The document summarizes incidents of intimidation and harassment faced by journalists reporting in Chhattisgarh, India. Several journalists like Santosh Yadav, Somaru Nag, Prabhat Singh, and Malini Subramaniam have been arrested, threatened, or forced to leave their homes on false charges for reporting on human rights violations in the region. Their reporting drew unwanted attention to the alleged excesses of security forces fighting Maoist insurgents in the area. The harassment is seen as an attempt to curb freedom of expression and create an information blackout in the conflict-ridden Bastar region of Chhattisgarh.
Since 1992, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has been keeping a record of atrocities committed against journalists in India. During this time CPJ has recorded 27 cases of journalists murdered in direct retaliation for their work. More than half of those killed reported regularly on corruption, crime and politics – three beats often closely intertwined. This has created a challenging environment for small-town journalists and those reporting on corruption, who are often more vulnerable to attack and whose legitimacy is questioned when they are threatened or killed.
Small-town journalists (even if a handful work for big media) often find themselves alone and abandoned when trouble strikes. In the three case studies this report focuses on – and in CPJ’s list of 27 press murders – it is hard to find a single reporter who was working for an English outlet of a large corporate media house in a big city.
An overwhelmed justice system, lack of media solidarity and a culture of impunity only add to the problems, leaving the country’s press vulnerable to threats and attacks. CPJ has found that while it is important for governments to ensure that journalists can safely carry out their work, media organisations play an essential role too, especially in protecting freelancers and local journalists. Apart from highlighting the gap in security, this report includes recommendations for the central government, the Central Bureau of Investigation, state governments, and the media.
The document summarizes a report by the Fact Finding Team of the Editors Guild of India on challenges faced by journalists in Bastar, Chhattisgarh. The team traveled to Jagdalpur and Raipur from March 13-15, 2016 to investigate recent reports of arrests of journalists and threats they face. The team found the reports to be true, with at least two journalists arrested and others threatened or forced to leave. Journalists in the region, caught between state and non-state actors, face pressure from both the administration and Maoists, creating a difficult environment for reporting.
Pucl statement stop criminalising media - protect journalism- final - 23 ju...sabrangsabrang
The PUCL condemns the criminal charges filed against journalist Supriya Sharma for her reporting on hunger and hardship faced by marginalized communities in Varanasi during the COVID-19 lockdown. The charges against her do not apply to the complaint and appear to be an attempt to harass and silence criticism of the government's response. The PUCL highlights numerous other cases where journalists across India have faced police complaints, arrests, and summons for their COVID-19 reporting or other commentary deemed critical of authorities. The PUCL expresses concern over the growing attacks on press freedom and independence and calls for the media to be allowed to fulfill its democratic role without fear of reprisal.
THE BATTLE WITHIN
Union Minister for Law Ravi Shankar Prasad’s statement that his ministry will not be merely a post office but a “stakeholder in the judicial system, including in the appointment of judges”
assumes significance, now that the Narendra Modi regime has won a second term. A face-off between the two pillars of democracy will be disastrous for the country, writes Professor Upendra Baxi
State Level Consultation on Human Rights and Law, RanchiNaveen Bhartiya
The workshop on Human Rights and Law was held at Ranchi, Jharkhand on 14th and 15th July 2012. It dealt with a range of human rights issues in Jharkhand such as police/security forces brutality, essential services in conflict zones (food, health, schools and so on), atrocities on dalits, conditions of prisoners, Forest Rights Act and related issues, displacement, human rights defenders, communalism, and struggles of the urban poor: slums and hawkers in the state.
Mr. Mahatab Alam who moderated the workshop pointed out that themotive behind the Ranchi workshop was twofold. First, to build a network of human rights activists and lawyers in the state of Jharkhand to practically deal with issues such as police atrocities, displacement, food security and so on. Second, to document and focus on the state and police attack on human rights defenders who are raising their voice against illegal mining, police atrocities and other human rights violations in the state. These human rights defenders include lawyers, journalists, women’s rights activists, and those fighting against displacement and other issues. Towards the end of the session, the participants were requested to share their ideas and suggestions on how can we strengthen the network and effectively fight against human rights violations in Jharkhand through law.
This document discusses the threats faced by RTI activists in India who seek information about corruption and malpractice under the Right to Information Act. It notes that at least 12 RTI activists have been murdered since 2010 for filing RTI applications, with many others facing attacks, harassment, and social ostracization. The document argues that RTI activists are extremely vulnerable as they often act alone against local authorities and politicians. It calls for amendments to the RTI Act to provide explicit legal protections for activists seeking information, including mandatory registration of threats and attacks, time-bound investigations, and expedited trials.
P eople's Tribunal on the Prevention of Terrorist Act (POTA) and Other Securi...sabrangsabrang
This document provides background information on the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA) passed by the Indian Parliament in 2002. It summarizes the controversy around POTA's passage and concerns that it could be misused due to its broad definitions of terrorism. Critics argue POTA violates civil liberties and international human rights standards more than previous anti-terrorism laws like TADA. It allows detention without charge for up to 180 days, treats certain activities like membership in certain groups as criminal offenses without requiring criminal intent, and restricts due process in trials under POTA.
The report documents how the Delhi Police framed and arrested constitutional rights defenders in India who were protesting new citizenship laws. It details how the police failed to control violence against Muslims in February 2020, and instead targeted Muslims and activists by fabricating a conspiracy theory. The report charges the police with complicity in the violence, failing to help survivors, refusing to file complaints against perpetrators, and arresting protesters to silence dissent. It aims to show how the police manufactured evidence to criminalize legitimate protests.
Since 1992, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has been keeping a record of atrocities committed against journalists in India. During this time CPJ has recorded 27 cases of journalists murdered in direct retaliation for their work. More than half of those killed reported regularly on corruption, crime and politics – three beats often closely intertwined. This has created a challenging environment for small-town journalists and those reporting on corruption, who are often more vulnerable to attack and whose legitimacy is questioned when they are threatened or killed.
Small-town journalists (even if a handful work for big media) often find themselves alone and abandoned when trouble strikes. In the three case studies this report focuses on – and in CPJ’s list of 27 press murders – it is hard to find a single reporter who was working for an English outlet of a large corporate media house in a big city.
An overwhelmed justice system, lack of media solidarity and a culture of impunity only add to the problems, leaving the country’s press vulnerable to threats and attacks. CPJ has found that while it is important for governments to ensure that journalists can safely carry out their work, media organisations play an essential role too, especially in protecting freelancers and local journalists. Apart from highlighting the gap in security, this report includes recommendations for the central government, the Central Bureau of Investigation, state governments, and the media.
The document summarizes a report by the Fact Finding Team of the Editors Guild of India on challenges faced by journalists in Bastar, Chhattisgarh. The team traveled to Jagdalpur and Raipur from March 13-15, 2016 to investigate recent reports of arrests of journalists and threats they face. The team found the reports to be true, with at least two journalists arrested and others threatened or forced to leave. Journalists in the region, caught between state and non-state actors, face pressure from both the administration and Maoists, creating a difficult environment for reporting.
Pucl statement stop criminalising media - protect journalism- final - 23 ju...sabrangsabrang
The PUCL condemns the criminal charges filed against journalist Supriya Sharma for her reporting on hunger and hardship faced by marginalized communities in Varanasi during the COVID-19 lockdown. The charges against her do not apply to the complaint and appear to be an attempt to harass and silence criticism of the government's response. The PUCL highlights numerous other cases where journalists across India have faced police complaints, arrests, and summons for their COVID-19 reporting or other commentary deemed critical of authorities. The PUCL expresses concern over the growing attacks on press freedom and independence and calls for the media to be allowed to fulfill its democratic role without fear of reprisal.
THE BATTLE WITHIN
Union Minister for Law Ravi Shankar Prasad’s statement that his ministry will not be merely a post office but a “stakeholder in the judicial system, including in the appointment of judges”
assumes significance, now that the Narendra Modi regime has won a second term. A face-off between the two pillars of democracy will be disastrous for the country, writes Professor Upendra Baxi
State Level Consultation on Human Rights and Law, RanchiNaveen Bhartiya
The workshop on Human Rights and Law was held at Ranchi, Jharkhand on 14th and 15th July 2012. It dealt with a range of human rights issues in Jharkhand such as police/security forces brutality, essential services in conflict zones (food, health, schools and so on), atrocities on dalits, conditions of prisoners, Forest Rights Act and related issues, displacement, human rights defenders, communalism, and struggles of the urban poor: slums and hawkers in the state.
Mr. Mahatab Alam who moderated the workshop pointed out that themotive behind the Ranchi workshop was twofold. First, to build a network of human rights activists and lawyers in the state of Jharkhand to practically deal with issues such as police atrocities, displacement, food security and so on. Second, to document and focus on the state and police attack on human rights defenders who are raising their voice against illegal mining, police atrocities and other human rights violations in the state. These human rights defenders include lawyers, journalists, women’s rights activists, and those fighting against displacement and other issues. Towards the end of the session, the participants were requested to share their ideas and suggestions on how can we strengthen the network and effectively fight against human rights violations in Jharkhand through law.
This document discusses the threats faced by RTI activists in India who seek information about corruption and malpractice under the Right to Information Act. It notes that at least 12 RTI activists have been murdered since 2010 for filing RTI applications, with many others facing attacks, harassment, and social ostracization. The document argues that RTI activists are extremely vulnerable as they often act alone against local authorities and politicians. It calls for amendments to the RTI Act to provide explicit legal protections for activists seeking information, including mandatory registration of threats and attacks, time-bound investigations, and expedited trials.
P eople's Tribunal on the Prevention of Terrorist Act (POTA) and Other Securi...sabrangsabrang
This document provides background information on the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA) passed by the Indian Parliament in 2002. It summarizes the controversy around POTA's passage and concerns that it could be misused due to its broad definitions of terrorism. Critics argue POTA violates civil liberties and international human rights standards more than previous anti-terrorism laws like TADA. It allows detention without charge for up to 180 days, treats certain activities like membership in certain groups as criminal offenses without requiring criminal intent, and restricts due process in trials under POTA.
The report documents how the Delhi Police framed and arrested constitutional rights defenders in India who were protesting new citizenship laws. It details how the police failed to control violence against Muslims in February 2020, and instead targeted Muslims and activists by fabricating a conspiracy theory. The report charges the police with complicity in the violence, failing to help survivors, refusing to file complaints against perpetrators, and arresting protesters to silence dissent. It aims to show how the police manufactured evidence to criminalize legitimate protests.
What it means to be a muslim in india todaysabrangsabrang
The document summarizes the findings of two tribunals held in India regarding atrocities committed against minorities, particularly Muslims, in the name of fighting terrorism. The tribunals heard testimonies that showed many innocent young Muslim men have been wrongly arrested and tortured by police after terrorist attacks with no evidence against them. The police investigation has been biased and based on the false assumption that all terrorists are Muslim. The document calls for urgent policy changes and protection of minority rights to ensure equality and justice for all.
