Document - India: Chhattisgarh should drop charges against Prisoners of
Conscience Soni Sodi and Lingaram Kodopi and unconditionally release them

*AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL *

*PUBLIC STATEMENT*


 Index: ASA 20/047/2011

11 October 2011


 *India: Chhattisgarh should drop charges against Prisoners of Conscience
Soni Sodi and Lingaram Kodopi and unconditionally release them*


 Amnesty International urges authorities in the central Indian state of
Chhattisgarh to drop the false and politically motivated charges against
Adivasi (Indigenous community) activists Soni Sodi and Lingaram Kodopi, who
are Prisoners of Conscience, and immediately and unconditionally release
them.


 Soni Sodi, a 35-year-old school-teacher was arrested on 4 October in Delhi.
Her 25-year-old nephew, Lingaram Kodopi, was arrested on 9 September in his
native Sameli village in Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh. The
Chhattisgarh police have charged Soni Sodi and Lingaram Kodopi with aiding
Maoist armed groups; one of the charges against them is that they had acted
as couriers and transferred funds amounting to 1.5 million Indian Rupees
(US$300,000) from a mining corporate firm, Essar, to the Maoists. Amnesty
International believes that Soni Sodi and Lingaram Kodopi are prisoners of
conscience as they have been arrested solely for criticizing human rights
violations by the police and security forces in Chhattisgarh. The charges
against them are false and politically motivated.


 In October 2009, Lingaram Kodopi resisted an attempt by the state police to
forcibly recruit him as a Special Police Officer to fight the Maoists. He
was arbitrarily detained for 40 days in a police station and released only
after a habeas corpus petition was filed in the courts. In April 2010, at a
public hearing in Delhi he detailed violations committed by the security
forces against Adivasis in Chhattisgarh, following which the state police
announced that he was the prime suspect in a Maoist attack on a local
Congress party leader’s residence.


 Lingaram Kodopi also highlighted the killing of three Adivasis by the
Central Reserve Police Force and the state police during a confrontation in
three villages – Tadmetla, Timapuram and Morpalli. During the attack, two
persons went missing and at least five women were sexually assaulted.
Lingaram Kodopi was eventually arrested in September on false charges of
aiding the Maoists.


 Soni Sodi, who was trained by a Gandhian peace organization, Vanvasi Chetna
Ashram, has been critical of the violations committed by the security
forces. At the same time, both Soni Sodi and Lingaram Kodopi have also been
outspoken critics of the Maoist pursuit of armed violence. While Soni Sodi’s
husband is in prison on the charge of aiding Maoists, her father was shot in
the leg by the Maoists in June 2011.


 Having opposed Lingaram Kodopi’s arrest, Soni Sodi no longer felt safe in
Chhattisgarh, left her three young children in the care of her relatives and
trekked through the forests to the nearest town and managed, after a week,
to reach Delhi to seek legal assistance. But she was arrested by the
Chhattisgarh police and Delhi Crime Branch police from a bus stand.


 On 7 October, a Delhi court rejected Soni Sodi’s appeal against the state
police move to transfer her to Chhattisgarh. Following this, she,
accompanied by women police personnel, was in transit custody for two days
when she was intensively questioned. On 10 October, the state police
admitted her to a hospital in Dantewada with physical injuries after she
reportedly fainted at a police station where she was questioned. Soni Sodi
has alleged that she had faced mental torture at the hands of the police and
that she would disclose later the details about the injuries she had
sustained. Following this, a magistrate remanded her to judicial custody
until 17 October. She was then sent to a hospital in neighboring Jagdalpur
and, after treatment, is to be lodged in prison.


 The Chhattisgarh police, during an intensive search for Soni Sodi last
week, also raided the Jaipur residence of Kavita Srivatsava, national
secretary of the People’s Union of Civil Liberties (PUCL), one of India’s
foremost human rights organizations, and harassed members of her family
questioning them about the whereabouts of Soni Sodi.


 Kavita Srivatsava, who visited Chhattisgarh in March this year to secure
the release of five security personnel taken hostage by the Maoists,
informed Amnesty International that the state police force was trying to
harass and intimidate her for being critical of its human rights violations.



 Amnesty International calls upon the Chhattisgarh authorities to:



   -

   Drop all politically-motivated charges against Soni Sodi and Lingaram
   Kodopi and immediately and unconditionally release them;
   -

   Ensure a prompt, impartial, independent and effective investigation into
   the allegations of torture and ill-treatment of Soni Sodi. Those police
   officials suspected of involvement including persons with command
   responsibility should be prosecuted, in proceedings which meet international
   standards of fairness. Also, she must be awarded full reparations;
   -

   Immediately halt the harassment of Kavita Srivatsava and the crackdown on
   those defending human rights in Chhattisgarh and take all necessary measures
   to guarantee that human rights defenders are able to carry out their
   legitimate and peaceful human rights activities without fear of harassment
   and intimidation.


 *Background*

More than 3,000 people, including Adivasis, Maoist insurgents, security
forces and members of a state-sponsored civil militia, known as *Salwa Judum
*, have been killed during the last six years of insurgency in Chhattisgarh
and at least 35,000 Adivasis continue to remain displaced in the wake of the
Maoist insurgency and the anti-Maoist operations. All the armed forces
operating in the area, including the security forces, civil militias as well
as the Maoists, have violated human rights laws.


 A number of social and political activists and human rights defenders in
Chhattisgarh have been imprisoned for highlighting the human rights
situation. Among them are Dr Binayak Sen of the PUCL, and Kartam Joga, an
Adivasi leader of the Communist Party of India, both declared as Prisoners
of Conscience by Amnesty International. Dr Sen spent more than two years in
prison and was released on bail by India’s Supreme Court in April 2011 after
he was convicted of sedition and sentenced to life by a lower court. Kartam
Joga is still in prison.


 In July 2011, India’s Supreme Court, acting on two petitions filed by
Kartam Joga and others, ordered the state authorities to disband all
anti-Maoist civil militias*, *following which the authorities issued an
ordinance to ensure that all civil militiamen are absorbed into the state
police as Special Police Officers.




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Peace Is Doable

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