*Tortured State*

*By Gladson Dungdung*

13 October, 2007
*Tehelka*


*A*t a time when the government of Bihar is trumpeting its achievements as
good governance, the images of a mob led by policemen assaulting a petty
thief in Nath Nagar in Bhagalpur, Bihar, shocked the entire country after it
was shown on TV. To prove its commitment to good governance, the government
took immediate action and punished the two policemen involved in the
incident. But the Police Men Association and many senior police officers
deny that the incident was a case of police torture and want the two
dismissed policemen to be reinstated. They argue that the policemen tried
their best to protect the thief but the crowd did not allow them to do so.

But initial outrage created by the live telecast by TV news channels of the
Allahabad fake police encounter and the Bhagalpur incident has had little
impact on the Bihar police. The cases of police torture are increasing day
by day in the state. Soon after the Bhagalpur incident, the police of Bikram
Police Station of Patna district severely beat and caused the disappearance
of an accused Kaushal Kumar and declared him an absconder to save them from
the allegation of torture. In another incident, the officer in charge of
Phulwarisharif police station broke the hands and legs of a footballer
Santosh Kumar and extracted his teeth. There have also been several
incidents of police locking up minor boys after involving them in false
cases.

It is notable that these heart-breaking incidents of police torture and
high-handedness have taken place near the capital city of Bihar. They serve
as crucial examples of misuse of power by the officials who are responsible
for the law and order. After Nitish Kumar became the Chief Minister of Bihar
there, there has been a rise in the occurrence of such cases, at a scale
that has not been seen in the history of Bihar before.

People's Watch, a human rights organisation has monitored and analysed the
cases of police torture in four districts of Bihar: Patna, Bhojpur, Nalanda
and Nawada. Most of the cases included in this study involved custodial
torture and death, fake encounters, torture of women, lathi charge, police
firing and negligence in duty that took place between July 2006 to June
2007. The study reveals that out of the total victims in these cases of
police torture 76 percent victims are male and 24 percent female.

Furthermore, the study shows that the highest number of victims, about
47.5percent of the total number, is from the Dalit community, followed
by the
backward community with 31 percent and victims from the higher castes
forming 21.5 percent. And occupation-wise comparison of the victims reveal
that 45 percent of victims are daily wage labourers, 9 percent
students, 5.4percent house wives,
3.6 service holders, with the remaining 38.4 percent victims coming from
other walks of life.

The study reveals the cases of police torture from the angle of age of
victims; 11.4 percent of victims are children of age between 0 to 14 years,
and 28.3 percent between 15 to 30. On the basis of education, the study
showed that 30.1 percent of victims are illiterate or uneducated,
59.1percent literate or educated, and
10.8 percent highly educated.

The most startling fact is that in 47.7 percent cases, the perpetrators,
whether police or private persons, have lodged criminal cases against the
victims. The 7.2 percent of torture victims have died up till now and 5
percent cases of police torture have been compromised. The study also
reveals that highest number of torture cases, 32 percent, took place in
police stations, 27.5 percent at home, 22.6 percent in villages or outside
villages and 17.3 percent elsewhere. The perpetrators are 57.8 percent
constables, 28.5 percent sub inspectors, 9.8 percent inspectors, 2.5 percent
DySPs and 1.4 percent higher officials. The data clearly shows that the
lower ranks in police are responsible for the majority of torture incidents.


But none of this constitutes an answer to the key question: why the police
use torture on ordinary people? The state director of People Watch and
former district & session judge Abhaya Shanker Prasad discloses that the
main purposes of police torture is to acquire information from suspects, as
punishment to the accused, and for intimidation and teaching a lesson for
future. Fake encounters, according to him, are often done for promotion in
service, to get a reward but also under political pressure.

The society is also not less responsible for the incidents of police
torture. It can be said that the society as a whole has become more violent
and demands instant justice. The majority of the people, whether they are
from the professional class or common men, support police torture and also
denies human rights without a second thought. What is the police for, if not
for punishment, is the question they commonly ask. In such a society, the
police alone cannot be blamed for such incidents. For the situation to
change, individuals must start with respecting human rights within the
family as well as the community. Only then will the government's thrust to
create an accountable and transparent system of governance can succeed and
the human rights of ordinary citizens can be protected.

The fact is that the Nitish Kumar administration has shown some signs of
good governance in the state, but the increasing number of incidents of
torture, lynching and atrocities against the weakest section of the
population has put a question mark over the government's achievements.
Police torture is one of the worst forms of human rights violation, which
must not be tolerated. The Constitution of India guarantees the right to
life, equality, liberty and dignity of individual to its people and the
State has duty to protect these rights. There can be no talk of good
governance when the basic human rights of citizens are being violated on a
day-to-day basis.