Losing Faith-The Muzaffarnagar gang-rape survivors’ struggle for justiceAmnesty India
In 2013, communal violence between Hindus and Muslims in and around Muzaffarnagar and Shamli districts in Uttar Pradesh led to the deaths of over 60 people and the displacement of tens of thousands.
Over three years later, seven Muslim women who were gang-raped during the violence are yet to receive justice.
The report documents the state repression of protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act in Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. It estimates that approximately 350 FIRs were filed against around 5000 named individuals and over 100,000 unnamed people. Around 3000 people were illegally arrested, many remaining in jail over two years later. At least 23 Muslims were killed by bullet injuries, but the state has denied responsibility and not initiated investigations. Over 500 arbitrary recovery notices were issued for damages of Rs. 3.55 crores without due process. The report highlights how fundamental rights to protest and dissent were violated and many families faced intimidation, harassment and denial of justice after the crackdown on peaceful protests. It calls for the state to make
This document summarizes the Yearly Report 2020 of the Religious Liberty Commission of the Evangelical Fellowship of India. It documents 327 cases of hate and targeted violence against Christians in India in 2020. The states with the highest number of incidents were Uttar Pradesh (95), Chhattisgarh (55), Jharkhand (28), and Madhya Pradesh (25). The months of March and October saw the highest number of incidents overall. The report appeals to the Government of India and state governments to ensure security for religious minorities.
First india ahmedabad edition-11 october 2020FIRST INDIA
Get TODAY NEWS IN ENGLISH from Gujarat,India & around the world. First India News Paper provides English News Paper Today Exclusive on politics, sports, entertainment, business, life style and many more.Visit First India For Latest News Update.
Visit:- https://firstindia.co.in/newspaper
Human Rights Watch issued a report documenting violence surrounding Bangladesh's 2014 national elections, finding that both opposition groups and the government were responsible. Opposition parties violently protested the election, while the government cracked down brutally in response. Hundreds were killed or injured. HRW called on political leaders to condemn violence and for the government to prosecute security forces accused of unlawful killings, torture, and other abuses. Without justice and reforms, the group warned that violence could deteriorate further in Bangladesh.
First india jaipur edition-04 october 2020FIRST INDIA
Get Exclusive Rajasthani News in english from Rajasthan,India & around the world. First India-Rajasthan provides Indian Newspapers In English Exclusive on politics, sports, entertainment, business, life style and many more.Choose once us among All India Newspaper players like The Times of India,Hindustan Times & The Hindu.Visit First India News Paper For Latest News Update.
Visit:- https://firstindia.co.in/newspaper
This document provides an introduction and overview of "witch" hunting related violence against women in Jharkhand, India. It discusses how women accused of being "witches" face severe physical and psychological violence, including assault, rape, and murder. It notes that "witch" hunting disproportionately impacts women and violates their fundamental rights. The organization Association for Advocacy and Legal Initiatives (AALI) aims to address this issue through legal support for victims and their families. While "witch" hunting is often seen as a tribal practice, evidence shows it also occurs in non-tribal areas. The document acknowledges those who made the research and report possible and provides an index of topics to be covered.
Caveat - VOLUME 14/II, JULY 2010 - LBH MasyarakatLBH Masyarakat
The attacks against the offices of Tempo magazine and anti-corruption activist Tama Satrya Langkun early this month dominates the coverage in this month’s CAVEAT.
The Main Report investigates the incidents and explores need for the Indonesian National Police Force to conduct institutional reform.
This month our Additional Feature examines the urgency to develop and pass specific laws for protection of human rights activists. The safety of human rights activists is not a problem faced only in Indonesia. In this edition’s Rights in Asia, our partner the Asian Human Rights Commission has brought to light the plight of human rights activists in the Philippines, Nepal and Pakistan.
In the Opinion column, Maeve Showell highlights the urgency for Indonesia to ratify the UN Refugee Convention as regional debate heats up in the lead up to the Australian election. As always, CAVEAT also updates you on the latest activities of LBH Masyarakat.
This month LBH Masyarakat participated in the XVIII International AIDS Conference in Vienna where Ricky Gunawan delivered his presentation titled “Legal Literacy in Indonesia: A Tool for Empowering Drug Users, Fishermen, and People Living with HIV to facilitate self-representation.” In other news comes from one of our employees, Ajeng Larasati, has just been named as a 2010 JusticeMakers Fellow which brought three volunteers of International Bridges to Justice (IBJ) came to LBH Masyarakat to assist LBH Masyarakat in running its program.
In addition to our regular columns, LBH Masyarakat had also interviewed Taufik Basari, one of the youngest and most promising human rights lawyers in Indonesia. In the middle of his busy schedule, he shared with us his views on youth and human rights for our Interview.
Modi 300 days - Documenting Hate and Communal Violence under the Modi Regimesabrangsabrang
This document summarizes communal violence in India under the Modi regime from May 2014 to March 2015 based on reports from human rights and civil society groups. It notes that 43 deaths occurred in over 600 cases of violence, with 149 targeting Christians and the rest targeting Muslims. Many of the attacks involved threats, intimidation, and coercion against religious minorities by Hindu nationalist groups like the RSS with complicity from police at times. Notable incidents included the rape of a 70-year-old nun in West Bengal, over 600 communal conflicts in Uttar Pradesh after the 2014 elections, and the lynching of an IT professional in Pune over a Facebook post. The report indicates a rising tide of hate and divisiveness against religious minorities under the Modi
The document discusses various aspects of elections in India including campaigning, polling, counting of votes and issues that need to be addressed such as criminalization of politics, abuse of money power and manipulation of votes.
It notes that campaigning takes place for 2 weeks prior to polling where candidates contact voters and parties mobilize supporters. Polling involves voters casting their votes at polling booths using electronic voting machines. Votes are then counted a few days later.
Key issues discussed include the presence of criminals in politics, booth capturing, tampering of EVMs, communalism and use of film stars to influence voters. It also examines abuse of money power through anonymous political donations, lack of spending limits and widespread bribery
First india ahmedabad edition-05 october 2020FIRST INDIA
Welcome to the Official Website of First India E-Paper. We are the best ENGLISH NEWS PAPER in India with Special coverage of Rajasthan & Gujrat. Follow us for the LATEST NEWS & Top LIVE NEWS in India and around the world.
Visit:- https://firstindia.co.in/newspaper
This document summarizes details of a team working on the problem of corruption and criminalization in Indian politics. It provides an overview of the causes such as money and muscle power influencing elections due to corruption. It also outlines proposed solutions like demonetization, introducing negative voting options and fingerprint-based electronic voting. Challenges before the Election Commission are discussed like candidates being selected based on caste/community support and the use of money/liquor for votes. Statistics on serious criminal cases filed against politicians from 2004-2009 are presented.
Report vigilantism and attack on the freedom of religion in meerutZahidManiyar
This document summarizes an incident of communal violence and vigilantism in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, India. It discusses the history of communal tensions and riots in Meerut dating back to the 1930s. On September 20, 2017, two members of the Jehovah's Witnesses religious group were invited into a Hindu man's home but then detained against their will for over an hour, assaulted, and handed over to the police with false allegations of forced conversion efforts. The police refused to register a complaint about the assault and illegally detained the victims overnight without medical treatment. The document analyzes this incident as an example of the shift in India to smaller scale vigilantism targeting religious minorities, with the tacit support
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016 Burma-Bureau of Democracy,...MYO AUNG Myanmar
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016
Burma
https://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/#wrapper
2016 Human Rights Reports – Secretary’s Preface
https://www.forbes.com/profile/rex-tillerson/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rex_Tillerson
http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?year=2016&dlid=265324
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016
Burma
Burma has a quasi-parliamentary system of government in which the national parliament selects the president, and constitutional provisions grant one-quarter of national, regional, and state parliamentary seats to active duty military appointees; all other seats are open to elections. The military also has the authority to appoint the ministers of defense, home affairs, and border affairs and assume power indefinitely over all branches of the government should the president declare a national state of emergency. In November 2015 the country held nationwide parliamentary elections that the public widely accepted as a credible reflection of the will of the people. The then opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), chaired by Aung San Suu Kyi, won 390 of 491 contested seats in the bicameral parliament. Parliament elected NLD member U Htin Kyaw as president in March and created the position of State Counsellor for Aung San Suu Kyi in April, cementing her position as the country’s de facto leader.
Civilian authorities did not maintain effective control over the security forces.
http://burmese.voanews.com/a/myanmar-army-still-involving-strong-under-new-nld-government-/3752110.html?ltflags=mailer
ျမန္မာလူ႕အခြင့္အေရးအဓိကျပႆ နာ ၃ ရပ္ ၂၀၁၆ ကန္အစီရင္ခံစာေထာက္ျပ
Chri and aali barriers in accessing justice englishsabrangsabrang
The report documents barriers faced by 14 rape survivors in Uttar Pradesh when attempting to access justice by reporting assaults to the police. Key findings include:
1) Police delayed or refused to register FIRs in most cases, with registration taking up to 228 days in some instances.
2) In 12 of 14 cases, survivors' complaints were recorded by male police officers instead of female officers as required by law.
3) Survivors reported facing disbelief, derision, and discrimination from police who assumed complaints were false.
4) Dalit survivors faced additional discrimination on the basis of caste in addition to gender.
Mangal Prabhat Lodha, the BJP's Mumbai Unit President, gave a communally inflammatory speech targeting the Congress candidate Amin Patel. In his speech, Lodha referred to past riots and terror attacks in Mumbai to imply that the bombs and bullets used came from the nearby Muslim-dominated areas. He suggested voters should support the BJP-Shiv Sena alliance to keep Mumbai safe. Lodha's speech violates the Model Code of Conduct and the Representation of People Act. The Center for Justice and Peace has written to the Chief Electoral Officer of Maharashtra to take cognizance of this serious violation and strict action against Lodha for his hate speech.
First india ahmedabad edition-09 march 2021FIRST INDIA
First India published from Ahmedabad & Jaipur. Get Latest News In English on politics, sports, entertainment, business, lifestyle and many more. We are a formidable news Provider especially from Gujarat, Rajasthan and Power corridor of Delhi like The Times of India, Hindustan Times & The Hindu, etc. Read First India Today Newspaper.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/epaper
Saffron On The Rampage - Gujarat’s Muslims pay for Lashkar’s Deedssabrangsabrang
A collective investigation into the Aug 3-10, 2000 post
bandh violence all over Gujarat state tracks the most
recent evidence of how the state ‘s minorities — Muslims
and Christians — live in a state of terror, ghettoised,
with their patriotism forever under question.
Gujarat 1998 - 2000 is live testimony to the utter contempt
that the Indian Constitution and the rule of law
have been reduced to, by BJP elected representatives
and VHP-BD and RSS hit squads
When will the rest of India wake up to the mockery of
the Constitution taking place in the laboratory of
Hindu Rashtra?
