India's own Abu Ghraib: The Week's story on secret torture chambers
Submitted by admin on 11 July 2009 - 8:52am.

   - Crime/Terrorism <http://www.twocircles.net/news/crime-terrorism>
   - Indian Muslim <http://www.twocircles.net/news/indian-muslim>

 By Adnan Alavi

A 14-year-old boy, Irfan, was crossing the road near his house in Delhi when
a Tavera car screeched to a halt near him, he was bundled into the car and
pinned down under the heavy feet with pistol kept to his head.

The mother kept searching for the boy. Had it not the car's numberplate and
the judiciary's help, the boy may not have been tracked and released in ten
days, from a secret Abu Gharaib-like torture cell in faraway Gujarat where
he underwent such torture which even the adults can't even dream to endure.

This explosive story by news magazine 'The Week' has caused ripples in
administrative circles. After a long time, a news magazine has done such an
investigative story that brings to light something which was either not
known or just talked about in whispers.

The magazine's journalist has unearthed and located these secret detention
camps a la Abu Ghraib in Iraq, which are present in several Indian cities.
The Week's managing editor Philip Mathew has written a special full page
introduction for the story and the purpose of this extraordinary revelation.
He writes:

*..The muffled cry will never reach you. Nor the snap of bone. It is a
strange silence, as if tranquilised by terror....the cover story is vastly
different from Hitlerian terror, what is common though is the sadistic
streak that strips a human of his dignity and sometimes his life...*

The Week's cover story on secret torture champers comes at a time when
mature democracies are pausing to listen to their conscience....many
innocents suffer grievously as they were picked up on mere suspicion and had
no access to legal help, nor their families know where they had been
taken...

The extensive groundwork and the interviews by The Week's senior
correspondent Syed Nazakat are a revelation. Yes, terrorists need to be
treated differently. But does the organised might of the state need to
torture 14-year-old innocent minor by abducting them and keeping them in
soundproof cells that don't have windows and where new definitions of
torture are scripted every minute?

Many are traumatised for their life and others die in these chambers without
anybody's knowledge. Former DGP and Intelligence Bureau (IB) officer, Dr KS
Subramanian's interview is also an eye-opener. He doesn't deny about such
practices and says, "...in terrorist-related cases, the police may feel
incentive to describe people as terrorists and kill them for professional
reasons and career advancement.'

He mentions how farmers were killed in the name of Naxalites. The exhaustive
report also tells about the exact location of these terror cells in Kolkata,
Palanpur (Gujarat), Delhi, Mumbai and Guwahati--often in houses faraway from
police stations.

The importance of the story lies in the fact that often journalists working
on a particular beat get sympathetic and close to the system, rather than
the citizens. In turn, they turn their back on such grave abuse of human
rights. However, the issue is that we always feel it is 'the other' who
suffers, not us and we forget.

When women get gang raped in custody, many feel that such incidents keep
happening to Dalits and Tribals or perhaps to that particular class of
'poor'. When innocents get killed in encounters, we remain indifferent. And
in process cede our rights and liberties.

The use of drugs through injections, water boardings, attaching electrodes
on genitals and other techniques of torture (as described by the magazine)
are not something which any civilised state should allow on innocent
citizens.

As the Week's editor writes, "...Irfan is not just Tasleema's 14 year old
son. He is an Indian citizen with rights, just like your son and mine.....
". Read the story. Link to the editor's
introduction<http://week.manoramaonline.com/cgi-bin/MMOnline.dll/portal/ep/theWeekContent.do?BV_ID=@@@&contentType=EDITORIAL&sectionName=TheWeek%20COVER%20STORY&programId=1073755753&contentId=5670068>and
the story 'India's
secret torture 
chambers<http://week.manoramaonline.com/cgi-bin/MMOnline.dll/portal/ep/theWeekContent.do?BV_ID=@@@&contentType=EDITORIAL&sectionName=TheWeek%20COVER%20STORY&programId=1073755753&contentId=5670071>'.
It's chilling and shocking to say the least. Congratulations to the writer
and the magazine for their courage.

Link:

http://week.manoramaonline.com/

EXCLUSIVE: India's secret torture chambers
   - July 12, 2009


     Imaging: Jijo Sebastian; Photos: Shutterstock
*They are our own Gitmos. Where, far away from the eyes of the law, 'enemies
of the state' are made to 'sing'. THE WEEK investigates

By Syed Nazakat*

Little Terrorist, as the intelligence sleuths came to call him, turned out
to be a hard nut to crack. No amount of torture would work on 20-year-old
Mohammed Issa, who was picked up from Delhi on February 5, 2006. The Delhi
Police believed that he had a hotline to Lashkar-e-Toiba deputy chief
Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhwi, who later masterminded the 26/11 attack on Mumbai. At
a secret detention centre in Delhi, the police and intelligence officers
tried every single torture method in their arsenal-from electric shock to
sleep deprivation-to make Issa sing. He stuck to his original line: that he
had come from Nepal to visit a relative in Delhi. Only, they refused believe
him.

