Saturday, 17 September 2011

Kashmir panel wants international probe into unmarked graves

A day after the state human rights panel directed the Jammu and Kashmir government to begin a probe into the more than 7000 unmarked graves in various parts of the state, the association of parents of disappeared persons (APDP) maintained that only an international probe would be "credible, independent and representative".


Talking to IANS here Saturday, Khurram Parvez, coordinator of the APDP and liaison person of the International People’s Tribunal on Kashmir (IPTK), said: “The state human rights commission (SHRC) has ordered that an independent, credible and representative probe must be held into the unmarked graves in north Kashmir and those in Poonch and Rajouri districts of the Jammu region.
“We believe only an international probe would be credible, independent and representative.

“The SHRC has shifted the responsibility on the state government. They have ordered the state government to create a structured independent enquiry. We still hold that only an international probe would be impartial.”

The human rights activist and coordinator of the APDP said: “We hope the state government will immediately start DNA profiling of all the nearly 7,000 unmarked graves, 2,730 of which have been found in north Kashmir and 3,844 in Poonch and Rajouri districts.


“The SHRC has not been clear in its order on the forensic examination of those buried in these graves. There has to be a thorough forensic examination of the buried persons because we want to know how and why the buried persons were killed which cannot be found out just through the DNA profiling.”The SHRC had passed on order here Friday directing the state government to start a structured independent probe into the unmarked graves identified by its investigating wing.On the plea of the APDP, the SHRC had also extended its order pertaining to the mass graves in north Kashmir to those the APDP said existed in the Poonch and Rajouri districts of the Jammu region.

The SHRC had also asked for creation of a compensatory mechanism by the state government which must be put in place for the next of kin of the victims. The SHRC order directed the state home department, the director general of the police (DGP) and the district magistrates of the concerned districts to speed up the investigating and the prosecuting process in connection with the unmarked graves.

The security agencies, however, continue to maintain that those buried in the unmarked graves are either foreign or local guerrillas who were killed in gunfights with the security forces close to the line of control (LOC) after infiltrating into the state. “The traditional of marking graves is an urban practice. In majority of rural areas the graveyards are full of unmarked graves.

“When killed, the slain militants are handed over to the locals by the police for burial as per the Islamic practices. Yes, when a local militant was killed close to the LOC, attempts have invariably been made for identification and such identities are recorded with the local police,” said a senior intelligence officer here.

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Monday, 12 September 2011

Brutish Indian Authorities thrash Indian journo unnecessarily in Kashmir

David Devadas, journalist, and author of In Search of a Future, the Story of Kashmir, was beaten by the police in Srinagar on last Monday. Devadas says that he is worried about his life after the incident.

In a letter written to Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, Devadas said that on September 5, when he was crossing the Rambagh bridge in his car in evening in heavy traffic, he heard a loud bang at the back of his car. His car was hit by another car.

Image: David Devadas shows the injuries he sustained after policemen thrashed him last Monday

It was a security vehicle which was part of a convoy. One of the vehicles had a car flying the national flag. Devadas claims, "Those who were in this convoy had apparently got the impression that my car was obstructing their way, and became angry with me for this reason."

What followed after was "a terribly upsetting experience" for Devadas. He explains, "How negatively many ordinary citizens of Kashmir experience the State."

Particularly during the disturbed period over the past two decades, the armed forces have too often been the face of the State most visible to the people. Increasingly, over the past few years, it is the Jammu and Kashmir police rather than central forces that have been the leading interface between the State and the people, says Devadas.

After few minutes a traffic policeman stopped his vehicle. They wanted him to leave his vehicle and hand it over to them. He was asked to wait on the road. Devadas requested that he has an appointment with former MP Jaya Jaitley, but the police didn't listen to his plea.

Devadas found that he was illegally detained. He called the Inspector-General of Police, Kashmir Range, SM Sahai. He could not find him. He kept the message with Sahai's assistant who picked up the phone. The policemen kept insisting that Devadas should hand over his vehicle and also go with them to the police station. That was a scary proposal in a city like Srinagar.

In few minutes, more policemen came and started hitting him with hands and metal lathis and abused him. In spite of such serious assault, policemen have filed an FIR against Davadas, saying that he made a `jaan-leva hamla' (lethal attack) against them when their convoy had passed his car.

Devadas says, "At no point of time during this incident did I resort to using force against police persons, even in self-defence. They further made a baseless allegation that I had a pistol. I do not own any pistol, and I made it clear to them that I was not carrying any pistol. On mentioning that I was a journalist, they threatened that they would teach me a lesson in the police station. Further, they continued to use profanities and issued threats."

Devadas believes that "outrageous allegation" that he possessed a pistol was police's excuse to use physical violence against him.

Devadas, who lives in Kashmir since long, knew that it's not wise to accompany policemen to police station. He insisted that he should be checked right there with help of witnesses.

"I requested him to search me on the spot in front of passers-by who were witnesses before taking me anywhere. I told him the men in the security detail had accused me of having a pistol and that I therefore wished for the veracity of this allegation to be established in front of independent witnesses from the public." says Devadas.

However, he was not given any choice. Nobody agreed to search him. He was forced to sit in police vehicle. "Even after having volunteered to board the vehicle, the police personnel, instead of respecting my action, seized me by my hair and pulled, pushed, kicked and forced me into the back of the jeep. My shirt was torn across my torso at this point. In the jeep, I was further beaten, abused and kicked, while my head was held down at the floor of the jeep by my hair. I was unsure of my fate, and what would follow inside the police station."

When Devadas was bleeding in the police station, various policemen kept asking him where his pistol is.

Only when the deputy superintendent of police came the assault stopped.

He was taken into his room. Here Devadas claims that the station house officer completely twisted the facts, and fabricated a false story stating that that Devadas was beaten on the street by people.