छत्तीसगढ़, मिजोरम, मध्य प्रदेश, राजस्थान और तेलंगाना में अभिव्यक्ति की स्वतंत्रता की स्थिति पर फ्री स्पीच कलेक्टिव की 50 पन्नों की इस जांच से राजनीतिक विभाजन पर एक असहज राजनीतिक सहमति देखी जा सकती है - जिनमें से सभी में विधानसभा चुनाव होने हैं।
The document discusses several issues related to women's rights and gender discrimination in India. It notes that while the Indian constitution guarantees equality, in practice there remains a large gulf in gender justice. Successive governments have done little to improve the situation. India ranks poorly on gender equality indices and crimes against women such as rape are still common. While some laws have been strengthened after recent reforms, women remain reluctant to report crimes due to security, social and other barriers. The document argues that more needs to be done to protect women's rights and remove barriers to justice in India.
The Press of India is considered one of the most independent Presses all over the world. But is it really true?
Do we really have a free press in the country?
What it means to be a muslim in india todaysabrangsabrang
The document summarizes the findings of two tribunals held in India regarding atrocities committed against minorities, particularly Muslims, in the name of fighting terrorism. The tribunals heard testimonies that showed many innocent young Muslim men have been wrongly arrested and tortured by police after terrorist attacks with no evidence against them. The police investigation has been biased and based on the false assumption that all terrorists are Muslim. The document calls for urgent policy changes and protection of minority rights to ensure equality and justice for all.
Losing Faith-The Muzaffarnagar gang-rape survivors’ struggle for justiceAmnesty India
In 2013, communal violence between Hindus and Muslims in and around Muzaffarnagar and Shamli districts in Uttar Pradesh led to the deaths of over 60 people and the displacement of tens of thousands.
Over three years later, seven Muslim women who were gang-raped during the violence are yet to receive justice.
The report documents the state repression of protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act in Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. It estimates that approximately 350 FIRs were filed against around 5000 named individuals and over 100,000 unnamed people. Around 3000 people were illegally arrested, many remaining in jail over two years later. At least 23 Muslims were killed by bullet injuries, but the state has denied responsibility and not initiated investigations. Over 500 arbitrary recovery notices were issued for damages of Rs. 3.55 crores without due process. The report highlights how fundamental rights to protest and dissent were violated and many families faced intimidation, harassment and denial of justice after the crackdown on peaceful protests. It calls for the state to make
This document summarizes the Yearly Report 2020 of the Religious Liberty Commission of the Evangelical Fellowship of India. It documents 327 cases of hate and targeted violence against Christians in India in 2020. The states with the highest number of incidents were Uttar Pradesh (95), Chhattisgarh (55), Jharkhand (28), and Madhya Pradesh (25). The months of March and October saw the highest number of incidents overall. The report appeals to the Government of India and state governments to ensure security for religious minorities.
First india ahmedabad edition-11 october 2020FIRST INDIA
Get TODAY NEWS IN ENGLISH from Gujarat,India & around the world. First India News Paper provides English News Paper Today Exclusive on politics, sports, entertainment, business, life style and many more.Visit First India For Latest News Update.
Visit:- https://firstindia.co.in/newspaper
Human Rights Watch issued a report documenting violence surrounding Bangladesh's 2014 national elections, finding that both opposition groups and the government were responsible. Opposition parties violently protested the election, while the government cracked down brutally in response. Hundreds were killed or injured. HRW called on political leaders to condemn violence and for the government to prosecute security forces accused of unlawful killings, torture, and other abuses. Without justice and reforms, the group warned that violence could deteriorate further in Bangladesh.
First india jaipur edition-04 october 2020FIRST INDIA
Get Exclusive Rajasthani News in english from Rajasthan,India & around the world. First India-Rajasthan provides Indian Newspapers In English Exclusive on politics, sports, entertainment, business, life style and many more.Choose once us among All India Newspaper players like The Times of India,Hindustan Times & The Hindu.Visit First India News Paper For Latest News Update.
Visit:- https://firstindia.co.in/newspaper
This document provides an introduction and overview of "witch" hunting related violence against women in Jharkhand, India. It discusses how women accused of being "witches" face severe physical and psychological violence, including assault, rape, and murder. It notes that "witch" hunting disproportionately impacts women and violates their fundamental rights. The organization Association for Advocacy and Legal Initiatives (AALI) aims to address this issue through legal support for victims and their families. While "witch" hunting is often seen as a tribal practice, evidence shows it also occurs in non-tribal areas. The document acknowledges those who made the research and report possible and provides an index of topics to be covered.
Caveat - VOLUME 14/II, JULY 2010 - LBH MasyarakatLBH Masyarakat
The attacks against the offices of Tempo magazine and anti-corruption activist Tama Satrya Langkun early this month dominates the coverage in this month’s CAVEAT.
The Main Report investigates the incidents and explores need for the Indonesian National Police Force to conduct institutional reform.
This month our Additional Feature examines the urgency to develop and pass specific laws for protection of human rights activists. The safety of human rights activists is not a problem faced only in Indonesia. In this edition’s Rights in Asia, our partner the Asian Human Rights Commission has brought to light the plight of human rights activists in the Philippines, Nepal and Pakistan.
In the Opinion column, Maeve Showell highlights the urgency for Indonesia to ratify the UN Refugee Convention as regional debate heats up in the lead up to the Australian election. As always, CAVEAT also updates you on the latest activities of LBH Masyarakat.
This month LBH Masyarakat participated in the XVIII International AIDS Conference in Vienna where Ricky Gunawan delivered his presentation titled “Legal Literacy in Indonesia: A Tool for Empowering Drug Users, Fishermen, and People Living with HIV to facilitate self-representation.” In other news comes from one of our employees, Ajeng Larasati, has just been named as a 2010 JusticeMakers Fellow which brought three volunteers of International Bridges to Justice (IBJ) came to LBH Masyarakat to assist LBH Masyarakat in running its program.
In addition to our regular columns, LBH Masyarakat had also interviewed Taufik Basari, one of the youngest and most promising human rights lawyers in Indonesia. In the middle of his busy schedule, he shared with us his views on youth and human rights for our Interview.
Modi 300 days - Documenting Hate and Communal Violence under the Modi Regimesabrangsabrang
This document summarizes communal violence in India under the Modi regime from May 2014 to March 2015 based on reports from human rights and civil society groups. It notes that 43 deaths occurred in over 600 cases of violence, with 149 targeting Christians and the rest targeting Muslims. Many of the attacks involved threats, intimidation, and coercion against religious minorities by Hindu nationalist groups like the RSS with complicity from police at times. Notable incidents included the rape of a 70-year-old nun in West Bengal, over 600 communal conflicts in Uttar Pradesh after the 2014 elections, and the lynching of an IT professional in Pune over a Facebook post. The report indicates a rising tide of hate and divisiveness against religious minorities under the Modi
The document discusses various aspects of elections in India including campaigning, polling, counting of votes and issues that need to be addressed such as criminalization of politics, abuse of money power and manipulation of votes.
It notes that campaigning takes place for 2 weeks prior to polling where candidates contact voters and parties mobilize supporters. Polling involves voters casting their votes at polling booths using electronic voting machines. Votes are then counted a few days later.
Key issues discussed include the presence of criminals in politics, booth capturing, tampering of EVMs, communalism and use of film stars to influence voters. It also examines abuse of money power through anonymous political donations, lack of spending limits and widespread bribery
First india ahmedabad edition-05 october 2020FIRST INDIA
Welcome to the Official Website of First India E-Paper. We are the best ENGLISH NEWS PAPER in India with Special coverage of Rajasthan & Gujrat. Follow us for the LATEST NEWS & Top LIVE NEWS in India and around the world.
Visit:- https://firstindia.co.in/newspaper
This document summarizes details of a team working on the problem of corruption and criminalization in Indian politics. It provides an overview of the causes such as money and muscle power influencing elections due to corruption. It also outlines proposed solutions like demonetization, introducing negative voting options and fingerprint-based electronic voting. Challenges before the Election Commission are discussed like candidates being selected based on caste/community support and the use of money/liquor for votes. Statistics on serious criminal cases filed against politicians from 2004-2009 are presented.
Report vigilantism and attack on the freedom of religion in meerutZahidManiyar
This document summarizes an incident of communal violence and vigilantism in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, India. It discusses the history of communal tensions and riots in Meerut dating back to the 1930s. On September 20, 2017, two members of the Jehovah's Witnesses religious group were invited into a Hindu man's home but then detained against their will for over an hour, assaulted, and handed over to the police with false allegations of forced conversion efforts. The police refused to register a complaint about the assault and illegally detained the victims overnight without medical treatment. The document analyzes this incident as an example of the shift in India to smaller scale vigilantism targeting religious minorities, with the tacit support
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016 Burma-Bureau of Democracy,...MYO AUNG Myanmar
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016
Burma
https://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/#wrapper
2016 Human Rights Reports – Secretary’s Preface
https://www.forbes.com/profile/rex-tillerson/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rex_Tillerson
http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?year=2016&dlid=265324
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016
Burma
Burma has a quasi-parliamentary system of government in which the national parliament selects the president, and constitutional provisions grant one-quarter of national, regional, and state parliamentary seats to active duty military appointees; all other seats are open to elections. The military also has the authority to appoint the ministers of defense, home affairs, and border affairs and assume power indefinitely over all branches of the government should the president declare a national state of emergency. In November 2015 the country held nationwide parliamentary elections that the public widely accepted as a credible reflection of the will of the people. The then opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), chaired by Aung San Suu Kyi, won 390 of 491 contested seats in the bicameral parliament. Parliament elected NLD member U Htin Kyaw as president in March and created the position of State Counsellor for Aung San Suu Kyi in April, cementing her position as the country’s de facto leader.
Civilian authorities did not maintain effective control over the security forces.
http://burmese.voanews.com/a/myanmar-army-still-involving-strong-under-new-nld-government-/3752110.html?ltflags=mailer
ျမန္မာလူ႕အခြင့္အေရးအဓိကျပႆ နာ ၃ ရပ္ ၂၀၁၆ ကန္အစီရင္ခံစာေထာက္ျပ
Chri and aali barriers in accessing justice englishsabrangsabrang
The report documents barriers faced by 14 rape survivors in Uttar Pradesh when attempting to access justice by reporting assaults to the police. Key findings include:
1) Police delayed or refused to register FIRs in most cases, with registration taking up to 228 days in some instances.
2) In 12 of 14 cases, survivors' complaints were recorded by male police officers instead of female officers as required by law.
3) Survivors reported facing disbelief, derision, and discrimination from police who assumed complaints were false.
4) Dalit survivors faced additional discrimination on the basis of caste in addition to gender.
