[image: Come, let’s call the bluff on the AFSPA]
THE AFSPA IS AN ACT OF SHAME: A group of women stripped themselves bare in
2004 and protested in front of the Assam Rifles headquarters in Imphal. The
government's stand on the AFSPA proves that the protest by these women never
shamed India.
[ This article assumes a few things. Among others, that the reader is aware
of two things: (i) what's wrong with the Act itself, and (ii) the atrocities
that have been committed because the Act exists. If you are unaware, do
scoll down to links that give you all the relevant information, including
the text of the Act itself. ]

The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958 (AFSPA, for short) is very much
in the news. And so are a host of officers of the Armed Forces, both retired
and serving, who have voiced their desire for the Act to continue. It needs
to be seen why they are being strident about an Act that has been repeatedly
called “draconian” by many who are knowledgeable about it. What also needs
to be exposed are the deceptive arguments they have been dinning into our
ears.

The Chief of Army Staff, Gen VK Singh, has been recalling a Supreme Court
ruling on AFSPA saying that it is neither arbitrary not unconstitutional. He
is certainly right, for once. The SC did hold the validity of the Act. But
what Singh has not been saying is that the judgment is not an endorsement of
the desirability or advisability of the Act. The two things are different.
As the BP Jeevan Reddy Committee had noted, when the constitutional validity
of an enactment is challenged in a court, the court only examines whether
the Act is within the legislative competence of the Legislature which
enacted it, and whether the enactment violates any of the provisions of the
Constitution. The Act is right only in terms of a technicality. The Act is
not arbitrary or unconstitutional, but what security forces have been doing
with it certainly are.

Air Chief Marshal PV Naik, who is also the chairman of the chiefs of staff
committee, said on Wednesday that a soldier deserves all the legal
protection that he can get. Oh yes? For what? To operate with impunity? If
security forces indeed require some provisions to operate in a hostile
counter-insurgency environment, as its advocates have been incessantly
arguing, they need to be reminded that most of the provisions already exist
under various Acts. Even the Jeevan Reddy Committee had pointed out that it
would be more appropriate to recommend insertion of appropriate provisions
in the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (as amended in the year
2004),which is a cognate enactment, instead of suggesting a newpiece of
legislation.

The ULP Act does contemplate, by necessary implication, the use of armed
forces of the Union as well as the other paramilitary forces under the
control of the Union to fight and curb the terrorist activities in the
country. It is for this said reason that the Act has expressly barred,in
Section 49, any suit, prosecution or other legal proceedings against "any
serving or retired member of the armed forces or paramilitary forces in
respect of any action taken or purported to be taken by him in good faith,
in the course of any operation directed towards combating terrorism". In
other words, the legal provisions already exist in a law of the land.

For those who are unaware, the ULP Act is a comprehensive law designed to
ban unlawful organisations; to curb terrorist activities and the funding of
terrorism; and investigation, trial and punishment of persons indulging in
terrorist acts. The AFSPA, on the contrary, deals only with the operations
of the armed forces in a disturbed area. What the Jeevan Reddy Committee had
proposed was an amendment to the ULP Act to include one more chapter. This
would have made it more comprehensive in that it would expressly permit
deployment of armed forces and paramilitary forces to curb terrorism. The
AFSPA was not needed at all.
NAGA VOICES: An anti-AFSPA protest in Kohima in the early 1990s. *
Photograph:* NPMHR

*The BP Jeevan Committee report*

The demand for the repeal / withdrawal of the AFSPA is nothing new to the
Northeast. There have been vociferous demands and passionate protests for
decades. The Indian government never took cognisance of any of these. It
conveniently turned a blind eye and a deaf ear to the screams of despair of
the people of the Northeast. Be it in Nagaland, or Assam, or Manipur. But
after the extrajudicial murder of Manorama Devi at the hands of the Assam
rifles in mid-2004, the state of Manipur was rocked by unprecedented mass
protests. It went on for days, weeks. None of the words of the people of the
state made any impact on the thick-skinned demagogues sitting in far away
New Delhi.

And then something happened. A group of women stripped themselves bare and
protested in front of the Assam Rifles headquarters in Imphal. The
landlocked state, no longer disconnected with the rest of the world now that
the Internet was here, managed to get its word out to the mainland. Photos
were splashed across. The world was shocked. And the government of India
lethargically pulled itself out of its stupor. It blinked for a moment,
yawned at the protestors of Manipur, and did what it can always do – set up
a committee.