Devadas has written to CM Abdullah, "Sir, I am deeply distressed at my discovery thus of the ease and impunity with which guardians of the law utter bald-faced falsehood. I am also concerned, sir, that I was not provided with a copy of my medico-legal examination at the Bone and Joints Hospital at Barzulla. I was taken to this hospital directly from the police station that night."

Devadas alleges that when he was beaten by police mercilessly policemen taunted that, "Get your home ministry to withdraw the disturbed areas order" that gives him such power.

Devadas has written to CM that, "He also told me angrily that what had happened to me was nothing compared to what Kashmiri journalists have experienced. Further, he told me that this sort of thing happens all over India [ Images ]; he knows this, he added, since he has been an 'international police officer."

Devadas has requested that, 'There is an urgent need to address and check the untrammeled abuse of powers by the police personnel, and other arms of the State, in Jammu and Kashmir. In relation to this incident, a strict action may be taken against these erring police personnel, who unleashed violence on a civilian without any provocation or any legal reason."

Since last 25 years, Davadas has been writing about conflict in Kashmir when he was working for India Today, Economic Times, Business Standard and Gulf News

To do research for his book he left his regular job and moved to Kashmir. Currently, Davadas is associated with Jamia Millia Islamia and the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library.

For Devadas life will never be same again. He writes to Abdullah that, "After this experience, I am apprehensive about my safety. Through that evening, it became clear to me that rules, procedures and court guidelines are treated with contempt by the police force. I would be grateful, sir, if you would kindly advise me on how best to proceed and whether you consider it safe for me to remain in Kashmir."

On advise of fellow journalists, Devadas didn't file any FIR, although the police has filed FIR accusing him of 'lethal attack' on them.

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Sunday, 11 September 2011

‘Kashmir will erupt if Afzal Guru is hanged’

Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, Chairman, Hurriyat Conference (M), tells Baba Umar why a peaceful protest is not possible in Kashmir

Chief Minister Omar Abdullah announced the release of 1,200 youths arrested for stone pelting. Do you welcome it?
Not at all. It is political gimmickry. ‘Granting amnesty’ is a wrong term used by Omar. These youths are not criminals. They were reacting to the situation created last year in which over 120 people, mostly students, were shot at. There is no concept of peaceful protests in Kashmir. The state government never allows it. Kashmir isn’t Delhi where Anna Hazare can lead peaceful protests.

You talked about Anna Hazare. Are you impressed with the way he led protesters?
It was good to see one man leading a war against corruption. But let’s say we start following Anna by launching peaceful protests to demand our basic right, how will the government react? They won’t allow it. They have different stands when it comes to Kashmir. Many things have been done here in the name of nationalism and security. You see, no newspaper carried the issue of mass graves. The media walks only a certain distance in Kashmir.

There has been no reaction from the separatists over Anna’s movement. In Manipur, Irom Sharmila has called upon Anna to visit and support her crusade against the Armed Forces Special Power Act (AFSPA)...
We can always ask Anna to come to Kashmir and raise his voice against human rights violations in the state. We will discuss it in the next meeting of Hurriyat members. We may even send a letter to him asking him to join our crusade. If he is a Gandhian, he should see what has been happening in the Valley for the past 22 years.

The CM said youngsters were used and then forgotten.
I resent this statement. Remember 2008 and 2010 was a people’s movement. Leaders were led by people. The youth was angry. The government choked the movement by force.

You’re suddenly talking about corruption and release of employees’ arrears. Many say your separatism is now restricted to civic and social issues only?
We can never sideline the main issue, which is the Kashmir dispute. But at the same time, we can’t keep our eyes shut to other things. The Kashmir dispute may take time to settle but we have highlighted other issues like the illegal construction of the Kishanganga power project in Gurez.

But Pakistan is also constructing a dam on the same river on its side of the LoC?
We are not okay with that. On this issue, both sides have treated us badly. I remember the World Bank was ready to invest in power projects in the state. Why should we give these projects to NHPC? We are not against development but we are for better deals. It’s simple economics.

In his visit to J&K, US Senator John McCain met Governor NN Vohra and the CM, but no separatist leader. Do you see a change in US policy on Kashmir?
The US has its own interests in India developing economically. It was a reversal of what Barack Obama had said when he was elected president. The world is talking about Arab Spring and Libyan uprising, but we aren’t seeing similar terms for Kashmiris who have been fighting for 63 years. This is double standards.

You recently warned New Delhi over hanging Afzal Guru.
Hanging Afzal would be disastrous for Kashmir. There is a strong sentiment in Kashmir against it both in the way his case was handled and how it was politicised. Kashmir will erupt if he is hanged.

Baba Umar is a Correspondent with Tehelka.
babaumar@tehelka.com

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Forget Libya or Syria. Worry About Kashmir

By : Eric Margolis

Does anyone remember Kashmir? Well, we certainly should. If nuclear war ever breaks out, the most likely place would be in Kashmir.

The fabled state of Kashmir lies in majestic isolation amid the towering mountain ranges of the Himalayas and Karakoram that separate the torrid plains of north India from the steppes and deserts of Central Asia.

Nineteenth Century geopoliticians called Kashmir one of the world’s primary strategic pivots. My book War at the Top of the World was written to help warn of the manifest dangers coming from this complex, little-known confrontation which is the world’s longest running border conflict.


The state human rights commission of the Indian-ruled portion of divided Kashmir just reported its investigators had found 2,156 bodies buried in unmarked graves in 38 different locations. Most were young men. Many bore bullets wounds.

Grisly and horrifying as this discovery was, there was hardly a peep from India’s allies, notably the United States and Britain, who have raised such a hue and cry over alleged civilian deaths in Libya, Iran and Syria. India shrugged off the report.


There may be many more bodies to be found. Most, or all, were the product of the decades-old uprising by Kashmir’s Muslim majority against often brutal Indian rule that the outside world has largely ignored.