Mangal Prabhat Lodha, the BJP's Mumbai Unit President, gave a communally inflammatory speech targeting the Congress candidate Amin Patel. In his speech, Lodha referred to past riots and terror attacks in Mumbai to imply that the bombs and bullets used came from the nearby Muslim-dominated areas. He suggested voters should support the BJP-Shiv Sena alliance to keep Mumbai safe. Lodha's speech violates the Model Code of Conduct and the Representation of People Act. The Center for Justice and Peace has written to the Chief Electoral Officer of Maharashtra to take cognizance of this serious violation and strict action against Lodha for his hate speech.
First india ahmedabad edition-09 march 2021FIRST INDIA
First India published from Ahmedabad & Jaipur. Get Latest News In English on politics, sports, entertainment, business, lifestyle and many more. We are a formidable news Provider especially from Gujarat, Rajasthan and Power corridor of Delhi like The Times of India, Hindustan Times & The Hindu, etc. Read First India Today Newspaper.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/epaper
Saffron On The Rampage - Gujarat’s Muslims pay for Lashkar’s Deedssabrangsabrang
A collective investigation into the Aug 3-10, 2000 post
bandh violence all over Gujarat state tracks the most
recent evidence of how the state ‘s minorities — Muslims
and Christians — live in a state of terror, ghettoised,
with their patriotism forever under question.
Gujarat 1998 - 2000 is live testimony to the utter contempt
that the Indian Constitution and the rule of law
have been reduced to, by BJP elected representatives
and VHP-BD and RSS hit squads
When will the rest of India wake up to the mockery of
the Constitution taking place in the laboratory of
Hindu Rashtra?
छत्तीसगढ़, मिजोरम, मध्य प्रदेश, राजस्थान और तेलंगाना में अभिव्यक्ति की स्वतंत्रता की स्थिति पर फ्री स्पीच कलेक्टिव की 50 पन्नों की इस जांच से राजनीतिक विभाजन पर एक असहज राजनीतिक सहमति देखी जा सकती है - जिनमें से सभी में विधानसभा चुनाव होने हैं।
The document discusses several issues related to women's rights and gender discrimination in India. It notes that while the Indian constitution guarantees equality, in practice there remains a large gulf in gender justice. Successive governments have done little to improve the situation. India ranks poorly on gender equality indices and crimes against women such as rape are still common. While some laws have been strengthened after recent reforms, women remain reluctant to report crimes due to security, social and other barriers. The document argues that more needs to be done to protect women's rights and remove barriers to justice in India.
The Press of India is considered one of the most independent Presses all over the world. But is it really true?
Do we really have a free press in the country?
Casr tripura fft uapa cases november 7th 2021sabrangsabrang
1) Four lawyers in Delhi were charged by the Tripura police for conducting a fact-finding mission that documented anti-Muslim violence in Tripura and releasing a report on it.
2) The police also filed charges against 102 social media accounts, including several journalists and activists, for their posts on the Tripura violence. No action was taken against Hindutva groups.
3) The lawyers, social media users, and NGO workers facing charges were attempting to expose the communal violence against Muslims in Tripura last month by Hindutva groups with the complicity of the state government and police.
Left wing extremist groups known as Naxalites pose one of the biggest security challenges in India. The Naxalite movement began in the late 1960s in the village of Naxalbari in West Bengal under leaders like Charu Mazumdar who advocated for a Maoist-inspired peasant uprising against landlords and the government. Since then, Naxalite groups have used violence in rural areas across central and eastern India in their fight for a more equal and just society for tribal and rural communities. The government has declared Naxalism a serious internal security threat and launched operations to counter the insurgency through police and paramilitary forces.
This document provides an overview of human rights violations. It begins with definitions of direct and indirect violations by states as well as failures to protect vulnerable groups. A brief history notes that while the Universal Declaration of Human Rights established equal rights in 1948, violations still occur daily in many parts of the world. Major examples of violations in India are then discussed, including caste-based discrimination, communal violence, restrictions on freedom of expression and association, and violence against women and children. The document concludes with recommendations for protecting human rights such as speaking up, volunteering, donating to organizations, and standing up against discrimination.
The document outlines concerns about human rights violations in Uttar Pradesh, India in response to protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). It details 19 deaths during police actions against protesters, arbitrary arrests and custodial torture of activists and journalists, and a blanket ban on protests using Section 144 of criminal law. The National Human Rights Commission of India is urged to conduct an inquiry into alleged excessive use of force, fabricated cases, and restrictions on fundamental rights in Uttar Pradesh.
This document summarizes the struggles of seven Muslim women in India who were victims of gang rape during 2013 communal violence in Muzaffarnagar and Shamli districts of Uttar Pradesh. Over three years later, there have been no convictions in the cases despite charges being filed. The survivors continue to face threats, delays in legal proceedings, and lack of protection and support from authorities. Their quest for justice has been impeded by a flawed legal system and failure of authorities to ensure fair and timely investigations and trials.
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For website 220112 cjp petition to dgp uttarakhand dharam sansadsabrangsabrang
1. The letter requests the arrest of accused individuals who delivered hateful and inciting speeches at the Dharam Sansad event in Haridwar, Uttarakhand calling for violence against minority communities.
2. Several prominent religious leaders and activists delivered speeches advocating for genocide and violence. Incidents of violence against minority communities have occurred since.
3. The letter provides details on some of the key individuals who spoke, including summaries of their hateful comments, and demands their arrest under relevant laws.
Caveat - Volume February-March 2013 - LBH MasyarakatLBH Masyarakat
The Indonesian Civil Society Coalition against the Death Penalty (HATI Coalition) condemns the recent execution of Adami Wilson by the Attorney General’s Office, on Thursday, 14 March 2013.
“All human beings are born free and equal”. Regardless of the reality, this is the value that underpins human rights. Human rights is about equality, about everybody having the same rights, and that the government has the obligation to protect, respect and fulfill it. But, what if there area group of people who,since early in their lives, are discriminated and seen as less of a human being, and then thrust into marginalization,unable to claim their rights? What role must the government play to protect the rights of these people?
Monday, 18 March 2013, the Central Jakarta District Court decided to send a child who uses drugs to receive rehabilitation in a government social rehabilitation for children. Vince (not his real name) was one of ten suspects who were involved in this case. The proceedings were relatively quick and should be appreciated as the judge handed down the rehabilitation verdict to the child instead of imprisonment and put priority on children rights throughout the process.
Human rights violations are actions or behaviors that infringe upon the fundamental rights and freedoms to which all individuals are entitled by virtue of being human. These violations can occur at various levels, from the actions of individuals or local authorities to systemic abuses by governments or other entities. Here are some common examples of human rights violations:
1. **Torture and Inhumane Treatment:** The use of physical or psychological torture, cruel, or degrading treatment is a direct violation of the right to be free from torture and inhumane treatment.
2. **Arbitrary Detention:** Holding individuals in custody without due process or without legal justification is a violation of the right to liberty and security of the person.
3. **Extrajudicial Killings:** Unlawful or summary executions by government officials or law enforcement agencies violate the right to life.
4. **Freedom of Expression:** Censorship, restrictions on the media, and persecution of journalists infringe upon the right to freedom of expression.
5. **Freedom of Assembly and Association:** When governments suppress peaceful protests, ban political parties, or hinder the formation of civil society groups, they violate the rights to freedom of assembly and association.
6. **Discrimination:** Discrimination based on race, gender, religion, nationality, sexual orientation, or other factors infringes on the principle of equality and non-discrimination.
7. **Forced Labor and Human Trafficking:** Coercing individuals to work against their will or trafficking them for exploitative purposes is a grave violation of their human rights.
8. **Child Labor and Child Soldiers:** Using children for labor or as soldiers deprives them of their rights to education, safety, and freedom from exploitation.
9. **Violence Against Women:** Domestic violence, sexual assault, and harmful traditional practices such as female genital mutilation violate the rights of women to live free from violence and discrimination.
10. **Denial of Education:** Preventing access to quality education, especially for girls and marginalized groups, denies them their right to education.
11. **Religious Persecution:** Discrimination and violence against individuals based on their religious beliefs violate their right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion.
12. **Refugee and Asylum Seeker Rights:** Denying asylum seekers their right to seek refuge from persecution is a violation of their rights as refugees.
13. **Right to Adequate Housing:** Forcible eviction, homelessness, and inadequate housing conditions infringe on the right to a standard of living.
14. **Environmental and Indigenous Rights:** Violations against indigenous communities' land rights and the destruction of the environment can have severe human rights implications.
15. **Privacy Violations:** Surveillance, data breaches, and invasions of privacy without just cause infringe on the right to privacy.
It's important to note tha
The Editors' Guild of India sent a fact-finding team to Tripura to investigate attacks on media freedom in the state. The team found that the Tripura government exerts extensive control over local media through threatening to withdraw advertising funds. As a result, local media avoids reporting critically on issues like communal violence and government actions. In contrast, journalists visiting from outside Tripura were able to report independently and objectively on incidents like communal violence, but faced police action. The state government also uses a carrot and stick approach to control media, offering incentives but also threatening FIRs and draconian laws against critical reporting.
The document condemns the arrest of a 22-year old rape survivor in Araria district, Bihar along with two feminist activists who were accompanying and supporting her. During the recording of her statement regarding the gang rape she underwent four days prior, she requested the activists be present for support due to her trauma. However, the magistrate perceived this as disrespect to the court and had all three arrested and sent to jail, violating guidelines on supporting rape survivors. The organizations request the Chief Justice of Patna High Court to ensure the immediate release of the survivor and activists and a fair trial for the rape case.
The document summarizes persecution and discrimination faced by Muslims in India during the first quarter of 2023. It describes numerous incidents of mob violence and lynchings targeting Muslims, often under the pretext of cow smuggling or love jihad. These include public beatings, stripping naked, and killings of Muslims by Hindu extremist groups. It also details illegal demolitions, housing discrimination, hate speech against Muslims, and attacks on Muslim activists and politicians. The government has largely failed to take prompt action or ensure accountability for such attacks.
State of Siege - Report on Encounters and Cases of Sexual Violence in Bijapur...sabrangsabrang
On 14 January 2016, a combined team of Coordination of Democratic Rights Organizations (CDRO), Women Against Sexual Violence and State Repression (WSS), conducted a fresh fact-finding in the Sukma and Bijapur districts in Chhattisgarh. Initially the objectives of the fact-finding mission was to investigate cases of encounter killings, supposed “surrenders” by Maoists and atrocities against tribal women in the villages in the intervening period of 3 months since the last fact-finding of WSS. However, the intensity and frequency of reported attacks, that the team learnt of once they were in the area, compelled them to limit the focus of the fact-finding to events that happened in the course of one week, between the 11th and the 15th of January.
1. A group of 125 social and political activists sent a letter to Gujarat government officials requesting them to immediately recall a notice issued against Lakhan Musafir, a Gandhian activist.
2. The notice, issued by a Sub-Divisional Magistrate, barred Lakhan Musafir from entering 5 districts for 2 years and made defamatory claims about him being involved in anti-social activities.