According to the police, the youth from Uttar Pradesh, who had moved to
Nepal in 2000 along with his family after his father, Irfan Ahmed, was
accused in a terrorism case, returned to India to set up Lashkar modules in
the national capital. More than six months after he was picked up, the
police announced his arrest on August 14. He has since been shifted to the
Tihar jail. His lawyer N.D. Pancholi said Issa was kept in illegal custody
for months. If not, let the police say where he was between February 5 and
August 15, he challenged.

Issa could have been detained in any of Delhi's joint interrogation centres,
used by the police and intelligence agencies to extract precious information
from the detainees using methods frowned upon by the law. As one top police
officer told THE WEEK in the course of our investigation, these torture
chambers spread across the country are our "precious assets". They are our
own little Guantanamo Bays or Gitmos (where the US tortures terror suspects
from Afghanistan and elsewhere for information).

Not many admit their existence, because doing so could result in human
rights activists knocking at their doors and bad press for the smartly
dressed intelligence men. It is a murky and dangerous world, according to
K.S. Subramanian, Tripura's former director-general of police, who has also
served in the Intelligence Bureau. "Such sites exist and are being used to
detain and interrogate suspected terrorists and it has been going on for a
long time," he told THE WEEK. "Even senior police officers are reluctant to
talk about the system." So are people who have been to these virtual hells
that officially do not exist.

THE WEEK has identified 15 such secret interrogation centres-three each in
Mumbai, Delhi, Gujarat and Jammu and Kashmir, two in Kolkata and one in
Assam. (One detention centre that is shared by all security and law
enforcement agencies is in Palanpur, Gujarat.) Their locations have been
arrived at after speaking to serving and retired top officers who had helped
set up some of these facilities. Those who have spent time in these places
had no idea where they are. They were taken blindfolded and were allowed no
visitors. The only faces they got to see were those of the interrogators,
day in and day out.

The biggest of the three detention centres in Mumbai, the Aarey Colony
facility in Goregaon, has four rooms. The Anti-Terrorism Squad questioned
Saeed Khan (name changed), one of the accused in the Malegaon blasts of
September 2006, here. He was served food at irregular intervals (led to
temporary disorientation) and was denied sleep. Another secret detention
centre maintained in the city by the ATS at Kalachowky has a sound-proof
room. Sohail Shaikh, accused in the July 2006 train bombings, was held here
for close to two months. "He was kept in isolation for days together," said
an officer. "He crumbled after being subjected to hostile sessions.
Intentional infliction of suffering does not always yield immediate results.
Sometimes you have to wait for many days for the detainee to break. It is a
tedious process." The smallest of the three facilities at Chembur has just
two rooms.

Parvez Ahmed Radoo, 30, of Baramulla district in Kashmir, was illegally
detained in Delhi for over a month for allegedly trying to plot mass murder
in the national capital on behalf of the Jaish-e-Mohammed. The Delhi
Police's chargesheet says he was arrested from the Azadpur fruit market in
Delhi on October 14, 2006. But according to Parvez's flight itinerary, he
travelled from Srinagar to Delhi on September 12 on SpiceJet flight 850. The
flight landed at Delhi airport at 12.10 p.m. He had to catch another flight
at 1.30 p.m. (SpiceJet flight 217) to Pune, where, according to his parents,
he was going to pursue his Ph.D. But he never boarded the Pune flight as he
disappeared from the Delhi airport.

Parvez wrote an open letter from the Tihar jail, where he is currently held,
in which he said he was arrested from the airport on September 12 and kept
in custody for a month. Apparently, he was first taken to the Lodhi Colony
police station and then to an apartment in Dwarka, where electrodes were
attached to his genitals and power was switched on. (Delhi's secret
detention centres are located at Dwarka in south-west Delhi, the Inter-state
Cell of the Crime Branch in Chanakyapuri in central Delhi, and the Lodhi
Colony police station in south Delhi.)

"After my arrest on September 12, I was taken to Pune, where I was shown
pictures of many Kashmiri boys," Parvez said in the letter. "They wanted me
to identify them. As I didn't know any one of them, they brought me to Delhi
again and threw me into the torture chamber of Lodhi Road [sic] police
station. They took off my clothes and started beating me like an animal, so
ruthlessly that my feet and fingers started bleeding. I was later forced to
clean the blood-stained floor with my underwear. They gave me electric
shocks and stretched my legs to extreme limits, resulting in internal
haemorrhage. I started passing blood with my urine and stool. Later I was
shifted to one flat near Delhi airport [he later identified the place as
Dwarka]. From the adjacent flats, voices of crying and screaming had been
coming, indicating presence of other persons being tortured."