Historic Kashmir, with its distinctive Indo-European and Tibetan-Mongol peoples, has ended up divided between three nations: India, Pakistan, and China.

Some nine million Kashmiris live in the Indian-ruled two thirds of Kashmir; over three million in the Pakistani portion, known as "Azad Kashmir," or in Pakistan proper, and small numbers in the frigid, 15,000-20,000 ft high Aksai Chin plateau which is controlled by China.

Kashmir’s Tibetan-race people mostly live in Indian-controlled Ladakh, long called "Little Tibet." There, Tibetan culture has fared far better under Indian rule than in Chinese-ruled Tibet.

When Imperial Britain divided India in 1947, the Hindu maharaja of Kashmir opted to join the new Indian Union. But 77% of his people were Muslim (20% were Hindu, 3% Sikh and Buddhist). Muslim Kashmiris wanted to join newly-created Pakistan. Fighting erupted. India and Pakistan rushed in troops.

The cease-fire line that ended the fighting has become the de facto border between the Indian and Pakistani ruled parts of Kashmir. India claims all of Kashmir, including Chinese-occupied Aksai Chin. Pakistan also claims all of Kashmir. In 1948, the United Nations called for a plebiscite in Kashmir to decide this issue. Pakistan accepted; India refused the UN resolution.

India and Pakistan have fought three full-scale wars over Kashmir and innumerable border clashes, some of which I have witnessed. Last week, three Pakistani soldiers were killed on Kashmir’s de facto border (called the Line of Control) by Indian fire.

Today, hundreds of thousands of Pakistani and Indian troops confront one another on Kashmir’s cease-fire line, and further south in the plains of Punjab. They are backed by growing numbers of tactical nuclear weapons that are on a three-minute hair-trigger alert, making Kashmir the world’s most dangerous border.

Kashmiri Muslims have resisted Indian rule since 1947. In the early 1990’s, massive uprisings erupted against Indian rule, which was enforced by 500,000 troops and ill-disciplined paramilitary police. Pakistan’s intelligence service, ISI, began training Kashmir "mujahidin" and sending them across the border to reinforce the uprising. But Pakistan’s covert support waned after 9/11.


Indian authorities blamed the uprising on "cross-border terrorism." Indian security forces struck back with maximum brutality, leading India’s human rights groups to denounce the repression.

Muslim villages were burned; suspects were tortured; Muslim women were gang-raped by Indian border police; large numbers of young Muslim men were taken from villages and simply disappeared.

Now we know where they went - filling many of the unmarked graves discovered last month.

An estimated 80,000 Kashmiris have so far died in the uprising, the majority Muslims. Muslims also committed bloody atrocities against Hindus and Sikhs. Now, Indian rights groups are demanding that India’s high courts investigate the crimes that have been committed in Kashmir, put an end to them, and punish the guilty parties.

Continued selective moral outrage on our part is unacceptable. India’s allies must encourage Delhi to face this ugly issue and end this blight on India’s democracy and good name. The outside world has to tell Delhi that if it wants to be a respected world power and have a seat on the UN Security Council, it must end the killing and torture in Kashmir. Pakistan must be reminded to stop stirring the pot.

Resolving the Kashmir dispute will eliminate the gravest danger faced by mankind: an India-Pakistan nuclear exchange that could kill an estimated 2 million initially, 100 million thereafter, and spread clouds of radioactive dust around the globe.

Kashmir has poisoned relations between sister nations Pakistan and India who are hopelessly locked in this sterile conflict. Desperately poor India and Pakistan waste tens of billions on military spending because of Kashmir. Clever Indian diplomacy has long kept the Kashmir conflict in the shadows.

Time now for the world to get involved. The solution: let all the borders fade away. Turn Kashmir into an autonomous, demilitarized free trade zone.




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Saturday, 10 September 2011

WikiLeaks: Mirwaiz wanted LoC as border, CMs on rotation

A US secret diplomatic cable has revealed that Hurriyat moderate leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq wanted LoC to be converted into a permanent border and three separate legislative assemblies for Ladakh, Jammu and Kashmir regions with Chief Minister and Governor from each region on rotation basis. The cable says the Mirwaiz wanted this “because he was concerned about his own political future”. 

 “Prior to his recent meeting with Musharraf, the Mirwaiz discussed with PolOff and PolFSN his effort to build support within the Kashmiri and Pakistani public for his solution. On the Indian side the Governor and the CM posts would rotate to allow representatives from Jammu, Ladakh and Srinagar an equal chance to fill each position,” reads the diplomatic cable.

 “The Mirwaiz is no doubt concerned about his own political future in this proposal and that of the rest of the APHC (All Parties Hurriyat Conference). With Srinagar having its own state Assembly, the Mirwaiz and his APHC colleagues would only have to win in the Valley to serve at least part of the time in the Governor and CM positions — rather than relying on minor Muslim voters in Jammu and Ladakh or having to worry about building a coalition with mainstream parties who may be reluctant to ally with the former separatists,” the cable says.

 It adds that the Mirwaiz's proposal — ‘United States of Kashmir’ — included turning the LoC into a permanent border between India and Pakistan. “First, the LoC would become border, but every effort would be made by parties on both sides to make it irrelevant similar to the soft barriers that define many of the borders in Europe. Second, both Kashmiri regions of India and Pakistan would be given semi-autonomous status. The proposal would set three separate state assemblies on the Indian side.. and two on the Pakistani side including Azad Kashmir and northern areas,” it says.