3. The signatories assert that Lakhan Musafir has devoted his life to Gandhian principles of non-violence and social service. They consider the police report and notice to be works of fiction and demand a high-level inquiry into the matter.
Letter to the chief minister of gujarat from concerned citizens ( 3 february ...sabrangsabrang
The group of citizens from Gujarat wrote a letter to the Chief Minister regarding inflammatory hate messages and calls for violence against Muslims on social media following the murder of Kishan Bharwad. They request that the police take immediate steps to track, file FIRs against, and apprehend those spreading hate messages. Preventive arrests should also be made of those likely to instigate violence against Muslims. Police need to identify sensitive areas and provide protection to Muslim settlements where residents feel apprehensive. The letter urges the Chief Minister to ensure these steps are taken to maintain law and order.
The document summarizes Amnesty International's findings on the use of the death penalty globally in 2017. Some key points:
- The number of executions and death sentences decreased from 2016 levels but remained high compared to pre-2015.
- Two countries abolished the death penalty for all crimes and one for ordinary crimes. Several restricted its use.
- Four countries - Iran, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Pakistan - carried out 84% of all recorded executions.
- Executions decreased in most retentionist countries except Iraq, Palestine, Singapore and Somalia.
Human rights defenders face personal attacks such as killings, enforced disappearances, persecution through prosecution, stigmatization, trolling, and reprisals for their work defending human rights. In 2016 alone, 281 human rights defenders were killed according to one NGO, with over half of those killings occurring in the Americas and targeting those working on land, environmental, and indigenous rights. Perpetrators of attacks on human rights defenders often enjoy impunity, failing to be prosecuted and instead emboldening further threats and violence. Families seeking justice for killings also face dangers, with many cases remaining unresolved and the truth unknown about the deaths of defenders.
The document summarizes human rights violations faced by Adivasi communities in India affected by coal mining operations. It profiles three coal mines - Kusmunda in Chhattisgarh, Tetariakhar in Jharkhand, and Basundhara-West in Odisha - operated by subsidiaries of Coal India Limited. Across these three mines, Adivasi communities complain of being routinely excluded from decision-making around their traditional lands and resources. Many have had to wait decades for promised compensation and rehabilitation after land acquisition by the government under the Coal Bearing Areas Act, which does not require their consent. The violations of their rights to consultation, consent, and self-governance have seriously impacted their
This document is a study by Amnesty International India on pre-trial detention in India. It finds that India has one of the highest proportions of pre-trial (undertrial) detainees in the world, who make up around 67% of the prison population. Various laws and Supreme Court rulings have aimed to reduce excessive pre-trial detention, but implementation has been poor across states. Amnesty analyzed responses from Right to Information requests which revealed that legal safeguards are regularly ignored and undertrials often do not receive proper legal aid or access to courts. The high proportion of undertrials reflects failure by governments to uphold fair trial rights.
The document discusses Singapore's 2013 reforms to its mandatory death penalty laws and finds the reforms to be flawed and limited. Key points:
- The reforms introduced some judicial discretion in death penalty cases but the mandatory death penalty remains for many offenses.
- While some individuals received lighter sentences due to the reforms, executions continue and many are still sentenced to death.
- The reforms transfer life-and-death decision making power from judges to prosecutors by requiring a "certificate of assistance" for discretionary sentencing.
- Concerns remain that the death penalty disproportionately affects socially disadvantaged groups and foreign nationals.
The document discusses the broken promises and lack of adequate support provided to thousands of families displaced after sectarian violence in the Muzaffarnagar and Shamli districts of Uttar Pradesh, India in 2013. Over 60 people were killed and tens of thousands of Muslim families were forced to flee their homes. While the state government promised compensation for resettlement, many families have not received any support and continue living in dire conditions in makeshift camps three years later. The government only provided compensation to families from 9 "worst affected" villages, ignoring many others. Additionally, some families were denied compensation due to inconsistent definitions of family or due to clerical errors. As a result, many displaced families continue to struggle with debt,
This document summarizes Amnesty International India's report on the continuing injustice for the 1984 Sikh massacre. It provides background on the 1984 violence where over 3,000 Sikhs were killed in Delhi. Survivors describe the horrific acts of violence and loss of family members. Despite this, only a small number of perpetrators have been punished due to police inaction and closing of cases. Amnesty International calls for effective investigations, comprehensive reparations for victims, and legal and policy reforms to prevent future targeted violence and ensure justice.
Losing sight in kashmir the impact of pellet firing shotgunsAmnestyIndia
This document summarizes Amnesty International's report on the impact of pellet-firing shotguns used by security forces in Kashmir. It details the cases of 88 people who were blinded or suffered eye injuries from metal pellets between 2014-2017. The report describes how the victims, including many young students and breadwinners, have had their lives permanently altered and are struggling with loss of vision, inability to work or study, and psychological trauma. It concludes that the use of these inherently inaccurate weapons, which have blinded hundreds and killed at least 14, violates international law and has inflicted immense human costs on the people of Kashmir.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
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Food safety, prepare for the unexpected - So what can be done in order to be ready to address food safety, food Consumers, food producers and manufacturers, food transporters, food businesses, food retailers can ...
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
A Guide to AI for Smarter Nonprofits - Dr. Cori Faklaris, UNC CharlotteCori Faklaris
Working with data is a challenge for many organizations. Nonprofits in particular may need to collect and analyze sensitive, incomplete, and/or biased historical data about people. In this talk, Dr. Cori Faklaris of UNC Charlotte provides an overview of current AI capabilities and weaknesses to consider when integrating current AI technologies into the data workflow. The talk is organized around three takeaways: (1) For better or sometimes worse, AI provides you with “infinite interns.” (2) Give people permission & guardrails to learn what works with these “interns” and what doesn’t. (3) Create a roadmap for adding in more AI to assist nonprofit work, along with strategies for bias mitigation.
United Nations World Oceans Day 2024; June 8th " Awaken new dephts".Christina Parmionova
The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Preliminary findings _OECD field visits to ten regions in the TSI EU mining r...OECDregions
Preliminary findings from OECD field visits for the project: Enhancing EU Mining Regional Ecosystems to Support the Green Transition and Secure Mineral Raw Materials Supply.
Contributi dei parlamentari del PD - Contributi L. 3/2019Partito democratico
DI SEGUITO SONO PUBBLICATI, AI SENSI DELL'ART. 11 DELLA LEGGE N. 3/2019, GLI IMPORTI RICEVUTI DALL'ENTRATA IN VIGORE DELLA SUDDETTA NORMA (31/01/2019) E FINO AL MESE SOLARE ANTECEDENTE QUELLO DELLA PUBBLICAZIONE SUL PRESENTE SITO
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
3. 3
Freedom of expression is being throttled in Chhattisgarh as the state cracks down on media and
civil society.
For the last six months, the central Indian state has witnessed a sustained attack on journalists
and human rights defenders. Conditions have been created where arbitrary arrests, threats
to life, and organized hindrance to the work of journalists, lawyers, and other human rights
defenders have led to a near total information blackout.
Local journalists investigating excesses by security forces have been arrested on trumped-up
charges and tortured, while their lawyers have been threatened. Abusive security laws have
been deployed. And increasingly, Chhattisgarh is playing to a script of the bizarre.
Violations by the state have been accompanied by intimidation by those acting on its behalf.
Local self-styled vigilante groups called the Samajik Ekta Manch (Social Unity Forum) and
Mahila Ekta Manch (Women’s Unity Form), which appear to have the backing of the state police,
have intimidated and harassed journalists and activists who express dissenting views. Among
the members of these groups are people who were part of the banned Salwa Judum civil militia.
Most of these incidents have taken place in and around the Bastar region of the state, the
epicenter of the long-drawn conflict between state forces and armed Maoist groups. Bastar has
witnessed violence and counter-violence leading to massive human rights violations.Adivasi
communities in particular have faced abuses from all sides. Against this backdrop, the silencing
of civil society and the media may both enable and hide more abuses.
BASTAR BLACKOUT
4. 4
Journalist SOMARU NAG is arrested for
allegedly being a Maoist sympathiser.
He is held for alleged banditry, arson
and criminal conspiracy under the
Indian Penal Code and the Arms Act.
Adivasi women from Kunna village,
Sukma file an FIR alleging sexual assault
by members of security forces on 12
January. The women are assisted by local
activists, including activist Soni Sori.
Journalist SANTOSH YADAV is arrested
for allegedly associating with a
terrorist organization and supporting
and aiding terrorist groups. He is held
under the Chhattisgarh Special Public
Security Act and the Unlawful Activities
(Prevention) Act, India’s principal anti-
terror legislation, among other laws.
Adivasi women from Pedagelur village,
Bijapur file an FIR alleging rape and
sexual assault by members of security
forces between 19 and 24 October.
Thewomenareassistedbylocalactivists,
includingresearcherBELA BHATIA and
lawyersfromtheJagdalpurLegalAidGroup.
16 July 2015
15 January 2016
29 September 2015
01 November 2015
Adivasi women from Nendra, Bijapur try to
file an FIR alleging rape and sexual assault
by members of security forces between 11
and 14 January. The police initially refuse,
but later register an FIR on 21 January after
local activists hold a press conference.
Human rights lawyers SHALINI GERA and
ISHA KHANDELWAL of the Jagdalpur Legal
Aid group (JagLAG) are forced to leave their
home in Jagdalpur after their landlord is
pressured by the police to evict them.
Members of the Samajik Ekta Manch
demonstrate outside the home of
journalist MALINI SUBRAMANIAM in
Jagdalpur. They accuse her of being a
Maoist agent. Later that night, stones
are thrown at her house.
Journalist MALINI SUBRAMANIAM
is forced to leave her home in
Jagdalpur after her landlord is
pressured by the police to
evict her.
18 January 2016
18 February 2016
08 February 2016
18 February 2016
TIMELINE OF DARKNESS
5. 5
BBC Hindi journalist ALOK PUTUL is forced
to abandon an assignment in Bastar after
receiving threats. A senior police official
had communicated to the journalist
that he preferred to spend time with
‘nationalist and patriotic’ journalists.
Activist SONI SORI is attacked and a
chemical substance thrown at her face.
Her nephew LINGARAM KODOPI later says
that the police tried to pressure him to
say that the attack was orchestrated by
Soni Sori to gain sympathy. AJAY MARKAM,
Soni Sori’s brother-in-law, says he was
picked up by the police and tortured.
SAIBAL JANA, the chief physician at
a hospital in Dalli-Rajhara, which he
helped set up to treat underprivileged
communities, is arrested for allegedly
being ‘absconding’ in a criminal case
registered in 1992. He is later released
on bail.
20 February 2016
20 February 2016
16 March 2016
Journalist DEEPAK JAISWAL is
arrested on a seven-month old
complaint filed by a school principal
for trespassing, obstructing public
servants, and assaulting a public
servant.