*Gladson Dungdung* is a human rights activist working against police torture
in Bihar


*Tortured State*

*By Gladson Dungdung*

13 October, 2007
*Tehelka*


*A*t a time when the government of Bihar is trumpeting its achievements as
good governance, the images of a mob led by policemen assaulting a petty
thief in Nath Nagar in Bhagalpur, Bihar, shocked the entire country after it
was shown on TV. To prove its commitment to good governance, the government
took immediate action and punished the two policemen involved in the
incident. But the Police Men Association and many senior police officers
deny that the incident was a case of police torture and want the two
dismissed policemen to be reinstated. They argue that the policemen tried
their best to protect the thief but the crowd did not allow them to do so.

But initial outrage created by the live telecast by TV news channels of the
Allahabad fake police encounter and the Bhagalpur incident has had little
impact on the Bihar police. The cases of police torture are increasing day
by day in the state. Soon after the Bhagalpur incident, the police of Bikram
Police Station of Patna district severely beat and caused the disappearance
of an accused Kaushal Kumar and declared him an absconder to save them from
the allegation of torture. In another incident, the officer in charge of
Phulwarisharif police station broke the hands and legs of a footballer
Santosh Kumar and extracted his teeth. There have also been several
incidents of police locking up minor boys after involving them in false
cases.

It is notable that these heart-breaking incidents of police torture and
high-handedness have taken place near the capital city of Bihar. They serve
as crucial examples of misuse of power by the officials who are responsible
for the law and order. After Nitish Kumar became the Chief Minister of Bihar
there, there has been a rise in the occurrence of such cases, at a scale
that has not been seen in the history of Bihar before.

People's Watch, a human rights organisation has monitored and analysed the
cases of police torture in four districts of Bihar: Patna, Bhojpur, Nalanda
and Nawada. Most of the cases included in this study involved custodial
torture and death, fake encounters, torture of women, lathi charge, police
firing and negligence in duty that took place between July 2006 to June
2007. The study reveals that out of the total victims in these cases of
police torture 76 percent victims are male and 24 percent female.

Furthermore, the study shows that the highest number of victims, about
47.5percent of the total number, is from the Dalit community, followed
by the
backward community with 31 percent and victims from the higher castes
forming 21.5 percent. And occupation-wise comparison of the victims reveal
that 45 percent of victims are daily wage labourers, 9 percent
students, 5.4percent house wives,
3.6 service holders, with the remaining 38.4 percent victims coming from
other walks of life.

The study reveals the cases of police torture from the angle of age of
victims; 11.4 percent of victims are children of age between 0 to 14 years,
and 28.3 percent between 15 to 30. On the basis of education, the study
showed that 30.1 percent of victims are illiterate or uneducated,
59.1percent literate or educated, and
10.8 percent highly educated.

The most startling fact is that in 47.7 percent cases, the perpetrators,
whether police or private persons, have lodged criminal cases against the
victims. The 7.2 percent of torture victims have died up till now and 5
percent cases of police torture have been compromised. The study also
reveals that highest number of torture cases, 32 percent, took place in
police stations, 27.5 percent at home, 22.6 percent in villages or outside
villages and 17.3 percent elsewhere. The perpetrators are 57.8 percent
constables, 28.5 percent sub inspectors, 9.8 percent inspectors, 2.5 percent
DySPs and 1.4 percent higher officials. The data clearly shows that the
lower ranks in police are responsible for the majority of torture incidents.


But none of this constitutes an answer to the key question: why the police
use torture on ordinary people? The state director of People Watch and
former district & session judge Abhaya Shanker Prasad discloses that the
main purposes of police torture is to acquire information from suspects, as
punishment to the accused, and for intimidation and teaching a lesson for
future. Fake encounters, according to him, are often done for promotion in
service, to get a reward but also under political pressure.

The society is also not less responsible for the incidents of police
torture. It can be said that the society as a whole has become more violent
and demands instant justice. The majority of the people, whether they are
from the professional class or common men, support police torture and also
denies human rights without a second thought. What is the police for, if not
for punishment, is the question they commonly ask. In such a society, the
police alone cannot be blamed for such incidents. For the situation to
change, individuals must start with respecting human rights within the
family as well as the community. Only then will the government's thrust to
create an accountable and transparent system of governance can succeed and
the human rights of ordinary citizens can be protected.

The fact is that the Nitish Kumar administration has shown some signs of
good governance in the state, but the increasing number of incidents of
torture, lynching and atrocities against the weakest section of the
population has put a question mark over the government's achievements.
Police torture is one of the worst forms of human rights violation, which
must not be tolerated. The Constitution of India guarantees the right to
life, equality, liberty and dignity of individual to its people and the
State has duty to protect these rights. There can be no talk of good
governance when the basic human rights of citizens are being violated on a
day-to-day basis.

*Gladson Dungdung* is a human rights activist working against police torture
in Bihar

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to