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India exposed - Latest sensational wikileaks cables about fake encounters in Kashmir and India



  (SBU) Summary: A review of Indian media would suggest that police, military and paramilitary officers have become expert at intercepting terrorists and at killing them in self-defense. Scratch the surface, however, and what lies underneath is an "encounter killing" -- an extrajudicial execution framed to look like the police foiled a bona fide terrorist attack. In some cases the victim is killed while in custody or after having been unofficially arrested, and brought to a (usually) isolated location where the officers later announce they had prevailed in a shoot-out with a hardened criminal or hard-core terrorist. India's slow legal system and the difficulty of obtaining timely convictions are key drivers in security officers deciding to summarily execute terrorist suspects, including in staged encounters, sources tell us. Police may also initially be driven to conduct these staged encounters because of the pressure to "solve the case," but they can be a lucrative business, the source of government-funded bounties, medals, and fame. In exceptional cases, police who become famous for multiple encounter killings become legend; Mumbai police officer Daya Nayak, who three years ago literally boasted having killed 83 criminals in encounters, was the subject of no less than three Bollywood films and a consultant on several more.


2. (SBU) The problems of a law enforcement culture that supports staged encounters are manifold: the unpunished (and often unpunishable) murder of civilians, trading good police work for an easy PR solution to a crime or terrorist attack, eroding public trust in the government, permitting corruption, promoting a culture that cheapens human life, and letting go unpunished those who actually committed heinous crimes and terrorist acts. Variants of this problem are found throughout most of India, each variant flavored by the region it inhabits. The good news is that the GOI has begun taking steps to bring to book officers who commit encounter killings; the less savory news is that the problem remains endemic, widespread, deeply ingrained in police culture, and still deemed by much of the public as an acceptable tactic to combat crime and terrorism. End Summary 

3. (SBU) NOTE: For the sake of consistency in this report, "encounters" will refer to all violent clashes between police and suspected terrorists; "bona fide" will be used to describe encounters we believe were legitimate law enforcement operations; and "staged encounters" will refer to incidents where we are highly skeptical of the veracity of police reporting. South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre Executive Director Ravi Nair told us that the terms "encounter killings" and "encounters" dates back to the 1960s, because police committing extrajudicial executions would claim they were killing criminals in an "encounter" with the police. The term has since become shorthand for any violent clash between security forces and criminals/terrorists, and security officials who become known for these operations are openly known and praised by the sobriquet "encounter specialists." NEW DELHI 00004667 002 OF 014

4. (SBU) NOTE (CONTINUED): This cable seeks to assess certain human rights issues endemic among uniformed security forces. Without a doubt terrorists and criminals themselves also commit serious human rights violations, which are more commonly referred to as crimes, and which are well documented in both Embassy reporting and open media. The focus on human rights violations by government officers does not diminish the horrific violations conducted by terrorists against civilians; staged encounters, it should be noted, are also sometimes conducted against civilians. End Note. The Dirty Little S,ecret Everybody Knows ----------------------------------------

5. (U) "Hindustan Times" editor Vir Sanghvi pulled no punches in his commentary entitled "Society's Willing Murderers." "Years ago, an encounter was when a police party confronted a criminal and fought a fight to the finish. Then, the definition changed -- an encounter became an occasion when the police captured a gangster and, instead of arresting him, shot him dead on the spot... Nearly every time I read about an encounter in Delhi, I am pretty sure that the suspects have been shot in cold blood." Sanghvi's concern, however, is not for the victims of wrongful encounters but "with the consequences of letting policemen become executioners" and the likelihood that extortion and corruption would follow. Pressures on Police -------------------

6. (SBU) Indian police forces are getting better at conducting bona fide anti-terrorism operations, but they remain poorly staffed, educated, trained, equipped, and funded (Ref D). Corruption and inefficiency further rob police forces of much-needed resources in areas prone to terrorism (J&K, the North-East, and the Naxal belt) or violent organized crime (Mumbai). At the same time, public and political pressure on police to "arrest someone" mount after every spectacular terrorist attack. This conflict between capacity and needs starts the cycle of police frustration.

7. (SBU) Police frustration extends to the Indian legal system. The difficulty of obtaining timely convictions is a key driver in security officers deciding to summarily execute terrorist suspects, including in staged encounters, according to Delhi-based terrorism expert Ajai Sahni. Forensics is weak in India -- only two DNA labs service the entire country. Few police officers outside major cities are trained in safeguarding and exploiting physical evidence, including electronic data. Bringing 2.2 million police officers (with a combined $5.5 billion budget) into 21st century law enforcement is proving to be a slow slog.

8. (SBU) As a consequence, terrorism and criminal investigations and court cases tend to rely disproportionately upon eyewitnesses (when available) and confessions, many of which are obtained under duress if not torture. Many cases that relied upon eyewitness testimony or confessions, for example those relating to the Punjab NEW DELHI 00004667 003 OF 014 militancy of the 1980s-90s, are later dismissed or overturned when witnesses or defendants later recant their testimony. According to "Hindustan Times" editor Vir Sanghvi, "Cases take so long to come to trial that witnesses forget what they have seen and judgments are often irrelevant by the time they are delivered." In the case of Kulvir Singh Barapind -- a suspected Khalistani terrorist the USG recently extradited to India (Ref A and previous) -- the witnesses in several of the 1991-92 cases filed against him have since recanted their initial testimony, causing the state to withdraw some charges. It is difficult to determine if they recanted due to threats from Khalistani terrorists or that their original testimony was coerced by Punjab police. In other cases, Jaish-e-Mohammad leader Masood Azhar spent seven years in Indian jails before he was released to end the December 1999 hijacking of IC-814, with no convictions, and Mafia kingpin Babloo Srivastava has spent ten years in jail to date, again with no conviction.