Members of the Mahila Ekta Manch
demonstrate outside the home
of researcher BELA BHATIA. They
accuse her of being a Maoist agent,
and demand that she leave the state.
A three-member fact finding
committee of the Editors Guild of India
concludes that there is a sense of fear
among journalists in Bastar and the
democratic space for journalism is
shrinking.
JournalistPRABHATSINGHispickedupbythe
police,torturedandthenarrestedunderthe
InformationTechnologyActforaWhatsapp
messagemakingfunofaseniorpoliceofficial.
26 March 2016
26 March 2016
30 March 2016
21 March 2016
6. 6
SANTOSH YADAV
WORKED with Navbharat and
Dainik Chhattisgarh
• ACCUSED of being member
of banned armed group,
Communist Party of India
(Maoist)
• CHARGED under UAPA,
CSPSA and other laws.
• If convicted, can face up to 10
years in prison.
SANTOSH YADAV
Born and raised in Darba, a small
town in Bastar, Santosh Yadav wanted
to be a police officer when he was in
school. Instead, he went on to become a
journalist, reporting on abuses by security
forces and Maoist armed groups in the
region. He was a local stringer for regional
and national dailies such as Navbharat
and Dainik Chhattisgarh. It was his refusal
to toe the state line that eventually led to
his arrest.
In September 2015, the state police
arrested five Adivasi villagers from
Badrimahu, a village inside the Darba
forest, during anti-Maoist operations. The
villagers claimed that they had been falsely
accused. Santosh Yadav not only filed
media reports from Badrimahu, but also
got the Adivasi villagers to meet advocates
from the Jagdalpur Legal Aid Group and
challenge the arrests in court.
Santosh Yadav’s reports put a spotlight on
the harassment of Adivasis by the state
police. Within days of the incident, he
was arrested. He was accused of being
involved in an attack by Maoist armed
groups on security forces on 29 September,
and arrested for alleged rioting, criminal
conspiracy, murder, and being part of the
banned Communist Party of India (Maoist)
armed group, among other offences. He
has been charged under the Chhattisgarh
Special Public Security Act and the Unlawful
Activities (Prevention) Act – both of which
violate international human rights standards
– and other laws. If convicted, he could
spend up to 10 years in jail.
His wife Poonam Yadav told Amnesty
International India, “He used to face a lot
of threats because of his work. I used to
tell him to be careful and once even told
him to find another profession. But he
always told me he was helping others and
was not afraid of anyone. He has been
framed by the state police.”
Isha Khandelwal, Santosh Yadav’s lawyer,
told Amnesty International India that the
charges were fabricated, and the journalist
was being targeted for his reporting on
human rights violations by the police
against Adivasis. She said, “The police
had started harassing him in 2013. At
one time they even stripped him naked in
custody and humiliated him. There was
a lot of pressure on him to become an
informer.”
“His only fault was that he went beyond
his journalistic duties and helped villagers
to get access to legal aid. In Bastar, the
police expects journalists to report only
what they are saying. Santosh Yadav
always reported both sides of the story.”
Rajkumar Soni, a reporter for the national
daily Patrika told Amnesty International
India, “The state police has to understand
that journalists have to report both sides of
the story. A reporter can’t be accused of
being a Maoist for speaking to a Maoist.”
He said, “If you call police for information
for a story, they will say you’re an anti-
national reporter and that they can’t share
information. In Bastar, if you’re a journalist
you’ll have to speak to Maoists once in a
while - the same way a journalist in Mumbai
has to speak to businessmen, politicians and
police officers for a story. Is there a law that
prevents us from reporting their version?”
The police had started harassing him
in 2013. At one time they even stripped
him naked in custody and humiliated him.
There was a lot of pressure on him to
become an informer.
Isha Khandelwal, Santosh Yadav’s Lawyer
“
“
7. 7
He used to face a lot of threats because of
his work. I used to tell him to be careful and
once even told him to find another profession.
But he always told me he was helping others
and was not afraid of anyone. He has been
framed by the state police.
Poonam Yadav, Santosh Yadav’s Wife
“
“
8. 8
SOMARU NAG
WORKED with Rajasthan Patrika
• ACCUSED of having links
with Maoists and destroying
government property
• CHARGED under The Arms Act
and Indian Penal Code
• If convicted, can face up to
seven years in prison
SOMARU NAG
Somaru Nag, an Adivasi journalist,
covered rural issues such as access to
water and electricity for newspapers in
Bastar, such as Rajasthan Patrika. His
reports also highlighted arbitrary arrests
by the state police, and detailed how
the police forced members from Adivasi
communities to become informers.
Somaru Nag was arrested on 16 July
2015. The police accuse him of having
links with the Maoists and of collaborating
in an operation to set fire to equipment
used to build roads. He was charged
under the Arms Act and also charged with
banditry, arson, and criminal conspiracy
under the Indian Penal Code. Following
his arrest, members of his village,
Tirathgarh, held a special gram sabha
(village assembly), in which they passed a
resolution saying that he was innocent.
“There is lot of fear in the villages in
Bastar. They are scared of both police
officers and Maoists. The local media
in Jagdalpur is helpless, the police can
harass them anytime if they don’t toe the
police line. Truth is a casualty because of
this,” said Jinesh Jain, Editor, Patrika.
In Bastar, if you’re a journalist you’ll have
to speak to Maoists once in a while - the same
way a journalist in Mumbai has to speak to
businessmen, politicians and police officers
for a story. Is there a law that prevents us
from reporting their version?
Rajkumar Soni, Journalist, Patrika, Chhattisgarh
“Many journalists
have suffered
various forms of
intimidation, threats
and beatings. Being
a journalist is one
thing and being an
outspoken journalist
is another. it’s been
a very difficult space
for journalists,”
Bela Bhatia
“
“
9. 9
PRABHAT SINGH
WORKED with Patrika and ETV
• ACCUSED of transmitting
obscene material about IGP of
Bastar Range
• NO CHARGESHEET YET
• If convicted, can face up to
five years in prison
Prabhat Singh worked as a stringer for
the Hindi daily Patrika and the news
channel ETV in Dantewada. He had
reported on corruption and alleged human
rights violations by the police, including
extrajudicial executions.
On 6 March, Prabhat Singh filed a police
complaint against members of the Samajik
Ekta Manch, accusing them of defaming
him on a WhatsApp group. On 19 March,
one of his employers terminated his
contract. Two days later the state police
arrested him for allegedly having posted
an obscene message on a Whatsapp
group on 1 March which made fun of a
senior police official.
Prabhat Singh was arrested under Section
67 and 67A of the Information Technology
Act for “publishing and transmitting
obscene material in electronic form”.
He also faces charges of cheating,
extortion and obstructing the police which
were filed previously in other cases.
Prabhat Singh alleged that he was
tortured by the police in custody. His
lawyer Xitiz Dubey said, “Prabhat was
picked up by the police on Monday
and was in their custody without a first
information report (FIR) for one day.
Finally, when he was produced in court
on Tuesday, Prabhat told the judge about
the torture he was subjected to in custody.
His chest and hand had several marks
resulting from such treatment.”
The WhatsApp message that got Prabhat Singh
arrested.
PRABHAT SINGH
Prabhat told the judge about the
torture he was subjected to in custody.
His chest and hand had several marks
resulting from such treatment.
Xitiz Dubey, Prabhat Singh’s Lawyer
“
“
10. 10
MALINI SUBRAMANIAM
Journalist with Scroll.in
• Samajik Ekta Manch
demonstrated against her.
Her house was stoned. Police
pressured her landlord to evict
her
• MOVED OUT of Jagdalpur on
18 February 2016
Malini Subramanium is a journalist who
contributes to the news website Scroll, and
has consistently written on allegations of
human rights violations by security forces
in Chhattisgarh, including cases of sexual
violence, arbitrary arrest and torture of
journalists, and fake Maoist ‘surrenders’.
On 10 January 2016, a group of men from
the Samajik Ekta Manch visited her home
in Jagdalpur and accused her of ‘engaging
in activities that tarnishes the image of
Bastar and the police’.
On 7 February, a group of over 20 people,
some of whom she identified as being from
the Samajik Ekta Manch, gathered outside
her home. They urged her neighbours to
stone her house and chanted slogans,
saying that she was an agent for Maoist
armed groups and demanding that she
leave Bastar. Later that night, stones were
thrown at the journalist’s house, shattering
her car’s rear windshield. The next day,
the Samajik Ekta Manch released a public
statement accusing her of presenting a
distorted picture of Bastar and ‘promoting
Maoist ideology’.
Speaking to Amnesty International India,
Subramaniam said, “This is not an attack
on me as a person but as a journalist
reporting incidents on the ground,
something that they don’t want.” The
journalist worked earlier at the office of
the International Committee of the Red
Cross in Chhattisgarh, which was asked
to suspend operations in 2013 by state
authorities.
According to her lawyers at JagLAG,
the police refused to register a First
Information Report (FIR) about the attack
on 8 February, and said that they would
need the approval of a senior official, who
was traveling then. The police eventually
registered an FIR on 9 February, in the
journalist’s absence, against unnamed
persons for the offences of house-trespass
and ‘mischief causing damage to the
amount of fifty rupees’. The FIR did not
mention the 7 February demonstration or
name any of the people Subramaniam had
identified in her statement.
On 17 February, the police summoned
the journalist’s landlord for questioning.
The landlord told her later that she would
MALINI SUBRAMANIAM
have to move out of her home as soon
as possible. The same day, her domestic
help was repeatedly detained and
questioned by the police. Fearing for her
safety, Scroll asked Malini Subramaniam
to leave Jagdalpur. The journalist and her
family moved out the next day.
Malini Subramaniam’s car after an attack on her house on 7 February.
11. 11
Malini Subramaniam was sent this image
depicting effigies of Naxalites and their
supporters being burned.
This is not an attack on me as a person but as
a journalist reporting incidents on the ground,
something that they don’t want.
Malini Subramaniam
“ “
Adivasi protest in Bastar in February
2016. Malini Subramaniam was one
of the few English media journalists
to report Adivasi protests in the region.
12. 12
ABUSES BY SECURITY FORCES
Since 2015, there have been reports of three instances of large-scale sexual
violence, physical abuse and looting of villages by security force personnel during
search operations in the South Bastar region of Chhattisgarh.
On 1 November 2015, three Adivasi
women and a teenage girl registered a
First Information Report alleging large-
scale rape, assault and looting by security
force personnel during search operations
between 19 and 24 October 2015 in the
villages of Pegdapalli, Pedagelur, Gundem,
Burgicheru and Chinnagelur in Bijapur
district. The women were aided by activists
from the group Women Against Sexual
Violence and State Repression, which
included researcher Bela Bhatia.
The group quoted one of the survivors as
saying: “They began chasing my hens,
so I objected. ‘Why are you catching my
hens? Do your own work,’ I said. At this,
they hit me with a stick, blindfolded me
and dragged me to the jungle where they
raped me. I heard them say in Gondi
they would kill me there itself.” It said
that many of the women reported being
chased out of their homes by security
force personnel and beaten. Over a dozen
women later filed statements about the
violence. No arrests have been made or
charges filed yet.
