammu and
Kashmir. They were tortured to death or shot outright. In areas where
government forces are engaged in counter-insurgency operations against
armed groups fighting for independence or for the state to join
Pakistan, the entire civilian population is at risk of arbitrary
detention, torture, even death.” The report further said,” Most of the
victims are young men, detained during crackdown-operations to identify
armed militants. Almost all those detained are tortured: many do not
survive; others are left disabled or mutilated. Scores of women in Jammu
and Kashmir claim to have been raped by security forces.”
Now after twenty four years, today in 2019, the situation regarding
human rights violations in Indian Held Kashmir is still the same.
Custodial killing of Rizwan Asad is the most recent and most horrible
example in this context. This all is very much frightening and alarming
too. The ‘Kashmirwala’ said in an analysis recently published on 21st
March, “After the custodial killing of Awantipora based school
principal, Rizwan Asad, his friend, Shahid Manzoor has picked up arms
and joined armed-group Hizbul Mujaheddin, fearing physical and mental
torture by government forces, as he states, ‘Today, it was Rizwan,
tomorrow it could be me.’