9. (SBU) Some police officers, knowing this is their operating environment, choose to kill detained suspects they believe will eventually walk free if arrested. Probably more common -- although data is lacking to confirm this -- would be police keeping criminal and terrorist suspects in jail without charges. These detainees could then be used to "solve" future terrorism cases, by killing them and staging their bodies to appear as terrorists killed in a gunfight. At the street level there is no dearth of anonymous young men whose families, if they have families, lack the clout to pierce the police veil to even discover the men have been jailed; they would also lack the clout to discover there they are held and under what charges, or how to get them released. These people live on the margins of society, illiterate, not missed when they are picked up by the police, and not identified if their bodies turn up as "terrorists" killed in a staged encounter. Frustration Plus Reward Yields Temptation -----------------------------------------

10. (SBU) It is easy for police officers to justify staged encounters as just one more government tool in their fight against crime and terrorism. Mumbai Police Inspector Raju Pillai -- who was awarded the President's Medal for Meritorious Service (2006) -- had worked in encounters, including staged encounters, since the 1980s, and now wants to be known "as a policeman, not as an encounter specialist." He quietly defended his methods to journalists: "in (the 1980s) encounters were the need of the hour, gang war was spilling onto the streets, even the Crime Branch was reeling under threat from the crime lords. Our brief was clear: to wipe out crime." However, Pillai admits that many police applicants today are lured by the potential to make money -- through corruption, power brokering, and in some cases as hired guns. Much as Mullah Omar began his rise in the Taliban by executing summary justice to an alleged rapist, Punjabi encounter specialists acquired the veneer of the Old West sheriff hired to clean up a town. Political, Legal Cover for Encounter Specialists --------------------------------------------- --- NEW DELHI 00004667 004 OF 014

11. (SBU) As officers "specialize" in staged encounters, their positive press and public approval mutually reinforce; they also accrue medals for valor, bonuses, promotions, and other tangible benefits. Another bonus encounter specialists enjoy is impunity. Decorated encounter specialists consider themselves "above the law" because their scoresheet against terrorism protects them from negative fallout. Because these crimes (i.e. trying staged encounters as criminal murders) are enforced at the state level, local public opinion generally weighs heavily in favor of the encounter specialists.

12. (SBU) Domestic legislation effectively immunizes the police and military from the legal prohibitions against torture: -- According to Section 197(2) of the Indian Penal Code, "No Court shall take cognizance of any offense alleged to have been committed by any member of the Armed Forces ... while acting or purporting to act in the discharge of his official duty, except with the previous sanction of the Central Government." -- This is reinforced by Section 6 of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (1958) (AFSPA) which states that "no prosecution, suit, or other legal proceedings shall be instituted, except with the previous sanction of the Central Government against any person in respect of anything done or purported to be done in exercise of powers conferred by this Act." The AFSPA is operative in J&K and several Northeast states. Section 4 of the AFSPA permits security forces stationed in these government-designated "disturbed areas" to shoot persons if "necessary for maintenance of law and order," although the officer is encumbered to provide "such due warning as he may consider necessary." -- The 1973 Code of Criminal Procedure extends this umbrella to government civil servants as well as members of police and military forces.

13. (SBU) Even if the government were to crack down on staged encounters, the same slow bureaucracy and courts that lead to encounters also protect encounter specialists. According to the Asian Centre for Human Rights' "India Human Rights Report 2005," (IHRR) only a minuscule percentage of encounter killings result in a trial, let alone a conviction. Some trials of security officers for alleged staged encounters in J&K and Punjab have lingered for over a decade. Hard for the Government to Address the Problem --------------------------------------------- -

14. (SBU) The pressures on police are real -- in 2005 in Bihar alone (a state admittedly known for its lawlessness), 300 left-wing extremists burned down a police station in one village, another town was sacked and hundreds of prisoners freed, and a police training center was ransacked and nearly 200 firearms were seized, all by Naxalite terrorists. Across India, political leaders select senior police officers in a jurisdiction with more attention to loyalty than to professionalism. This leaves the police chiefs with little say in selecting their subordinates in what is informally NEW DELHI 00004667 005 OF 014 known as the "transfer industry," the process of officers "buying" postings where they can profit as extortionists or hired guns, Deputy Inspector General of Police Gonda (Uttar Pradesh) Safi Ahsan Rizvi told journalists. In fact, some postings are so expensive to purchase, the officer must immediately embark on securing bribes and murder contracts to start paying back the loans he procured to obtain the position in the first place.

15. (SBU) Some social activists take their accusations a step further. Former IAS officer SR Sankaran, now affiliated with the NGO Peoples' Union for Civil Liberties, called staged encounter killings a "deliberate and conscious state administrative practice." (NOTE: Sankaran is also reportedly well regarded by Naxal groups. End Note.) Human rights advocate Ravi Nair cuts to the chase: "Extrajudicial killings are de facto state policy in India." Public Acquiescence -------------------

16. (SBU) This same frustration that leads police to summarily execute terrorists also leads much of the Indian populace to willfully cast a blind eye to the problem. Public frustration with the courts' inability to swiftly apply justice in terrorism cases has bred a climate that tacitly sanctions staged encounters, as long as civilians are not harmed and the police only target two-bit criminals, terrorist foot-soldiers, and slum-dwellers. Encounter Culture Taints Media Reports --------------------------------------

17. (SBU) There is no widely accepted data on the magnitude of the problem of extrajudicial killings, let alone the subset that can be categorized as staged encounters, although the number of such deaths is believed to have declined sharply in recent years following criticism from Indian courts and the National Human Rights Commission. The persistence of staged encounters, however, casts doubt on the legitimacy of many untelevised/unwitnessed reports of police shoot-outs. Elements of an Encounter ------------------------

