Please sign the following petition at <
http://www.petitiononline.com/678234h/petition.html>.

In India, such lawless barbarity by the keepers of "law and order" is so
routine.

But it is a rare occasion that a US Journalist is the victim.
It has got to be highlighted just not to obtain justice for this immediate
victim, but to draw attention to the barbaric ways of our law keepers – they
are law unto themselves – and remedy the situation.

Sukla

To:  National Human Rights Commission, India


We the undersigned journalists, academics, public intellectuals, and
citizens of India are shocked the way Delhi Police tortured Joel Elliott, an
American journalist working as a staff writer with The Caravan magazine in
New Delhi, and also as a freelancer for the New York Times, Global Post etc.
The torture faced by Joel Elliott in the morning of Oct 6, 2009, as he was
walking back home was of the utmost nature of violation of human rights, and
all the more alarming given the fact that he was in India as a journalist.
We demand immediate termination of the police officers who attacked Mr.
Elliott, a high level inquiry into the harassment faced by Mr. Elliott,
apologies from the Delhi Police Commissioner, and compensation for Mr.
Elliott for the physical and mental pain suffered by him. Attached below is
the statement of Mr. Elliott.

Oct. 8, 2009

Statement of Joel Elliott about the night of Oct. 5 and the morning of Oct.
6

Background: I am a journalist working for The Caravan, a narrative
journalism magazine run by Delhi Press. I also freelance for a number of
publications, including The New York Times, The Christian Science Monitor,
San Francisco Chronicle and Global Post. I hold a Bachelor of Science degree
in Journalism from Toccoa Falls College in Georgia, USA. My work has won a
number of state, regional and national awards in the United States.

Narrative:

