Human rights and the AFSPA

    13-Dec-2021
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Radha Binod Koijam
International Human Rights Day was observed all over the world on the 10th of the month. In India the Chairperson of the National Human Rights Commission, Justice Arun Mishra in an event that day to mark the Human Rights Day declared, ‘There is no room for fake encounters. The government is accountable to its people’.      
I sat pondering through the day as to how to celebrate the day. Memories of horrifying incidents of violation of Human Rights flooded my mind. I recalled the valiant fight of the brave young woman, Irom Sharmila Devi, fasting 16 long years demanding repeal of the ARMED FORCES (SPECIAL POWERS) ACT, 1958 (known widely as AFSPA, in short). I remembered how another young woman, Manorama Devi was picked up by the security forces from her home in the wee hours of the morning in July 2004 and was found abandoned dead in a nearby field after a few days with bruises on her thighs and other inner parts. The furious  red face of the former Indian Army Chief and Rajya Sabha member, Gen Shankar Roychowdhury (retd.) with his decorative long mustache flashed before my eyes when I, in the Roundtable organized by the SAPRA India Foundation on 26 August 2004 at New Delhi to discuss the developments in Manipur in the context of AFSPA, questioned whether AFSPA is the panacea for insurgency, how long can a region and its people be kept under subjugation by military might if the civil society was getting alienated and if POTA could be repealed on grounds that the Act lacked a human face and was misused in many areas, then can’t the AFSPA, which is draconian and had been grossly misused for almost half a century be repealed or replaced by a better legislation. The participants of the Roundtable included former Intelligence Bureau official, MK Dhar and former DG BSF & member National Security Advisory Board, EN Rammohan. I demanded then, ‘Manipur should not be abandoned to the periphery of national consciousness’ and proposed that the government of India should outline a roadmap for lasting peace and development in Manipur.
My mind slowly turned from the turbulent Past to the Present. My attention then dwelt on the horrendous incident at Oting village of Mon district, Nagaland where on 4th December 2021 the Security Forces shot unsuspecting civilian coal mine workers and subsequently killed many more civilians using lethal weapons in the repression of the angry public protesting against the highhandedness of the security forces. The killings were clear cases of Human Rights violation. The pain caused by the incidents was deep and hard to bear. The pain and anguish were more unbearable and infuriating when the government of India fabricated excuses of justification for the inhuman acts of its security forces. I was unable to find any appropriate word of condemnation for such an anti-people stance of a democratic government. May the Truth prevail.
It was only last month (November) on the 16th that I, accompanied by my nephew, Mr Zasivikho Zakiesato, a young upcoming social worker in Dimapur, visited my long time friend, Mr. Chingwang Konyak, a former Minister & a former MP of Nagaland  and the present President of the ruling National Democratic People’s  Party of Nagaland at his Dimapur home. Mr Chingwang Konyak hails from the Mon district of Nagaland.
Immediately after the Oting incident the Chief Minister of Nagaland as well as the Chief Minister of Meghalay came out demanding for the repeal of the AFSPA. I appreciate the two leaders for their courage and political vision. More importantly, I salute their sensitivity to the wishes and aspirations of their people and their high sense of obligation to the people they govern.
Not long after there followed a great din of demands by various organizations inside and outside the country to repeal the Act. The Civil Society Coalition on Human Rights in Manipur and the United Nations (CSCHR) came out with a strong statement on Oting incident on the 7th December 2021demanding repeal of the Act. The statement was welcomed and supported by the Citizen Committee Manipur of which Mr Babloo Loitongbam, Executive Director, Human Rights Alert, Manipur is the Convener.  Human Rights Watch, New York joined the chorus with its article on 8th December 2021 under the headline, India: Army Kills 14 Civilians in Nagaland with   subtitles : Repeal Armed Forces Special Powers Act; Prosecute Soldiers Responsible. Statement of the Working Group on Human Rights in India and the UN (WGHR) on the incidents in Oting, Mon District, Nagaland on 4-5 December 2021 issued on         12 December 2021 expressed solidarity with the coal mine labourers and protestors killed and injured at Oting, Mon district, Nagaland  and said despite the historic judgment of the Supreme Court of India in EEVFAM -vs- Union of India the government of India is yet to grant  prosecution sanction against anyone involved in the extra- judicial killings. ’The repeal of AFSPA will strengthen the spirit of the country’s constitutional democracy’ read the statement
Why the demands for the repeal of the AFSPA?
The Act is a short enactment of the Indian Parliament having only 7 sections. But, it is lethal in the sweeping powers conferred to the security forces and glaring in the absence of accountability of the soldiers with the immunity provided from prosecution.
The Supreme Court of India had the occasion to look into the provisions of the Act threadbare in a Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 129 of  2012 filed by the Extra Judicial Execution Victim Families Association, Manipur (EEVFAM) & anr versus Union of India & anr against the fake encounters perpetrated by the Security Forces in Manipur. Based on the judgment and order of the Supreme Court I wrote an article, ‘AFSPA and the law of the land’, which was published in the Fortnightly, the North East SUN in its September 1-15, 2016 (Vol. xx, No.17) issue.  I reproduce the same below (Courtesy:the North East SUN) for the benefit of the public to acquaint themselves  with what the highest Court of the land said on the Act and ponder on the merit of the gathering storm of demands for its repeal. I, for one, strongly feel that it is high time to do away with the draconian law. This will help in the emotional integration of the Northeast into the Indian Nation and remove the feeling of OTHERNESS from the mind of the people of the region.
The writer is Sr. Advocate and Former Chief Minister, Manipur & Chairperson, Citizen Committee Manipur