On 5 April 2016, a team from the National
Commission for Scheduled Tribes which
looked into the allegations said that there
was prima facie evidence of mass sexual
violence, and the case was not being
effectively investigated. The team asked
for an impartial investigation, stating that
an investigation carried out by the district
police would not be fair as they had been
involved in the search operations.
On 15 January 2016, six Adivasi women
registered an FIR against security force
personnel for sexual assault during search
operations on 12 January in Kunna village
and Pedapara in Sukma district. The
women – accompanied by activist Soni
Sori - reported the violence to a senior
official in the district administration
on 15 January, but an FIR was only
registered later. The women said that
security force personnel had stripped
and beaten them. One woman said that
she was dragged out of her house, and
her husband and children taken to a
security force camp. When she said
that she had a small child, a policeman
forcibly squeezed her breast. No arrests
have been made or charges filed yet.
On 18 January 2016, 16 Adivasi women
from Nendra village, including eight
rape survivors, traveled to the Bijapur
district headquarters to file an FIR against
security personnel who allegedly raped
more than a dozen women in Nendra
during search operations between 11 and
14 January. The police recorded their
statements, but refused to register an FIR
in the absence of the Superintendent of
Police. Isha Khandelwal, the women’s
lawyer, said, “The women who were raped
were not able to even walk properly.
Despite that, they went to file an FIR in the
district station, where the police officials
refused to file an FIR unless the SP was
present.”
Shivani Taneja, a member of the group
Women Against Sexual Violence and
State Repression who accompanied
the victims, said, “While taking the
statements of the affected women, a
woman police official remarked in Gondi,
“You are all feeding the naxalites and
taking care of them. And now you’re
coming here.” There is a bias against
them continually because they come
from Naxal affected areas.”
An FIR was finally lodged on 21 January
2016, after immense pressure from
activists and civil society groups. One of
the women’s statements reads: “Two men
caught hold of me and dragged me inside
my house. They took off my clothes,
tore my blouse and pressed my breasts.
One policeman raped me and said, ‘We
will burn down your houses. If it wasn’t
daytime, we would have killed you.’”The
personnel allegedly also raped or sexually
assaulted other women, threatened and
beat up villagers, and stole poultry, food
and money.No arrests have been made
or charges filed yet.
WHAT IS COMMON IN ALL THESE CASES?
- The allegations against security force
personnel include sexual assault
against women, physical assault and
verbal abuse of villagers and looting of
villagers’ homes.
- In all the cases, the police refused
to file an FIR at first, and only agreed
to do so after a delay. Under Indian
law, refusing to file an FIR in a case of
sexual violence is a criminal offence.
- All the FIRs were registered against
unnamed security personnel. In the case
of the Nendra incident, the victims had
identified and named police personnel in
their statements, but these names were
not listed in the FIR.
- No charges have yet been filed in any
of these cases. It has been more than
six months since the first incident in
Bijapur district.
13. 13
BELA BHATIA
Independent researcher and
human rights activist
• Part of a team that helped
Adivasi women file FIRs on sexual
violence allegedly committed by
security force personnel.
• Samajik Ekta Manch demanded
that Bela Bhatia leave Bastar, and
be charged under the CSPSA.
Bela Bhatia is an independent researcher
and human rights activist who has lived
and worked in Bastar for over a year. She
currently resides in Parpa, a village about
three kilometers away from Jagdalpur.
Bela Bhatia has worked at the Centre
for the Study of Developing Societies, a
prominent think-tank, where she focused
on the Telangana Naxalite movement
and the Salwa Judum campaign in
Bastar. She was also part of an expert
committee constituted by India’s Planning
Commission on ‘development challenges
in extremist-affected areas’.
The researcher was part of a team that
helped Adivasi women file FIRs on the
large-scale sexual violence allegedly
committed by security force personnel in
October 2015 and January 2016.
On 21 January 2016, as Bela Bhatia
and other activists were assisting Adivasi
women from Bijapur in filing an FIR, a
group named Naxal Peedith Sangharsh
Samiti (Committee of Naxal Victims)
shouted slogans against them for
‘defaming’ the image of security forces. On
29 January, the same group held a protest
march in Bijapur against Bela Bhatia and
Adivasi activist Soni Sori, in which they
burnt effigies and warned the activists
against returning to Bijapur.
On 19 February, the police visited Bela’s
home and questioned her landlord and
his wife, and the head of the village
council. The next day, the police called
her landlord to the police station for
questioning. Three days later, the
police visited her home again and took
photographs of her house.
On 18 March, the Mahila Ekta Manch
organized a protest in Jagdalpur to
condemn the killing of an eight year-old
girl by a landmine allegedly planted by
armed Maoist groups in Sukma. They
demanded that Bela Bhatia and human
rights lawyer Shalini Gera leave Bastar,
and that they be charged under the
Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act.
BELA BHATIA
On 26 March, dozens of
men and women showed up
at Bela Bhatia’s home while
she was away. They advised
her landlady to evict her as
she was a ‘Naxalite terrorist’.
The protestors carried out
a rally, distributing leaflets
that said: ‘Know that Bela
Bhatia, a Maoist agent,
lives among you… Bela
Bhatia, stop destroying the
country… Leave Bastar’.
On 24 March, Bela Bhatia
wrote an open letter
stating that she had no
plans to leave Bastar. She
wrote, “Democracy aims
for a society where there
is no oppressor and the
oppressed. It means a
society where everybody
has freedom of speech.
I hope we will be able to
establish such a democracy
in Bastar.”
A leaflet against Bela Bhatia distributed on 26 March.
14. 14
Isha Khandelwal and Shalini
Gera are members of the
Jagdalpur Legal Aid Group
(JagLAG), which has been
providing free legal assistance
to prisoners in five districts in
Chhattisgarh since 2013. Many
of their clients are members of
Adivasi communities accused
of being part of Maoist armed
groups. The lawyers have also
carried out research which
shows that Adivasi people in the
state are frequently arrested by
the police on little evidence, and
spend long periods in pre-trial detention
before being acquitted by courts.
In 2015, police officials questioned the
JagLAG lawyers, following an anonymous
complaint alleging that they did not have the
right credentials to practice law in Bastar. In
October 2015, the Bastar Bar Association in
a general body meeting passed a resolution
debarring lawyers not enrolled in the State
Bar Council from practicing in Jagdalpur
courts, a move which appeared to be
targeted at hindering the practice of the
JagLAG lawyers.
On 7 February, Isha Khandelwal assisted
journalist Malini Subramaniam to file an
FIR after an attack on her house. Two days
later, a Samajik Ekta Manch statement
announced that the organisation would be
carrying out a protest against groups like
JagLAG, which they said helped Naxals in
the garb of social service.
On the night of 17 February, police
officials visited the home of the lawyers’
landlord, and took him to a local police
station. The landlord returned the next
morning and told the lawyers that he had
’no choice’ but to ask them to vacate their
home and office. “He was asked by the
police to ensure that we vacate the house
within a day or two,” said Shalini Gera.
ISHA KHANDELWAL & SHALINI GERA
An official at the police station
told Amnesty International India
that the landlord had been
questioned on a different matter.
Later that day, members of the
Samajik Ekta Manch again held
a public demonstration against
JagLAG, accusing them of being
defenders of Maoists. “They
issued a press statement which
said that we are their next target
since we support bloodthirsty
Naxalis. They’ve also made a lot
of speeches against us, saying that we drink
foreign liquor and live lavish and indecent
lifestyles,” said Shalini Gera.
On 19 February, the Inspector General of
Police for Bastar announced at a press
conference that there had been a threat of
an attack against JagLAG lawyers. Shalini
Gera and Isha Khandelwal left Jagdalpur
the following night.
ISHA KHANDELWAL &
SHALINI GERA
Members of the Jagdalpur Legal
Aid Group (JagLAG), which
has been providing free legal
assistance to prisoners in five
districts in Chhattisgarh.
• Samajik Ekta Manch held
protests accusing JagLAG of
helping Naxals.
• MOVED OUT of Jagdalpur on
20 February.
JagLAG which is helping dreaded Naxals
lodged in jail, despite the seriousness of Naxal
matters, and despite the fact that honourable
local lawyers are keeping themselves away
from such cases….
Samajik Ekta Manch statement on 9 February.
“
“
Following repeated threats by Samajik Ekta Manch, Shalini and Isha pack up their
belongings to leave Bastar.
15. 15
Research by the Jagdalpur Legal Aid
Group in prisons in Bastar in 2013
revealed widespread apathy to the rights
of pre-trial detainees(or ‘undertrials’). The
lawyers found that,between 2005 and
2013, about 96 per cent of all criminal
cases in Dantewada resulted in acquittals.
Yet many undertrials spent long periods in
jail awaiting trial. In 2013, nearly half the
undertrials in the Dantewada district jail
had spent over a year in prison.
The research showed that the main jails
in Jagdalpur, Dantewada and Kanker
were extremely overcrowded – by 260 per
cent, 371 per cent, and 428 per cent,
respectively. About 97 per cent of the
inmates in the Dantewada and Kanker
district jails were pre-trial detainees, well
above the national average of about 67 per
cent. Many of the prisoners were illiterate
Adivasi men.
The lawyers also found cases where
the police appeared to have fabricated
VIOLATIONS OF PRISONERS’ RIGHTS
Capacity of
Jails
Actual
Occupancy
Occupancy
Rate
INDIA 347,859 411,992 118%
Chhattisgarh 6,070 15,840 261%
Kanker
District Jail
65 278 428%
Dantewada
District Jail
150 557 371%
Jagdalpur
Central Jail
579 1,508 260%
OVERCROWDING IN JAILS
Of all the states in India, Chhattisgarh has had the highest
rate of overcrowding in Jails for the past 6 years.
2013 data compiled by Jagdalpur Legal Aid Group
evidence. In one instance, policemen who
were involved in an armed exchange with
Maoists later claimed that they recalled 50
names shouted out by the Maoist fighters.
The lawyers also found cases where people
were arrested under the Arms Act for
carrying shovels and crowbars. In some of
the examined cases, detainees had spent
years in jail, implicated in multiple cases,
before finally being acquitted.
PercentofCasesDisposed
RATE OF COMPLETE ACQUITTALS
Dantewada Sessions Court data obtained through RTI by Jagdalpur Legal Aid Group
16. 16
Former Amnesty International Prisoners
of Conscience and Adivasi activists, Soni
Sori and her nephew Lingaram Kodopi
have been raising issues of human rights
abuses committed by both security forces
and armed Maoist groups in Chhattisgarh
for years.