18. (SBU) Although it is difficult to determine with finality which incidents are staged encounters and which are bona fide, some details of police incidents we see in the Indian media are sufficient to raise suspicions: -- We believe staged encounters are more likely to transpire without civilian witnesses present. We give far more credence to the veracity of terrorists being shot by police during a attack witnessed by civilians or the media, such as the December 2001 attack on Parliament, than to shoot-outs that occur away from the public eye, either in isolated rural areas or (for urban encounters) ones that occur in the hours before dawn, when few civilians are on the street. -- We give more credence to attacks that result in terrorists being arrested and later being presented in court, such as NEW DELHI 00004667 006 OF 014 the arrests following the May 2005 Delhi cinema blasts. Staged encounters are more likely to end with the terrorists, who are often reported as carrying automatic weapons and explosives, all dead, and without having wounded any security officers. -- In many arrests and shoot-outs, the names of the terrorists are released to the media. In some incidents that have the above hallmarks of encounters, however, names are either withheld or only partially released -- either first names only, such as "Aziz" or "Mahmud," or noms de guerre such as "Abu Hamza." Ajai Sahni pointed out to Poloff that his database (www.satp.org) lists no fewer than six dead to the six "Abu Hamzas" and at least one living who is sought by Mumbai police. -- We also believe, but are unable to fully corroborate, that the incidence of staged and/or bona fide encounters spikes for several weeks immediately after a terrorist attack (see Paras 29-30). This is a logical assumption, because both vigilance and the pressure to "do something" rise immediately after a terrorist attack, and taper off afterwards.

19. (SBU) Encounters can also be categorized according to who the "terrorist" is: -- In bona fide encounters, as well as in some staged encounters, the identity of the terrorist is exactly who the police say he is -- the perpetrator or planner of a particular attack, or a leader of a known terrorist organization. The difference here is, the bona fide encounter occurs while the police are trying to arrest/subdue the suspect (in a hot-pursuit style engagement), while the staged encounter occurs after the police decide to execute the already-arrested/subdued terrorist. -- On the other extreme, in some staged encounters, the "terrorist" turns out to be a "chawl" (slum)-dweller or a migrant laborer, living on the margins of society whose disappearance is not noticed, able to disappear -- or "be disappeared" -- without causing a stir. -- According to Sahni, the vast majority of encounter cases lie in the middle: petty thieves and low-level terrorist operatives who, in his words, "did not commit the crimes the police say they did, and certainly are not planners, but are guilty of some other crimes and are often taken from jail cells or known hide-outs, roughed up or shot, and then planted and positioned for effect." Early Encounter Inquiries Slammed AP, Punjab Police --------------------------------------------- ------

20. (SBU) Early investigations into alleged staged encounters yielded high conviction rates against police. Nineteen encounters in Andhra Pradesh in 1975-6 investigated by the Tarkunde Inquiry and eight in 1970-6 investigated by the Punjab Civil Rights Committee were all staged, according to the committees, who also noted the lack of official inquiries into any of the encounters and the refusal of requests made by the victims' families to the state and federal governments to investigate the incidents. NEW DELHI 00004667 007 OF 014 Punjab Credited for Expansion of Encounters -------------------------------------------

21. (SBU) Some Indian terrorism analysts trace the rapid expansion of encounters -- both bona fide and staged -- to Punjab in the late 1980s. The Punjab militancy was the epicenter of violence, and Kashmiri terror was just over the horizon. Vir Sanghvi in early 2006 recounted the "open secret" that Punjab Police chief KPS Gill "ended the Punjab SIPDIS militancy by simply executing the terrorists they came across"; Gill justified his actions by averring that no judges could try the terrorists, nor could any witness testify or any court convict them, because the police could not adequately protect the rest of the legal system from terrorists' retribution. (NOTE: Gill currently heads Chhattisgarh state's anti-Naxal efforts. He is also the President of the Institute for Conflict Management; Ajai Sahni, one of our most reliable counter-terrorism contacts, is the ICM's Executive Director. End Note.)
22. (SBU) During the Punjab militancy of the 1980s-1990s, Additional Director General of Police (Administration) Mohammad Izhar Alam assembled a large, personal paramilitary force of approximately 150 men known as the "Black Cats" or "Alam Sena" ("Alam's Army") that included cashiered police officers and rehabilitated Sikh terrorists. The group had reach throughout the Punjab and is alleged to have had carte blanche in carrying out possibly thousands of staged encounters, according to Indian NGO and press reports. Gill publicly praised the group and said the Punjab police could not have functioned without them. Punjabi Encounters Now Rare, but After-Effects Linger --------------------------------------------- --------

23. (SBU) On the positive side, our Punjabi contacts and a review of Indian media reports suggest that staged encounters in Punjab are largely a thing of the past. As the State Department's 2004 Human Rights Report (HRR) notes, "the pattern of torture and extrajudicial killings (in Punjab) prevalent in the 1990s has ended." In the months following the May 2005 Delhi cinema bombings, several suspects were arrested; none were shot down (Ref E). Punjabi encounter killings did leave behind a legacy, however -- the 2004 HRR also notes that "the government has failed to hold accountable hundreds of police and security officials for serious human rights abuses (committed from 1984-95)," including staged encounters. (NOTE: The California-based NGO ENSAAF estimates that Indian security forces extrajudicially killed and "disappeared" over 10,000 Punjabi Sikhs in counter-insurgency operations during the militancy. End Note.)

24. (SBU) The lingering social and law enforcement problems in Punjab were recorded by the Bellevue-NYU Program for Survivors of Torture and Physicians for Human Rights in a 2005 joint survey of Amritsar-based family members of 160 victims who were extrajudicially killed. The study's focus was on how encounter and custodial killings affected the family members, but it also yielded interesting results about the encounters as well. Only half of the family members NEW DELHI 00004667 008 OF 014 asked police for the circumstances of death; of these, police told approximately 65% the deceased had been killed in an encounter. The encounters were sometimes described as either crossfire with terrorists or escape attempts, but in many cases no specifics were offered.

