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HRW accuses India of human rights violations after 2008 bombings

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Human Rights Watch criticises India for abuses after 2008 bombings
AFP, Feb 2, 2011, 12.52pm IST

MUMBAI: Indian authorities carried out torture, arbitrary arrests and religious discrimination after a spate of deadly bombings in the country in 2008, Human Rights Watch said in a report published on Wednesday.

The global rights monitor said that human rights violations were commonplace after the blasts in Jaipur, Ahmedabad and New Delhi, as security forces battled to bring the perpetrators to justice and prevent further atrocities.

HRW warned authorities that their illegal actions - blamed by security experts on a lack of training, awareness and resources - could be counter productive in the wider fight against extremism.

"The very real pressures to deter and prevent such attacks do not justify violations of human rights, which undermine efforts to fight terrorism," the report said.

"By relying on forced and sometimes fabricated confessions, the Indian government risks punishing the wrong suspects while perpetrators remain free.

"Moreover, allegations of abuse create resentment in Muslim communities across India, depriving law enforcement officials of information sources that could prevent future attacks.

"Reports of torture may also serve as a recruitment tool."

The study said the majority of victims were the scores of Muslim men held after each blast and accused by police of being members of the Indian Mujahideen, a militant Islamist group that claimed responsibility for the wave of attacks.


More than 150 people died and hundreds of others were injured in the serial blasts, which hit between May and September 2008.

But suspected Hindu nationalists - blamed for a separate bomb attack that killed seven in the western city of Malegaon a week after the New Delhi blasts - also suffered abuse, the group said.

One suspected Hindu extremist said that police forced beef into his mouth while he was in custody, in contravention of his strict religious beliefs.

Researchers were told that in many cases, suspects were held for weeks without their arrests being registered, while police bent the rules to keep detainees in custody beyond the 15 day legal limit, to get them to confess.

Torture included electric shocks, beatings and being kept blindfolded and shackled in "stress" positions. Detainees' families were also mistreated or threatened in order to force confessions, it was claimed.

The report, based on interviews with suspects, their families, lawyers, activists, law enforcement officials and security experts, alleges that abuse took place at every stage of the judicial process. In court, judges often ignored suspects' complaints about ill-treatment, it added.

"This is what we would expect from China. The world's largest democracy can do better," HRW's South Asia director Meenakshi Ganguly said in a statement.

The group called for an overhaul of the judicial system, including the repeal of wide ranging, vaguely defined laws aimed at curbing militancy, and for the perpetrators of abuse to be brought to book.

A "thorough and impartial" investigation should also be conducted into how nine Muslim men were held for more than four years, and allegedly tortured, on suspicion of another blast in Malegaon in 2006.

Hindu extremists are now thought to have been behind the attack, as well as, others in 2006-7 which killed at least 115 people.


Ganguly said HRW was encouraged by the restraint shown by the authorities after the November 2008 Mumbai attacks, which killed 166, as well as after more recent strikes claimed by the Indian Mujahideen.

But the long term success of countering extremism depended on transforming "restraint and respect for the law" into the country's institutions, she added.
 
The study said the majority of victims were the scores of Muslim men held after each blast and accused by police of being members of the Indian Mujahideen, a militant Islamist group that claimed responsibility for the wave of attacks.
Prime example of it is Malegaon blasts,mecca masjid blasts and samjhota express blasts which all were blamed at muslims and muslim youths were picked up for these blast and denied bail.After all these years when it became clear that these blasts were done by hindu groups those muslim youths are still in jail and their bail is being opposed by CBI.


Malegaon blast case: CBI opposes bail to nine accused

The nine Muslims who have spent four years in jail for the Malegaon blast should not be granted bail, said the CBI in court today.

On the 17th of this month, the men asked that they be released because of Swami Assemanand's confession that right-wing Hindu groups were responsible for the blast which killed 37 people in the communally-sensitive town of Malegaon in Maharashtra in 2006.


Malegaon blast case: CBI opposes bail to nine accused
 
Human Rights Watch criticises India for abuses after 2008 bombings

Unfortunately there is a large amount of support for such 3rd degree torture methods among the populace.

I personally think that the policemen who indulge in such acts are breaking the same laws that they swore to uphold. These guys should be prosecuted.

On the other hand, more funds/training should be provided to improve forensics and policing methods. The politician-police nexus must be broken and corruption in the force must be weeded out.
 
As expected, the religious discrimination.
Firs they accuse ISI of Afghan Embassy,
and now on Pakistan. After a few months, they will apoligise.

This religious and political discrinimation can be judged by blaming Ammar Singh to be Ajmal Kasab and making him a Pakistani Muslim.

What else can be seen from this?
The bitterness in the hearts of Indian government.


Regards.
 

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