Hong Kong, June 21, 2009) On 11 May 2010, a Select Committee appointed by
the Kerala Legislative Assembly prepared and published a questionnaire
seeking opinions and advice from the general public, jurists and human
rights organisations concerning the Kerala Police Bill, 2010. The purpose of
the exercise is to receive comments and recommendations concerning the Bill
so that the aspirations of the people of Kerala are reflected in the law
governing the state police, when the Kerala Legislative Assembly finally
enacts the law.

Nervazhi and the Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC) today jointly released a
study on the Bill titled "Kerala, a police state in the making - Act Now!".

Nervazhi is a registered human rights organisation, based in Thrissur
district, Kerala. The ALRC is a registered regional human rights
organisation based in Hong Kong. The ALRC enjoys a General Consultative
Status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations and have
extensive network of partners in India and other Asian countries.

Nervazhi has considerable experience concerning human rights issues, in
particular those related to the functioning of law enforcement agencies in
Kerala. Justice institutions, in particular the police, prosecution and the
judiciary have been ALRC's area of focus since its inception in 1986 and
thus its field of expertise. The ALRC has extensive knowledge about the
functioning of police in various Asian jurisdictions, in particular India.
The ALRC has assisted the drafting of similar laws in South Asian countries,
the latest, a law criminalising torture and custodial death which is
currently under the consideration of the Bangladesh parliament.

For preparing the comments and suggesting recommendations to the Bill,
Nervazhi and ALRC have consulted experts in the field, including senior
police officers serving and retired in India, jurists, academics,
journalists and above all the people of Kerala. For this very reason, the
comments and recommendations will reflect a combination of expertise
emerging from this knowledge base.

We have no claims whatsoever that the following pages contain a
comprehensive analysis of the Bill, but we are certain that the Bill, as it
stands now has the potential to turn Kerala into a police state. The
comments and recommendation are thus made with an intention to prevent this.
We have analysed the Bill bearing in mind various human rights cases that we
have come across from Kerala in particular and India in general. We have
studied the jurisprudence developed internationally concerning law
enforcement agencies and their operational standards and the case law
developed by the courts in India, the Supreme Court of India in particular,
concerning the rights of the citizens while in custody and the duty of the
state as well as that of the law enforcement agencies in dealing with the
citizens while engaged in law enforcement duties.

We have held consultations with the general public about the Bill. The use
of simple language in the document, understandable to the common person, is
thus not an intentional use of any editorial style, but is the result of the
effort taken to write down the opinions the ordinary Indian living in Kerala
provided us concerning the Bill. It reflects the collective wisdom of the
ordinary people, rooted in their experience of dealing with the police as a
state institution.

The recommendations also reflect this collective voice of the people of
Kerala and their hope that their police can be corrected, provided the law
governing the police is also right. Almost everyone whom we have consulted
has informed us in various forms that the state of affairs of the Kerala
police is deplorable at the moment. They want the new law to be a tool to
bring change to this unacceptable status quo.

The ALRC, along with the comments and recommendations is also submitting a
model law for the consideration of the Legislature to criminalise torture
and extrajudicial executions.

We hope that the recommendations and comments will be duly considered and
appropriate changes incorporated in the Bill. We are certain that by
incorporating the recommendations in the Bill, the Kerala State Police will
be provided with a statutory framework to discharge their duties, thereby
contributing to develop India, a country of great people into a mature
democracy.

A copy of the comments and recommendations with the copy of the original
Bill is sent either by email, fax or post to Honourable Governor of Kerala,
Honourable Speaker and all other members of the Kerala Legislative Assembly,
Judges of the Supreme Court and the Kerala High Court, the National and
State Human Rights Commissions, the Director General of Police - Kerala and
all print and electronic media in Kerala.

The comments and recommendations with the Draft Bill can be downloaded from
here.

# # #

About Nervazhi and ALRC: The Asian Legal Resource Centre is an independent
regional non-governmental organisation holding general consultative status
with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. It is the sister
organisation of the Asian Human Rights Commission. The Hong Kong-based group
seeks to strengthen and encourage positive action on legal and human rights
issues at the local and national levels throughout Asia. Nervazhi is a
registered human rights organisation, based in Thrissur, Kerala state,
India.


check following link

http://www.alrc.net/PDF/ALRC-PRL-005-2010-01.pdf

Asian Human Rights Commission
19/F, Go-Up Commercial Building,
998 Canton Road, Kowloon, Hongkong S.A.R.
Tel: +(852) - 2698-6339 Fax: +(852) - 2698-6367

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To post to this group, send an 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