25. (SBU) The Bellevue-NYU study also reported an understandable strain on civil-police relations. One 70-year old father recounted that when the police offered monetary compensation, he instead offered to give them money, "but first let me kill your son." In addition to a host of psychological traumas uncovered, many of those interviewed reported having been abused or tortured by security forces themselves, and one-third of the family members reported they had also received death threats from the security forces. Kashmir: The New Punjab --------------------------

26. (SBU) When Kashmir took the mantle of "hotbed of terrorism" from Punjab, it also began to assume a greater share of likely staged encounters. In some cases of security forces killing civilians and subsequently claiming to have killed terrorists, we can assume the high operational tempo led to accidental deaths that the security officers staged after the fact, to cover up mistakes. In some cases, however, the staged encounters were clearly premeditated. For staged encounters in J&K that have subsequently been investigated and charges levied against the perpetrators, see Paras 48-50.

27. (SBU) PM Singh and J&K Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad (as well as Azad's predecessor Mufti Mohammed Sayeed) each announced "zero tolerance" policies toward staged encounters when they took office. However, human rights advocate Ravi Nair predicted that, until the Armed Forces Special Powers Act and the J&K Public Safety Act are withdrawn, security forces will continue to commit custodial killings, because these laws provide immunity to those who commit abuses. The use of soldiers and paramilitary forces in the Valley, notably the Rashtriya Rifles, results in many of those who commit custodial killings falling outside the purview of the PM's edict, Nair concluded.

28. (U) According to a May 2006 "Asian Age" article, Army Captain Sumit Kohli of the 18th Rashtriya Rifles had witnessed an April 2004 encounter killing of four porters by Army officers who later claimed the porters were "Pakistani jihadi terrorists." This information reportedly remained under wraps until a June 2005 anonymous letter to the wife of one of the porters claimed the encounter hadbeen staged. In April 2006 Kohli ostensibly committed suicide by shooting himself in the neck with an AK-47. Kohli's wife told reporters Kohli had been shot seven times by another Army officer because Kohli had threatened to cooperate with the Army's investigation of the encounter; she also believed Kohli has written the anonymous letter. An Army spokesman said both the encounter and the purported suicide are still under investigation. Tit-for-Tat Killings in Naxal Belt ---------------------------------- NEW DELHI 00004667 009 OF 014

29. (SBU) The wealth of press reporting on encounter killings in the Naxal Belt (Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkand, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal) compared to that of other parts of India suggests it is particularly prone to such incidents. We cannot authoritatively determine, however, whether this is related to the rate of encounters or the aggressiveness of reporting. Also, because the Naxal belt spans 12 states, and crime is a state-level issue, statistics on Naxal-related encounters overall are particularly difficult to collect.

30. (SBU) Consulate/Chennai's analysis of terrorist violence for 2005 yields an extraordinary and predictable pattern; within 1-4 days of a Naxal murder of a police officer or civilian, there is almost always a killing of one or more Naxalites by police, usually in encounters. The numbers generally favor the police forces; for example, according to Andhra Pradesh government figures, police killed 161 "extremists" against 25 police officers killed. Manipur and Assam: Encounters in the Northeast --------------------------------------------- -

31. (SBU) Most encounters in the Northeast occur in the state of Manipur, where they are "pretty common," if not widely reported, according to Consulate/Calcutta. For example, in the spring-summer of 2004, 60 civilians were killed in encounters over a three-month period. Because of the region's hard physical isolation from the rest of the country, much of this activity escapes the notice of the national press. The "Indian Human Rights Report" catalogues seventeen cases in 2004 of what Manipuri villages claimed were staged encounters, most involving units of the Assam Rifles. According to the families of the victims, in almost all these cases the victims were arrested from their homes and later "killed" by paramilitaries who claimed they were armed, frequently with 9mm pistols. Although reporting from victims' families is not conclusive, elements of a trend are concerning.

32. (SBU) To a lesser extent, Assam has also seen encounters. However, the main terrorist group, the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA, designated as an Other Specified Terrorist Organization) has been in a prolonged negotiation process. ULFA attacks are generally planned to keep casualties low -- they seem to prefer causing disruption at Indian national events and attacking economic targets -- which makes their cadres less likely targets for staged encounters.

33. (SBU) That said, a February 2006 alleged encounter by paramilitary forces in Assam was swiftly followed by violent protest. General Officer Commanding Eastern Command Lieutenant General Arvind Sharma swiftly announced an inquiry, visited the victim's family to give 100,000 rupees compensation, and declared the Army would build a house for his family, provide a job for his wife, and assist the rearing of his two children. (NOTE: 100,000 rupees is roughly equal to $2200, a considerable sum in rural India. End Note.) Before Lt. Gen. Sharma's visit, however, a crowd NEW DELHI 00004667 010 OF 014 of over 15,000 people for four days blocked the road that connects Assam to Arunachal Pradesh and burnt vehicles, a post office, and a train station. Police defending their headquarters in Kakopathar opened fire on the mob, killing seven, while the enraged throng killed two security officers and seized their AK-47s. Capital Encounters Seldom Reported; Uptick Recent --------------------------------------------- ----
34. (SBU) Reports of encounters in New Delhi are infrequent -- less than once per year until the two incidents reported in the first half of 2005, both involving Special Cell units killing suspected Lashkar-e-Tayyiba members, according to www.satp.org. Both times, the encounters happened near arms caches that included assault rifles and explosives. We cannot say whether this is a function of the number of actual encounters or of the ability/willingness of reporters to cover the subject, although both Ajai Sahni and Vir Sanghvi say that encounters in Delhi are more frequent than Indian press reporting suggests. In the cases above and the handful of others reported since 2000, police reported that the terrorist suspects carried or were near firearms, but in none of the incidents were any police reported slain or injured. In the November 2002 Ansal Plaza incident, the Delhi Police claimed they intercepted a plot to bomb a shopping mall; "Hindustan Times" reports say the police "took two drugged terrorist suspects to the Ansal Plaza basement and shot them in cold blood."

