FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

AHRC-PUB-001-2010
June 18, 2010

A Publication Forwarded by the Asian Human Rights Commission

INDIA: Mass Graves in the Indian-administered Kashmir

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) wishes to forward and
introduce you to a preliminary report on Mass Graves in the
Indian-administered Kashmir.

The report entitled 'Buried Evidence - 'Unknown, Unmarked, and Mass
Graves in Indian-Administered Kashmir' (Dr. Angana Chatterji, Advocate
Parvez Imroz et al.; The International People's Tribunal on Human
Rights and Justice in India-Administered Kashmir) is a unique and
daring attempt to find the truth behind the disappearance and
extrajudicial execution of persons in the Indian-administered Kashmir.
The 108-page report challenges the defiance of the Indian government
that has so far allowed the systematic persecution of the people of
Kashmir with impunity, by what is known in international human rights
law as a crime against humanity, and the government's subversive acts
that have prevented every attempt to bring this to light.

The International People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in
Indian-administered Kashmir with the support of the Association of
Parents of Disappeared Persons have met and listened to hundreds of
persons in Kashmir. The Tribunal received communications in
confidence, many of which are reproduced in the report. The report
includes a large array of recommendations to the stakeholders in
Kashmir, including the government that must be acted upon.

While most of India and the rest of the world see the ongoing conflict
in Kashmir as a security issue arising out of the shadow war for
control over disputed territory fought between two neighbouring
countries, India and Pakistan, the report throws light upon the daily
reality of loss, pain and the continuing agony of the ordinary
Kashmiries.

While little is known to the world about the Pakistan-administered
Kashmir, for sure the Indian side of Kashmir has been for the past six
decades the valley of death. There are thousands of ordinary people
living in Kashmir who are confronted with the daily possibility of
violent death at the hands of those whom the state refer to as
'security forces’.

Over the years, Kashmir has become an anomaly of believes. Here the
protector has become the persecutor, safety implies silence, and
honour is not a distant possibility even after death.

The rule of law that India and the state government of Kashmir have
been promising to the people living in this part of the world does not
apply to those who are stationed here to enforce the law. They abduct,
rape, torture and kill at will, and justify it in the name of national
security. Today, Kashmir has become the land of systematic state
oppression. The mass graves, where mutilated and unidentified bodies
are buried stands proof to this gruesome reality of life.

Thousands have lost their life in Kashmir at the hands of those the
state has sent to protect. Their bodies are now mere heaps of gravel
covering unidentified decomposed human remains found throughout
Kashmir. It is normal to find such graves in public places. "Children
ask us about these graves. Children ask us why soldiers are
everywhere. Children grow up here thinking violent death is natural"
(page 33). Mass graves are no more a phenomena that warrants secrecy
in Kashmir. They are found near schools, play grounds and other public
places. It is this normalcy of Kashmir that is frightening.

Yet like the unheard cry for dignity and justice that comes from these
graves, the ordinary people of Kashmir have also refused to forget
what has befallen upon them. "We learned that local communities across
Kashmir insist on remembrance as practice of resistance. To forget,
they say, would be to reconcile to injustice." (page 41). The report
is a unique attempt to give voice to the voiceless of Kashmir.

"There they are, rows upon rows." (page 21). The report is an
encouragement to similar attempts that could be conceived in
Pakistan-administered Kashmir. It is an indicator to what a society
may have to face in other places in India like Manipur where
systematic militarisation in underway in the excuse of combating armed
militancy.

The details available in the report shatter the false notion of
mainstream Indian media that reporting on Kashmir is difficult.

The report in essence is the cry for help and an attempt to restore
the honour of those who have been termed terrorists and anti-national
to justify the brutal crime of the state.

"My son was killed in a fake encounter. Buried by the police as a
'Pakistani terrorist'. We want justice. We want his name restored. We
want his memory healed." (page 9).

The question is will these cries be heard?

The report can be downloaded from the website of International
People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Kashmir (IPTK).

The AHRC wishes to express our sincere gratitude to the Tribunal for
granting permission to forward the report with the above introduction.

# # #

About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional
non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights
issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984.


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