Monthly Archives: September 2011

India Deports Award Winning Journalist David Barsamian

David Barsamian, activist, writer and founder of the national radio show “Alternative Radio,” was deported from New Delhi, India on Monday. Barsamian was on his way to Srinagar, the capital of Jammu Kashmir for a three week long investigation into reports of mass graves found in the area. His trip was prompted by the Indian State Human Rights Commission’s release of a three year long inquiry and report which found over 2,000 bodies buried in 38 different unmarked graves in Kashmir. While the Indian Government stated that Barsamian was deported because he had violated his Visa stipulations on his previous India trip in 2009, others in the human rights community suspected that the real reason was to avert attention from the ongoing allegations of abuse and torture by Indian security forces in response to a rebellion in Kashmir that began in 1989 and continues today.

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Human Rights Abuses In Punjab Exposed By Wikileaks

LUDHIANA, Punjab (September 26, 2011)–The mass level of human rights abuses in Punjab by police and para-military forces finds a Wikileaks link. A recent “expose” by Wikileaks mentions the existence of “Alam Sena” (Army of Black Cats responsible for mass tortures and killings) deployed by Mohammad Izhar Alam, a senior Punjab Police officer and a very close affiliate of Punjab CM Parkash Badal.

The communication, referred to as a “cable,” sent by the New Delhi based US Embassy on December 19, 2005 and released by Wikileaks, mentions the existence of “Alam Sena.” This cable is in response to certain issues and specific questions relating to the extradition of Kulbir Singh Barapind from the US to India.

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Kashmiris, Sikhs stage anti-India demos in New York

NEW YORK (US): Hundreds of Kashmiris and Sikhs staged separate demonstrations in front of the United Nations building when the Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was addressing the 66th session of the United Nations General Assembly, reports KMS.

The demonstrators urged the international community to raise its voice against human rights abuses by Indian forces in occupied Kashmir and Indian state of Punjab. The Kashmiris carrying placards and raising slogans called on the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon to implement resolutions of the World Body that gave the Kashmiris the right to decide their fate by themselves. They also demanded an end to the atrocities being committed by Indian police and troops in the occupied territory.

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Nepal: Plan to withdraw criminal cases is a serious blow to the rule of law – AHRC

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) wishes to express its concern regarding the Attorney General of Nepal’s recent announcement that the government is preparing to go ahead with its plan to withdraw cases filed against members of the Maoist and Madesh movements.
This announcement comes in the wake of an agreement signed between the Maoist party and the United Democratic Madhesi Front prior to the election of Baburam Bhattarai as the Prime Minister of Nepal in which both parties have agreed to withdraw cases pending against those involved in the Maoist party, the Madhesi, Janajati, Tharuhat, Dalit, and Pichadabarga movements.

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Nepal: Beware, Attorney-General

DAMAKANT JAYSHI

The new Attorney-General Mukti Pradhan is the latest among those who want “politically motivated” cases against Maoist cadres withdrawn.
“All politically motivated and baseless cases against Maoists will be withdrawn, including cases against leaders and cadres of Madhesi parties,” Pradhan told media persons at an interaction program in the capital on Tuesday.

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India: AFSPA, a nuisance than a solution – ZHRF

Lamka, Sep 9: The Zomi Human Rights Foundation today rallied behind the icon of public resistance, Irom Sharmila Chanu, saying the Armed Forces Special Powers Act, is more of a nuisance than a solution.
A statement of the rights body as well suggested, “Irom Sharmila Chanu’s protest and campaign to repeal the AFSPA must be heard and consider as a democratic non-violent protest.” The Act which gives extra-ordinary power to the security forces was imposed in some States of North East India with the noble intention of controlling militancy but ended up leasing an undeclared State of emergency for undefined reasons and for an unlimited period, it alleged.

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India: How we happily abuse our kids – Rally spills an open secret

Calcutta, Sept. 9: The “abduction” of children from a school to feed the supply chain of a rally has shed light on how an “enlightened” Bengal has learnt to live comfortably with the abuse of the moral and legal rights of its children.

A day after 45 children were plucked out of their school and made to march through the heart of the city, police split legal hairs, some parties found leaving children alone “absurd” and others seemed to suggest that children’s inalienable rights could be trampled with the consent of parents.

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Force-feeding India

Rajdeep Sardesai

‘Why don’t you cover Irom Sharmila’s decade-old fast with the same intensity as you did Anna Hazare’s 12-day fast?’ asked Binalakshmi Nepram, the founder of the Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network with characteristic passion. On stage in a live programme, there was no escape. “Perhaps, it’s because Ramlila Maidan is closer to television studios than Imphal,” was my feeble response.
The ‘tyranny of distance’ can only be a part-explanation for why a 39-year-old Manipuri woman’s fast that began in November 2000 for the repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) has not resonated across TV channels and the nation in the manner that Anna Hazare’s did.

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Nepal: 17 jobless Nepali youths swindled

KATHMANDU, Sept 6: The owner of Sakura Foundation Private Limited, also known as Sakura Japanese Language School, has allegedly swindled huge amount of money from at least half a dozen jobless Nepali youths.
Pandav Raj Karki, the chairman of the language institute, has gone out of contact after collecting a staggering amount of money from 17 jobless youths.

Karki had collected from Rs 200,000 to Rs one million from each of them promising jobs in Japan.

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Nepal: OHCHR & unfinished transitional agenda

DR GOPAL KRISHNA SIWAKOTI

The extension of the mandate of the UN rights body – Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) – is critical for a sustained support to the rights- and justice-related transitional management in Nepal. The OHCHR’s time-tested expertise is crucial not only to enhance efforts to work quickly and effectively in re-establishing the rule of law and the administration of transitional justice but also to support fragile domestic institutions and lend assistance to build peace and capacitate the state in putting forth a long-term domestically-owned and nurtured human rights protection regime.

Assistance in training, advising, monitoring and generating programs and resources for rule of law and human rights safeguards initiatives especially the “peace-through-justice” program as well as devising an effective and legitimate transitional justice policy for the prevention of future human rights abuses is an unparalleled task that the OHCHR could accomplish. OHCHR is constitutionally-mandated to monitor the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) and it deserves a graceful exit only after the peace process is completed.

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