---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Khalid Azam <[email protected]>





'Now, nobody can call my son a terrorist'
 
Mid-Day.com<http://www.ndtv.com/news/search/results.php?cfeed=tw%3BSU%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.ndtv.com%3BLC%3A%23003399%3BVC%3A%23008000%3BDC%3A%23999999%3BTB%3A0%3BPBG%3A1%3BGP%3A0%3B%3BRBG%3A%23DCDCDC&hl=en&q=Mid-Day.com&site=ndtv.com>,

Monday March 29, 2010, New Delhi

http://www.ndtv.com/news/cities/my-son-was-not-a-jihadi-says-atifs-father-18620.php

Mohammad Ameen is a proud father today, though his son is long dead and
buried.

What has changed for the 55-year-old from Sanjarpur village in Azamgarh
district of Uttar Pradesh is a response to a Right to Information plea that
his son, Atif Ameen, may not be an Indian Mujahideen terrorist on the
suspicion of which he was gunned down in the controversial Batla House
encounter on September 19, 2008.

According to the autopsy report, which was revealed after an RTI plea, the
bullet wounds on the body of Atif - who was a Jamia Millia Islamia student
and used to put up with his friends at the L-18 Jamia Nagar suggest that the
allegations of him being killed in a gunfight might be wrong.

But Mohammad Ameen is concerned only about the fact that now nobody would
dare call his son a terrorist. "No report can bring back my dead son. But it
has at least rendered some authenticity to our claim about his innocence,"
he told MiD DAY. The sudden death of his young son has taken its toll on him
but Mohammad Ameen remains resolute to restore the honour of his family.

"I am really thankful that we have so many people supporting us. I have read
the post-mortem report, but still I want a full judicial inquiry into the
matter," he said. "The police labelled my son a terrorist. But then my son
is not alone. In the past, so many people have been meted out the same
treatment and this will continue," Mohammad Ameen said. He says it a
conspiracy against the minority community. "They are picking on those who
can do well in the future."

Mohammed Ameen's mood changes frequently and sometimes he becomes reclusive,
perhaps lost in his thoughts about Atif. The suffering and hardship faced by
him is reflected in his reluctance to face the media.

The RTI also came as a relief to the family of Mohammad Sajid, roommate of
Atif who was fell to the bullets of the Special Cell cops. The police on the
other hand lost senior Inspector Mohan Chand Sharma.

Sajid, who had never gone out of his hometown in 17 years, moved to Delhi so
that he could be like his role model and cousin Atif. A second year
intermediate student, Sajid left his home on July 10 for the first time so
that he could join coaching classes in Delhi, as there were no proper
arrangements in Sanjarpur, said Dr Ansar-ul Hassan, father of Sajid.

"My son was innocent. He went to study there (Delhi) and he spent just two
months in the city before being shot. We got to know through media reports
about his death in an encounter. The autopsy report clearly shows it was a
fake encounter," Dr Hassan, a BUMS doctor, said.

Dr Javed Akhtar, president of Association for Welfare, Medical, Educational
and Legal Assistance (AWMELA), an umbrella organisation of eminent people
from Azamgarh, said: "They have clearly seen injury marks/abrasion etc on
the bodies that could only be the result of brutal torture prior to shooting
at point blank range."

He also ridiculed the "ever changing" police version vis-a-vis the fatal
injuries to Inspector Sharma. Dr Akhtar demanded an impartial probe into the
incident and emphasised the need for review of all the allegations against
Atif and Sajid "in the light of this report."

*Classified no more*
The highly secretive autopsy report, which the Special Cell of the Delhi
Police refused to make public despite repeated demands by civil society
groups, and which finally came out of the closet on March 17 after sustained
efforts by RTI activist Afroz Alam Sahil, further strengthens the barrage of
questions from all quarters challenging the authenticity of the September
19, 2008 police encounter in which the two youngsters from Azamgarh were
killed. Special Cell cop MC Sharma too was killed in the 'encounter'. His
post-mortem report has also been disclosed. This fact was revealed in the
post-mortem reports of Atif Ameen, 24, and Mohd Sajid, 18, provided by the
NHRC.

*Some points revealed by the RTI

*

   - The four-page autopsy reports reveal that Atif Amin and Mohammad Sajid
   had suffered injuries by a blunt object apart from gunshot wounds.
   - Eight out of 10 bullet entry wounds on the body of Atif are on the back
   side, in the region below the shoulders and at the back of the chest, which
   point to the fact that he was repeatedly shot from behind.
   - Sajid's post-mortem report says there were two wounds on his body which
   were not caused by a firearm. These injuries were antemortem in nature i.e
   caused before his death.
   - Sajid was shot three times in the head with the bullets travelling
   downwards.


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