- INDIA ASKED TO EXPLAIN
ATTACKS ON MINORITIES, IMPUNITY FOR ITS ARMED FORCES,
CASTE DISCRIMINATION, EXTRA-JUDICIAL KILLINGS AND TORTURE
AT THE UN - GETS UPSET
India's Human Rights
Record: Myths and Reality Exposed
India's Solicitor General reacted
angrily to repeated assertions made at the UN in Geneva
that Indian armed forces have carried out human rights
violations with impunity, calling them "totally off the
mark". Given the largely ritualistic diplomatic niceties
of the occasion - India's Universal Periodic Review (UPR)
under the new Human Rights Council procedures held at
the UN in Geneva on 10 April 2008 - this was a
conspicuously odd reaction which brought laughter from
journalists and NGO representatives who sat in on the
session.
Indeed there was a series of grave human rights issues
raised by a number of states in the three hour session
which saw the Indian delegation having to respond in
what most observers saw as a shameless attempt to hide
India's appalling human rights record behind the spin of
claiming complete constitutional and legal safeguards
which it protect the vulnerable. In essence it was the
stark difference between the theoretical legal position
and the actuality of systematic abuses and impunity that
will characterise the world's assessment of India's
human rights situation.
Attacks on Minorities
Many states, especially the USA and the UK, asked what
India was doing to stop attacks against religious
minorities. Whether Muslims, Sikhs or Christians there
have been numerous mass attacks on them in contemporary
India where the state has been at best complicit in the
abuses if not directly responsible for them. India's
unwillingness to punish the guilty remains a serious
problem which has been noted by the international
community. India's own written submission to the UPR
makes not a single reference to the anti-Sikh pogroms of
November 1984 in which 10,000 Sikhs were killed in three
days of genocide, the massacre of thousands of Muslims
in Gujarat or the recent attacks on Christians in Orissa,
despite official findings by formal government enquiries
that cited the involvement of government officials in
the mass killings of Sikhs in 1984 and Muslims in 1993
respectively. The very same submission claims "India's
approach towards protection and promotion of human
rights has been characterised by a holistic,
multi-pronged effort" which is based on a constitution
in which "fundamental freedoms are guaranteed without
discrimination to all citizens".
In relation to abuses (primarily systematic
extra-judicial killings and secret cremations) against
the Sikhs in Punjab, Human Rights Watch's formal
submission to the UPR called for the guilty to be
punished and condemned the policy of impunity. It noted
how India's National Human Rights Commission has refused
to order an investigation in to the killings and has
restricted its interest to whether "proper procedures
were not followed by state authorities in cremating
unidentified bodies". India's representatives offered no
response to the NGO's call for action.
Use of Torture, Extra-judicial
Killings and Impunity
Several states questioned why India - some 11 years
after India signed the UN Conventional Against Torture
it has still not managed to ratify the treaty or agree
to be bound by the terms of its Optional Protocol. New
Delhi's representative prompted derision when she
asserted that ratification was being "actively pursued"
by the Government of India. The widespread use of
torture in India was glossed over by India's delegation
even though the UN is fully aware of India's refusal to
agree formal requests by the UN Special Rapporteur on
Torture in 1993 and 2007 to visit India. India has also
not agreed to formal requests made in 2000, 2005 and
2006 by the UN Special Rapporteur on Extra-judicial,
Summary or Arbitrary Executions. In a blatant mis-representation
of the position, India's Solicitor-General intervened to
claim that India had in fact acceded to every request
made by UN Special Rapporteurs.
The significance of India's approach to the use of
killings and torture should not be lost on anyone. Human
Rights Watch, in its submission to the UPR noted that
"security forces in India have been responsible for
abuses such as extra-judicial killings, disappearances
and torture, especially in Punjab and Nagaland in the
1980s, and currently in Jummu and Kashmir, Assam and
Manipur, and in states where there is a Maoist
insurgency". They further state that "impunity is a
major problem in India; serious crimes perpetuated by
security forces are rarely investigated or prosecuted".
