Media Advisory
Embargoed for Release mkovary@nycbar.org
Not for Publication Until
00:01 in Delhi, Tuesday, September 26, 2006
14:31 in New York, Monday, September 25, 2006
(For Tuesday’s Papers)
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Contact: MATT KOVARY
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Human Rights Report
Urges India to
Limit Draconian Antiterrorism Laws and
Implement Police and Criminal Justice Reform
( New York , September 25, 2006 ) – India
should aggressively build upon the initial steps
it recently has taken to limit the use of draconian
antiterrorism laws and to begin to transform
its British colonial-era police and criminal
justice institutions, the Committee on
International Human Rights of the New York City
Bar Association said in a report released
today. The 135-page report analyzes human rights
concerns arising from India’s antiterrorism
and security laws and the ways in which some
of those concerns derive from lingering, colonial-era
practices and institutions.
The report also welcomes the Indian government’s
decision — following the bomb blasts over
the summer in Mumbai — not to enact new
antiterrorism legislation but instead to focus
on upgrading its intelligence and investigative
capacity to prevent acts of terrorism and to
hold perpetrators accountable.
“Respect for human rights when combating
terrorism is a strategic imperative,” said
Anil Kalhan, chair of the Committee’s India
project. “As the Supreme Court of India
has recognized, terrorism often is designed ‘to
provoke an overreaction’ and therefore ‘thrives
where human rights are violated.’ In this
context, draconian laws often provide terrorists
exactly the response they hope for and, in the
process, plant the seeds for future violence.
That is an important lesson for all countries
facing the threat of terrorism.”
Background
In 2004, the government of India took an important
step forward for human rights by repealing many
of the provisions in the Prevention of Terrorism
Act of 2002 (“POTA”), the most recent
in a series of laws, some dating from the colonial
era, that confer the government with sweeping
power to combat terrorism and other security
threats largely outside the normal rules of the
criminal justice system. Despite these laws,
terrorism has persisted, and few actual terrorists
have successfully been prosecuted. At the same
time, like similar laws in other countries, aspects
of India’s antiterrorism and security
laws have raised numerous human rights concerns,
including:
- Overly broad, ambiguous, and malleable definitions of terrorism;
- Pretrial investigation and detention procedures which infringe upon due process, personal liberty, and limits on the length of pretrial detention;
- The use of “special courts” and procedural rules that infringe upon judicial independence and the right to a fair trial;
- Lack of sufficient oversight of police and prosecutorial decision-making to prevent arbitrary, discriminatory, and disuniform application; and
- Broad immunities from prosecution for government officials that obstruct victims' right to effective remedies.
Enforcement of these laws has varied widely
across the country, facilitating human rights
violations that include:
- Arbitrary and selective enforcement against Dalit (so-called “untouchables”), other lower caste, tribal, and religious minority communities;
- Prolonged detention without charge or trial;
- Violations of protected speech and associational activities, particularly of political opponents and journalists;
- Prosecution of ordinary crimes as terrorism-related offenses; and
- Severe police misconduct and abuse, including torture.
Recommendations
While POTA’s partial repeal eliminated several of the law’s
most troubling features, the report analyzes a number of human rights
concerns that have remained, especially since POTA continues to apply
retroactively to many individuals notwithstanding its formal repeal.
The report also urges India to develop mechanisms to provide for
greater administrative and judicial oversight of investigative and
prosecutorial decision-making, and transparency in that decision-making,
to ensure nationwide uniformity and respect for fundamental rights.
Mechanisms for citizens to seek redress and hold government officials
accountable for abuses should be improved. As the Association also
has urged the U.S. government with respect to its antiterrorism laws
and policies since 2001, the Association similarly urges the Indian
government to take a number of steps to cooperate more fully with
U.N. and other international institutions responsible for monitoring
India’s compliance with human rights standards.
The report also discusses the need to reform India’s police
and criminal justice institutions more generally
and the human rights concerns arising from the U.N. Security Council’s
efforts to enforce Resolution 1373, which was adopted after the September
11, 2001 terrorist attacks and has played a significant role in the
public debate over antiterrorism laws in India.
The New York City Bar
Association
The Association’s report draws extensively from information
learned during a two-week visit to India in 2005 by several of its
members. The Association has previously conducted several similar
projects examining the same range of issues in other countries, including
Northern Ireland , Hong Kong , and Indonesia . These visits also
have helped inform the Association’s extensive work examining
the human rights issues arising from antiterrorism initiatives by
the United States since 2001.
As with its previous human rights reports, the Association will
share its report with government officials, lawyers and bar associations,
and human rights advocates in India as part of its efforts to promote
mutual respect for the rule of law and human rights and ongoing dialogue
about antiterrorism and security laws in India, the United States
, and other countries. The Association also will share its report
with officials from entities including the U.S. State Department,
Congress, and the United Nations.
Inquiries about the report should be directed to Anil Kalhan
(kalhan@law.fordham.edu or
telephone: +1-212-636-7699).
The report is available at:
executive summary and recommendations only
full report
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