Soni Sori, a former schoolteacher, and
Lingaram Kodopi, a journalist were
arrested by the state police in October
and September 2011, respectively, on
allegations of acting as couriers for a
corporate mining firm, Essar. The police
alleged they delivered Essar’s ‘protection
money’ to armed Maoists groups to ensure
the firm’s unhindered operations. A
politician with the Aam Aadmi Party since
2014, Soni Sori has been acquitted in five
cases filed against her, and Kodopi has
been acquitted in one of two cases filed
against him. Both of them alleged that
they were tortured in police custody. On
29 October 2011, a government hospital
examined Soni under a court order, and
reported that two stones had been inserted
in her vagina and one in her rectum, and
that she had annular tears in her spine.
On the night of 20 February 2016, Soni
Sori was travelling on a motorcycle with
a colleague from Jagdalpur to her home
in Geedam, Chhattisgarh, when three
unidentified men on a motorcycle stopped
them and threw a chemical substance
on Soni Sori’s face. The activist said that
the substance caused an intense burning
sensation, temporarily blinding her.
She was taken to a hospital in Jagdalpur,
and later shifted to a hospital in New Delhi
for treatment.
Soni Sori had been trying for weeks to file
a complaint against a high-ranking police
official in Bastar in a case involving an
alleged extrajudicial execution in Mardum.
She told Amnesty International India that
her attackers on 20 February had warned
her not to continue her efforts.
SONI SORI
Following the attack, Chhattisgarh
authorities formed a special investigation
team comprising state police officials. Soni
Sori’s family alleges that the team has
repeatedly called in Lingaram Kodopi and
Soni Sori’s brother-in-law, Ajay Markam,
for questioning, and pressured them
to say that they had a role in planning
the attack. Ajay Markam was called in
for questioning on three occasions and
claimed that he was detained for 30 hours
in Jagdalpur police station after he was
picked up on 10 March 2016. During
this time, he says, he was tortured by the
police. “I was beaten up and asked to
confess to committing the attack on Soni.
They hit me with their shoes everywhere
on my body while I was lying on the
ground,” Ajay Markam told Amnesty
International India.
SONI SORI
Former Amnesty International
Prisoner of Conscience and
Adivasi activist
• Soni Sori was arrested in 2011,
tortured in police custody.
• On 20 February, three
unidentified men threw a
chemical substance on her face.
Soni Sori had been trying for weeks to file
a complaint against a high-ranking police
official in Bastar in a case involving an
alleged extrajudicial execution in Mardum.
Soni Sori told Amnesty International India that
her attackers on 20 February had warned her
not to continue her efforts.
Soni Sori after a chemical substance was thrown
on her face.
17. 17
DEEPAK JAISWAL
WORKED with Dainik Dainandini
• ACCUSED of obstructing
public servants from
discharging their duty and
assault against a public
servant.
• NO CHARGESHEET YET
• If convicted, can face up to
two years in prison
Deepak Jaiswal, a journalist with Dainik
Dainandini, published several reports
in 2015 on allegations of widespread
cheating in school exams in the region.
Deepak Jaiswal is a close friend of
Prabhat Singh. On 26 March, he was at
a local court in Dantewada filing Prabhat
Singh’s bail application when the state
police arrested him on a seven-month-old
complaint by a school principal accusing
him of trespassing and obstructing public
servants. The school principal had alleged
that Deepak Jaiswal had threatened to
write a false report about cheating in the
school examination and demanded a
bribe.
His lawyer Xitiz Dubey said, “Instead of
investigating reports of cheating in school
exams, the state police are arresting the
journalists who filed the reports. Instead
of investigating the issue, the state police
are shooting the messengers. In such
an environment, how can you expect
journalists to survive?”
DEEPAK JAISWAL
Members of the Samajik Ekta Manch attend a press conference with senior officials of the police.
Image Courtesy: Scroll.in
18. 18
THE UNLAWFUL ACTIVITIES (PREVENTION) ACT
THE LAW
THE ARRESTS OF JOURNALISTS IN
CHHATTISGARH BRING INTO FOCUS
THE ABUSIVE LAWS THAT FACILITATE
THE SILENCING OF DISSENT.
detention of suspects without charge is 30
days and the maximum period 180 days,
well beyond international standards. These
provisions contravene India’s obligations
under international human rights law
to ensure that all arrested people are
promptly informed of the charges against
them and are tried within a reasonable
time or released.
The Act lacks adequate pre-trial safeguards
against torture and other cruel, inhuman
or degrading treatment or punishment of
detainees. It reverses certain evidential
burdens of grave crimes and requires, in
certain circumstances, accused persons
to prove their innocence – a provision
which is incompatible with the right to
be presumed innocent until proven guilty
according to law.
Since 2005, a number of socio-political
activists and other human rights defenders
around central India have faced false
charges and imprisonment for highlighting
human rights abuses. Among them are
Binayak Sen of the People’s Union for
Civil Liberties and Kartam Joga, an Adivasi
leader of the Communist Party of India.
Human rights groups in India have
highlighted several instances where the
UAPA has been abused, with the use of
fabricated evidence and false charges,
to detain activists defending the rights
of Adivasi and Dalit communities and
peacefully exercising their rights to
freedom of expression and association.
Several Indian and international human
rights bodies, including the UN Special
Rapporteur on the situation of human
rights defenders, have called for the repeal
of the law.
The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act
(UAPA) enacted in 1967 is an anti-
terrorism legislation that was amended in
2004, 2008 and in 2012. It incorporates
provisions from the draconian Terrorist
and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act,
1987, which was allowed to lapse, and the
Prevention of Terrorism Act, which was
repealed, following widespread abuse.
Several parts of the UAPA violate India’s
international human rights obligations
- particularly under the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR), to which India is a state party -
and have led to human rights violations.
The Act uses sweeping and overbroad
definitions of ‘terrorist acts’. For example,
the definitions cover actions ‘likely
to cause…loss of, or damage to, or
destruction of, property’ even when they
are only ‘likely to strike terror’.
The law also uses sweeping definitions
of ‘membership’ of a ‘terrorist gang or
organization’ without a clear definition
of what constitutes membership. Its
definition of ‘unlawful activity’ is also
overly broad, covering any action which
‘disclaims, questions, disrupts…the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of India
or which ‘causes or is intended to cause
disaffection against India’.
These definitions place excessive
restrictions on the rights to freedom of
expression, association and assembly,
guaranteed under India’s Constitution and
international human rights law.
Under the Act, the minimum period of
Binayak Sen of the People’s Union for Civil Liberties was arrested on false charges and
imprisoned for highlighting human rights abuses.
19. 19
This is not the first time Chhattisgarh has
witnessed a series of attacks on journalists
and activists. Between 2005 and 2007,
human rights defenders who highlighted
violations by either the Salwa Judum civil
militia or security forces faced physical
intimidation, violence, arbitrary detention,
torture and sexual violence.
The Supreme Court in 2011 ordered
the government of Chhattisgarh and the
Union of India to disband and disarm
the state-sponsored civil militias, and
to provide its members security and
rehabilitate them.
However there have been various attempts
made to revive the Salwa Judum in
different forms. In May 2015, the son of
the Congress party leader who created the
Salwa Judum announced the formation of
a group called the Vikas Sangharsh Samiti
(Development Struggle Committee) –
similar in respects to the Salwa Judum -to
counter Maoists.
A PATTERN OF REPRESSION
CHHATTISGARH SPECIAL PUBLIC
SECURITY ACT
The Chhattisgarh Special Public Security
Act was enacted in 2005 to combat
violence by Maoist armed groups. Several
parts of the Act violates India’s obligations
under international human rights law.
The Act contains broad and vaguely
worded definitions of ‘unlawful activity’.
The definition includes, for instance,
an act which ‘tends to interfere with
maintenance of public order’ or ‘which
is designed to overawe…any public
servant’, or acts ‘encouraging or
preaching disobedience to established
law and its institutions’.
Its definition of ‘unlawful organization’
covers organizations which provide
‘encouragement directly or indirectly…
to any unlawful activity.’ Any organization
or person who commits or abets or tries
or even plans to commit an ‘unlawful
activity’ may be imprisoned for up to
seven years. Mere membership of an
unlawful organization is punishable with
imprisonment for up to three years.
These broad definitions run counter
to several human rights, including
the rights to freedom of expression
and association guaranteed under the
Constitution of India and international
human rights law. Writing a journalistic
report on an act of terrorism could be
prosecuted as ‘tending’ to interfere with
public order.
Any definition of terrorism and related
acts should be exact and legally precise.
Counter-terrorism measures should
be necessary and proportionate to
countering specific threats of terrorism.
The International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights – to which India is a state
party – has been interpreted by the UN
Human Rights Committee as requiring
states to ensure that counter-terrorism
measures do not lead to unnecessary or
disproportionate interference with freedom
of expression.
The UN Special Rapporteur on the
situation of human rights defenders has
called for the repeal of the CSPSA.
Over the last few months, with the
apparent support of the state police,
local political leaders from different
parties have also established groups
such as the Samajik Ekta Manch which
are openly hostile to those who question
the state government. These groups
have begun to gradually intensify their
campaign against dissenting voices.
20. 20
CRITICAL CRACKDOWN: FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION UNDER ATTACK IN MALAYSIA 13
The Supreme Court in 2011 ordered the government of Chhattisgarh and the Union of India
to disband and disarm the state-sponsored civil militias, and to provide its members
security and rehabilitate them.
Consequently, the fight against Maoists/Naxalites is no less a fight for moral,
constitutional and legal authority over the minds and hearts of our people. Our constitution
provides the gridlines within which the State is to act, both to assert such authority, and
also to initiate, nurture and sustain such authority. To transgress those gridlines is to act
unlawfully, imperiling the moral and legal authority of the State and the Constitution.
Supreme Court of India, Nandini Sundar v. State of Chhattisgarh, 5 July 2011.
21. 21
SIA 13
- Immediately drop all
politically motivated charges
against journalists arrested
merely for doing their
work, and immediately and
unconditionally release all
those detained.
- Conduct a time-bound,
impartial and effective
investigation into allegations
of rape, torture and other
human rights abuses
by security forces in
Chhattisgarh, and bring those
responsible to justice.
- Immediately take measures
to end the harassment of
journalists, defenders and
- Ensure a prompt, impartial,
independent and effective
investigation into all
allegations of harassment,
intimidation, attacks,
torture and ill-treatment of
RECOMMENDATIONS
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL INDIA URGES
THE CHHATTISGARH GOVERNMENT TO
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL INDIA URGES
THE UNION MINISTRY OF HOME
AFFAIRS TO
CONTACT US JOIN THE CONVERSATION
contact@amnesty.org.in www.facebook.com/AIIndia
@AIIndia+91 80 49388000
ensure that they are able to
carry out their legitimate
and peaceful human rights
activities without fear of
harassment and intimidation
- Repeal the Chhattisgarh
Special Public Security Act.
journalists, researchers,
lawyers and human rights
defenders in Chhattisgarh.
- Repeal the Unlawful Activities
(Prevention) Act.