Religious and Caste Discrimination
India's representatives, without embarrassment, stated
that India does not see caste discrimination as racism
when confronted with widespread criticism of systematic
caste-based discrimination in India.
When the US representative spoke of evidence of
restrictions on freedom of conscience, they retorded
that freedom of religion was a pillar of the Indian
Constitution. Unsurprisingly they made no reference to
the decades-long opposition of Jains and Sikhs (who
refused to accept the document when adopted in 1950 and
ever since) to their being classed as Hindus in Article
25 of the Constitution. Explaining the rationale for
this provision, India's Supreme Court declared in a
judgement in 2005 as follows:
"The so-called minority communities like Sikhs and Jains
were not
treated as national minorities at the time of framing
the Constitution.
Sikhs and Jains, in fact, have throughout been treated
as part of the
wider Hindu community which has different sects,
sub-sects, faiths,
modes of worship and religious philosophies. In various
codified
customary laws like Hindu Marriage Act, Hindu Succession
Act, Hindu
Adoption and Maintenance Act and other laws of pre and
post-
Constitution period, definition of 'Hindu' included all
sects, sub-sects of
Hindu religions including Sikhs and Jains. "
Denial of Self-Determination: State Policy in defiance
of the UN Covenants
India's submission made repeated reference to "internal"
conflicts as purely law and order (and terrorism)
concerns, without addressing the underlying causes of
those conflicts. It offered nothing in terms of
responding to the UN's earlier recommendations that it
establish political dialogue with the minorities
involved. The UN Human Rights Committee, a separate body
which monitors the compliance of states with the 1966
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
has suggested dialogue but there has not been any.
India has in fact taken the opposite approach based on a
'Reservation' it made when acceding to the ICCPR to the
effect that the right of self-determination of peoples
and nations (Article 1 and a foundation of the ICCPR) is
not considered to be applicable to India. The UN Human
Rights Committee, which has stated that
self-determination is a human right the denial of which
leaves other rights susceptible to open abuse, in 1997
formally requested India to withdraw that 'Reservation'
but it has failed to do so. In fact, India's latest
formal report to that Committee was due in 2001 and
still has not yet been submitted. Sikhs, Kashmiris,
Nagas, Assamese, Manipuris, Bodos and other national
groups can draw their own conclusions for what this
attitude means for them.
A Challenge to the UN
The UN's recommendation that India's notorious Armed
Forces Special Forces Act, (which effectively guarantees
impunity by stipulating that central government
permission is needed before security personnel can be
prosecuted for abuses) be repealed was raised by a
number of states including the UK, Canada, Germany.
India's delegation rejected the move by insisting that
the draconian provisions of the Act were sanctioned by
India's Supreme Court and that the international
community need not be concerned as all members of the
armed forces are given lessons in how to conduct
themselves! That response perhaps epitomised a session
which saw many in the human rights community question
the effectiveness of the new UPR procedure which
apparently allows violators of human rights to simply
hide behind rhetoric and falsehoods. It will be a
challenge for the UN to redress the balance between
victims and perpetrators of state terrorism within its
review processes.
Sikh Reaction
The UPR session was attended by Sikhs from the Council
of Khalistan and Dal Khalsa International who took the
opportunity to brief journalists and a number of NGOs
about the reality of the humanitarian situation in
India, whether in terms of collective or individual
human rights. They also met with a representative of the
Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and
urged the UN to take concrete steps to hold India
account for its past as well as its continuing
violations. Amrik Singh Sahota, OBE deplored India's
brazen contempt for human rights and said that the
international community would not be fooled by India' s
preposterous claims made at the UPR. Manmohan Singh
Khalsa expressed satisfaction at seeing India's
representatives have to squirm in front of the world's
representatives in their futile attempt to hide the
record of a state which has become an acknowledged
serial violator of human rights. India's representatives
had ironically reminded decision makers why it was not
only inappropriate but also dangerous to entertain
India's claims to a permanent seat at the UN Security
Council.
ISSUED BY THE COUNCIL OF KHALISTAN AND
DAL KHALSA INTERNATIONAL
CONTACT: cokhalistan@aol.com or
dalkhalsauk@hotmail.co.uk
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