Throughout his detention, wrote Parvez, he was asked to lie to his parents
that everything was fine. In the letter he also gave the mobile number from
which the calls were made-9960565152. His family is trying to collect the
call site details of the number to prove his illegal detention.
Delhi-based journalist Iftikhar Geelani, who spent nine days in the Lodhi
Colony police station after his arrest in 2002 on spying charges, is yet to
get over the traumatic experience. "There are lock-ups with such low
ceilings that a person will not be able to stand," he said. "There is an
interrogation centre within the police station where people are brutally
tortured with cables, and some are completely undressed and abused. They
also have a facility to raise the temperature of the cell to a point where
it is unbearable and then suddenly bring it down to freezing cold."

Assistant Commissioner Rajan Bhagat, spokesman for the Delhi Police, denied
the existence of such facilities. "Nobody ever asked me the question [about
secret detention centres]," he said. "We don't operate any such facility in
our police stations."
But Maloy Krishna Dhar, former joint director of the IB, confirmed the
existence of secret detention centres in Delhi and other parts of the
country. He was convinced that detention outside the police station and
torture are an inevitable part of the war on terrorism. "Now I would never
dream of doing the things I did when I was in charge," said Dhar. "But
security agencies need such facilities." Interrogating suspected terrorists
at secret detention centres, he said, is the most effective way to gather
intelligence. "If you produce a suspect before court, he will never give you
anything after that," he said. In other words, once you record the arrest
you are within the realm of the law and you have to acknowledge the rights
of the accused-arrested and contend with his lawyer.

An officer who worked in one of the detention centres admitted that extreme
physical and psychological torture, based loosely on the regime in
Guantanamo Bay, is used to extract information from the detainees. It
includes assault on the senses (pounding the ear with loud and disturbing
music) and sleep deprivation, keeping prisoners naked to degrade and
humiliate them, and forcibly administering drugs through the rectum to
further break down their dignity. "The interrogators isolate key operatives
so that the interrogator is the only person they see each day," he said. "In
extreme cases we use pethidine injections. It will make a person crazy."

Molvi Iqbal from Uttar Pradesh, a suspected member of the
Harkat-ul-Jihadi-Islami who is currently lodged in Tihar, was held at a
secret detention centre for two months according to his relatives. They
alleged that during interrogation a chip was implanted under his skin so
that his movements could be tracked if he tried to escape. "He fears that
the chip is still inside his skin," said one of his relatives. "That has
shattered him."

Kolkata has its own Gitmos in Bhabani Bhawan, now the headquarters of the
Criminal Investigation Department, and the Alipore Retreat in Tollygunj, a
bungalow that is said to have 20 rooms. They were bursting at the seams at
the height of the Naxalite movement, but are more or less quiet now. "A
large number of innocent people, as well as suspected terrorists, have
disappeared after being taken to such secret detention centres," said Kirity
Roy, a Kolkata-based human rights lawyer. "Their bodies would later be
found, if at all, in the fields."

That was how militancy was tackled, first in Punjab and then in Kashmir.
Today no secret prison exists in Kashmir officially after the notorious
Papa-2 interrogation centre was closed down. But secret torture cells thrive
across the state. The most notorious ones are the Cargo Special Operation
Group (SOG) camp in Haftchinar area in Srinagar and Humhama in Budgam
district. Then there are the joint interrogation centres in Khanabal area of
Anantnag district and Talab Tillo and Poonch areas in Jammu region.
Detentions at JICs could last months. Lawyers in Kashmir have filed 15,000
petitions since 1990 seeking the whereabouts of the detainees and the
charges against them without avail.

The most recent victim of the torture regime was Manzoor Ahmed Beigh, 40,
who was picked by the SOG from Alucha Bagh area in Srinagar on May 18. His
family alleged that he was chained up, hung upside down from the ceiling and
ruthlessly beaten up. He died the same night. Following public outrage, the
officer in charge of the camp was dismissed from the service in June.

Maqbool Sahil, a Srinagar-based photojournalist who was held at Hariniwas
interrogation centre for 15 days, says it is a miracle that he is alive
today. "If you tell them [interrogators] you are innocent, they will torture
you so ruthlessly that you will break down and confess to anything," he
says.
Human rights organisations are understandably concerned.   Navaz Kotwal,
coordinator of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, said that there
should be an open debate on the illegal detention centres. "The US had a
debate on the Gitmos. Our government should come forward and respond to
these allegations," she said.

No one wants to compromise the nation's safety, but the torture becomes
unbearable, and questionable, when innocent people like the 14-year-old boy
Irfan suffer (see box on page 30). The security of the country and its
people is important and terrorism should be crushed at all cost. But the
largest democracy in the world should also ensure that human rights are not
violated.

Dhar defended the secret prison system, arguing that the successful defence
of the country required that the security establishment be empowered to hold
and interrogate suspected terrorists for as long as necessary and without
restrictions imposed by the legal system. "The primary mission of the
agencies is to save the nation both by overt and covert means from any
terrorist threat," he said. "But to keep the programme secret is a horrible
burden."
*with Anupam Dasgupta *


-- 
MD. MAHTAB ALAM
[email protected]
Phone:+ 91-9811209345

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
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