On the evening of Oct. 5, I visited the home of Kate Webb and Ryan Fletcher,
two freelance journalist friends of mine who were flying out to London at 5
the next morning. My own flight, to the United States, would leave in a few
days hence, and so we wanted to spend one more evening together as we three
would not see each other again for quite some time. Their home is in
Jangpura Extension, as is mine. We are separated by some six or seven
blocks, perhaps eight.
I became tired sometime around 2 a.m. Oct. 6, and set out on foot, alone, to
my home. As I was walking in the darkness, I came around the corner of a
building and walked literally into the middle of an altercation between at
least four Delhi Police Officers, in uniform, beating a person beside the
street. As I had not been paying attention, one police officer�s baton
struck me, perhaps by accident, while he was beating the other person on the
ground. Startled, I shouted. When I realized what was happening to the
person on the ground, I shouted again. The police officer closest to me
turned and advanced, shouting something in a language I did not understand.
I shouted back, saying they couldn�t just beat people in the street. In
the middle of the exchange, the officer swung his baton and struck me in the
left upper arm area and began to raise his baton to strike again. I struck
him in the jaw, and as he reeled back, turned and fled, turning off of the
way to my home, as the officers were in the way. They gave chase, but I had
somewhat of head start, and it was quite dark, so I was able to evade their
line of vision for a time. It took me a few moments to find my way back to a
road that I recognized. The problem was that they could easily catch me in
their mobile command post. I began searching for a hiding place, and the
most obvious places were in the row of cars parked along the left-hand side
of the road. I slowed to a fast walk, trying door handles to see if one were
unlocked. I was hoping I could hide inside one of the cars until the police
passed, since I was afraid they found me. Door after door I tried, to no
avail. The last car I tried was an Ambassador cab � I had been
particularly hopeful about this car, because it had darkened windows.
However, I had apparently chosen a car near Bhogal Market that was parked
next to a guard, or a driver, because someone came out of the shadows
shouting. I tried to explain I wanted a hiding place, not to steal a car
(after all, my home was only five or six blocks away � why would I need a
taxi?). But the man was shouting in a language I did not understand, and
apparently did not understand me, either. His shouts alerted the police, who
were already in pursuit, as was mentioned before, and they arrived quickly
and surrounded me. Advancing quickly, they began beating me with their
batons. In self-defense, I swung at, and connected, with a few of them, but
I quickly went down beneath a rain of blows on my head, back, arms, thighs,
shins, buttocks and ankles. The beating continued for some time after I had
fallen.
They shackled my arms behind my back, so tight that to this date I have
drastically reduced sensation in my left thumb. Then they shackled my ankles
together and threw me bodily into the back of the mobile command vehicle.
Three officers climbed into the rear compartment with me, and resumed
beating me, this time with their fists. They also slammed my face into the
seat and into the floor, which action I was unable to resist, since my hands
were shackled behind my back.
After some time we arrived at what I later learned was the AIIMS Hospital.
At the time, however, I was not aware of location, because the officers had
continually slammed my head down, and I was unable to see out of the windows
for some time. They threw me from the rear of the truck, and I landed on the
asphalt hard, without being able to catch myself. Unable to walk, I found
the skin being removed from my knees and lower body as the officers hoisted
me up by my arms behind my back and dragged me into the hospital entry way.
Again, at this point I had no way of knowing where I was; I believed I was
in the police station. When a nurse emerged with a hypodermic needle, I
began screaming for help and for someone to call the US Embassy. After the
officers� rough treatment of me, I was afraid of what the syringe
contained. As far as I knew, the woman was an employee of the police
department. No one explained to me in English what was happening. I
struggled, the officers held me down, and I finally was forced to be
injected by an unknown substance � one that later turned out to be a
sedative. When the injection was complete, the officers again picked up my
upper body and dragged me across the concrete floor and parking lot back to
the truck.
Once inside the truck, the three officers in the rear continued to strike me
in the face and head as we rolled to the police station.
At the police station, the officers hauled me out of the rear of the truck
and tossed me to the ground, still shackled. I began again screaming for
someone to call the US Embassy to report this beating and continued torture.
I lay like this for perhaps two hours.
After 15 or 20 minutes of my shouting for help, an officer came out and
began kicking me, apparently angered by my calls for help. He did this one
or two more times, as I still continued calling for help. After an hour or
two had passed, several officers came out and dragged me into the police
station, still scraping my lower body across the concrete. They threw me
into a holding room with a concrete floor. I lay like this for perhaps a
couple of hours, still shouting for someone to call the US Embassy.
Two officers came in two or three times and kicked me while I was lying on
the floor, apparently to make me be quiet. In between these instances, they
targeted the other person in the room, a young Indian man of perhaps 17 who
had been sitting quietly near a table along the wall. One two or three
occasions, two officers entered the room, and one held him down on the table
while the other beat the soles of his feet with a baton. The young man
screamed, but the beating went on and on.
I am not sure whether this was the same young man I saw being beaten earlier
in the morning.
Around 9 a.m., the police asked for my street address and called for my
flatmate to come and get me. At no point during the six or seven hours they
had held me did they offer me any food or water. At no point did they offer
me the opportunity to make a phone call. At no point until my release did
they unshackle me. At no point did they contact the US Embassy, according to
the Embassy itself. The police are required to notify the US Embassy the
moment a foreigner is arrested.
My flatmate took me to the hospital for treatment. I was covered in blood
from head to toe from the police beating. My pants, which were still on me,
were torn to shreds, and covered in blood. My shirt had been torn from my
body. The hospital staff, concerned about the gaping wound to the side of my
head and blood clots in my right eye, combined with the massive bruising
across the whole of my body, kept me at AIIMS Hospital for two days and one
night. I received five stitches to my eyebrow.

Conclusion:
I request a thorough inquiry into the six to seven hours of beating and
torture I endured at the hands, feet and batons of Delhi Police. I request
that the police officers responsible be removed from their positions.
Further, I seek $500,000 US dollars in compensation for pain and suffering
and mental anguish the Delhi Police inflicted upon me.


Signed by Joel Elliot
Date: October 8, 2009
Time: 4 p.m
Place: New Delhi

India address: Second floor, N-31 B, Jungpura Extension, New Delhi
Mobile number: 09654023864




Sincerely,

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