The Manmohan Singh government in November 2004 set up a five-member
committee under the chairmanship of Justice BP Jeevan Reddy, a former judge
of the Supreme Court. The other four members were Dr SB Nakade, former vice
chancellor and jurist; P Shrivastav, former special secretary to the
ministry of home affairs; Lt Gen (Retd) VR Raghavan, former Director-General
(Military Operations); and Sanjoy Hazarika, journalist and Northeast affairs
expert.

This committee had its mandate quite clearly laid out:

"Keeping in view the legitimate concerns of the people of the North Eastern
Region, the need to foster Human Rights, keeping in perspective the
imperatives of security and maintenance of public order to review the
provisions of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958 as amended in 1972
and to advise the Govt. of India whether-
(a) To amend the provisions of the Act to bring them in consonance with the
obligations of the Govt. towards protection of Human Rights; or
(b)To replace the Act by a more humane Act.

The Committee may interact with representatives of social groups, State
Governments and concerned agencies of Central Govt./State Govt. legal
experts and individuals, as deemed necessary by the Committee in connection
with the review of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958 as amended in
1972. The Committee will meet as often as required and visit the North
Eastern region, if felt necessary".

The committee submitted its report in June 2005. It recommended that the
AFSPA be repealed. Then the government did what it is wont to – go back to
sleep.

And all of a sudden it has woken up because of the fervent cries for the
repealing of the AFSPA in Jammu and Kashmir where it was promulgated in
1990. The demands are the same as it had been in Manipur. And the response
of the government is the same – it doesn’t want to.

For the record, the Second Administrative Reforms Commission, and the
Working Group on Confidence-Building Measures in Jammu and Kashmir, too had
recommended AFSPA’s repeal.
TERMINATOR TOO: Indian Army soldiers patrol a deserted street in Srinagar.
The Army and other security forces have been frequently charged with
excesses. *Photograph:* AP

*An inconvenient truth and a question of convenience*

Given the context that the Jeevan Reddy Committee was set up and the terms
of references that were laid down for it, the Manmohan Singh government
should have acted in 2005 itself instead of sleeping over it for five long
years. The government had asked the committee to see if there were grounds
for repealing the AFSPA; the committee had worked hard on finding out the
ground truths and said yes. Shouldn’t the government have acted on it?

True, no recommendations of any committee is binding on any government. In
other words, it works like this: I will accept your recommendations if it
suits me, I won’t if it doesn’t. And that’s what it has been. The setting up
of the committee was a farce since, at the end of the day, its findings and
recommendations was not convenient for the government.

That’s what the AFSPA is all about – it is a question of convenience.

The Army needs it because it otherwise cannot satiate the gory desires of
its bloodthirsty jawans and officers who need extreme measures to solve
moderate problems. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) needs since it has, in
turn, traditionally wanted whatever the Army has.

If you care to step back and take a bird’s eye view of what is happening,
you will realise that those braying for the AFSPA to stay are essentially
people who have never been at its receiving end. Be it those callous
politicians (both in Jammu and Kashmir, and elsewhere), or those jingoistic
journalists you read in newspapers or see baring their fangs on television.
Or for that matter, the displaced Kashmiri pandits who have sprung up from
nowhere as far as the AFSPA is concerned. It’s a question of convenience,
you see.

All blaring of rhetoric about India being a great democratic country falls
flat if it is the people of the land who have to pay the price for the
errors of omission and commission of others. The last time I heard,
democracy is supposed to be all about people. Have things changed, or what?

Any contention that the repeal of the AFSPA is also convenient for those
seeking it is an empty-vessel argument that only makes noise. It has no
substance. The call for the AFSPA’s repeal comes from hapless citizens of
this country who have to bear its brunt. And for any insinuation that
terrorists are trying to use such demands as a cloak to hide, the answer is
this: they can try to hide, but they can’t. Because the existing ULP Act is
enough to deal with them. And with the suggested amendments, the Army
doesn’t need the AFSPA.

If these people still say it’s needed, their bluff has been called.


http://www.write2kill.in/critiques/conflict/359.html

-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
*
*
*The UID project i**s going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists
of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.*
*
*
*http://saynotoaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/*
*http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1*<http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1>

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