35. (U) Police in early March reported a 6am encounter that left dead two suspected Laskhar-e-Tayyiba terrorists in northwest Delhi, claiming the duo were behind the October bomb attack on the Hyderabad police office. The Hyderabad-based Civil Liberties Monitoring Committee called the encounter "fake," primarily because (1) no police were injured despite the terrorists possessing an AK-56, pistols, and hand grenades, and (2) the police released detailed histories of the terrorists shortly after the encounter.

36. (U) More recently, Delhi Police say they killed a suspected Laskhar-e-Tayyiba terrorist near Nehru Stadium on May 8 at 10pm, although media reports are consistent with the profile of a staged encounter: lack of civilian witnesses, lack of police casualties in Delhi after the "LeT" terrorist reportedly opened fire first, only a nom de guerre given to the press by the police (Abu Hamza, see Para 18), etc. Police told reporters they shot Abu Hamza after he opened fire; no police casualties were listed. Mumbai Encounters Declining, Crooks Still Targeted --------------------------------------------- -----

37. (SBU) The same frustrations that bedevil police trying to combat terrorists also stymie those who face criminals; in some cases criminal police have it harder, because anti-terrorism units typically benefit from better equipment and training, and in some states special anti-terrorism laws give the police additional legal tools. However, police in regions where organized crime holds sway, as in Mumbai, stand to profit handsomely by taking contracts from one criminal gang to kill members of a rival. The criminals know their NEW DELHI 00004667 011 OF 014 hired gun will do the job well and is immune from prosecution; the officer earns cash and favors from the criminals, and sometimes a commendation from the government, as well as the verbal support from the public for helping to clean up crime.

38. (SBU) Reported encounter deaths in Mumbai peaked in 2001 at 94, and declined to 11 for 2004 (most recent figures available through "Times of India" reporting.) Consulate/Mumbai reports that Police Commissioners Anami Roy (Mumbai) and Shivanandan (Thane) made a policy decision to rein in encounter killings in 2004 -- which saw a dramatic drop from 35 encounters the prior year -- in large part because several police officers were visibly enriching themselves by using encounters for extortion. Also, several police officers were charged with murder in September 2004 following the suspicious disappearance (and suspected torture-killing) of one of the accused in the 2003 Ghatkopar bombing case. As a result, the small teams of "encounter specialists" were reportedly disbanded and their officers distributed to other branches.

39. (SBU) In October 2004, the Maharashtra State Human Rights Commission began investigating the January 2003 killing of Bhimappa Koli, a reputed gangster. His family claims he was arrested and killed by police, the police contend he shot at them and was killed when they returned fire. An unnamed lawyer was quoted in the "Times of India" (August 29, 2005): "In most cases, the cops pick up the victims and plant (evidence) before shooting them in cold blood. The cops also demand money for their release. But there is no guarantee that you will not be shot even after you pay up." Daya Nayak, "Encounter Specialist" ----------------------------------

40. (SBU) Mumbai policeman Daya Nayak was an "encounter specialist" and the inspiration for characters in three movies, including "Ab Tak Chhappan" (which means "56 Killed Until Now") and the eponymous "Encounter Daya Nayak." The Bollywood film "Company" was dedicated to Nayak. His reputation and Bollywood clout were sufficient to yield Amitabh Bachchan (India's Sean Connery) as the chief guest for the opening of a school dedicated to Nayak's mother. Nayak's career reads like a supporting character in Suketu Mehta's book "Maximum City" about Mumbai's underworld and the police who live symbolically with it. From working in a restaurant, he joined the Mumbai police force in 1995; in a 2003 rediff.com interview after eight years on the force he boasted "I have done 83 encounters, I have arrested more than 300 criminals." Indian press reports suggest many if not most of the encounters were staged.

41. (SBU) Starting around that time, Indian press started investigating his alleged ties to Mumbai mobsters. In January 2006 he was suspended from the police force and the following month the Mumbai court issued a warrant for his arrest for having amassed "assets disproportionate to his known means of income" (i.e. corruption allegations) to the tune of four hundred times his annual police salary over a ten-year period. As former CBI Director Joginder Singh NEW DELHI 00004667 012 OF 014 pointed out to journalists, Nayak's alleged extrajudicial executions are not under the legal microscope.

42. (SBU) In addition to Nayak, several other Mumbai encounter specialists have been suspended, but, again, for corruption more often than for the killings. Vir Sanghvi in a column contrasted the ease of letting the encounter culture persist over spending the money needed to ensure that police are properly trained and equipped and courts are able to effect justice more swiftly Human Rights Committee Guidelines Largely Ignored --------------------------------------------- ----

43. (SBU) The National Human Rights Committee issued the following guidelines in 2005 to all the state governments to specifically address encounter killings; former CBI Chief Joginder Singh reports "they have hardly had any impact": -- All encounters should be probed properly and without bias. -- Any death caused in an encounter with any local police force or paramilitary force in peaceful areas would amount to culpable homicide, unless it is established that the action was taken in self defense. (NOTE: The reference to peaceful areas is likely meant to exempt legislatively-designated "disturbed areas" in J&K and the Northeast. End Note.) -- The probe report has to be submitted within six weeks. -- Investigation should be independent, police involved in the encounter should be kept out.

44. (SBU) Nair publicly laments that that NHRC "has not proved to be an effective body in combating extrajudicial killings" because it cannot move its recommendations into policy. Perpetrators are more likely to face an internal inquiry than a court trial (or for military officers a court martial.) The typical punishment for a police officer is a transfer to another jurisdiction with no change in rank or pay. Social and Religious Factors Complicate the Picture --------------------------------------------- ------

45. (SBU) Beyond the legal and political cover that security forces enjoy, social and religious factors grant more latitude regarding staged encounters. A uniform carries weight in Indian culture, and few civilians dealing face-to-face with a police or military officer will gainsay their directives or statements. This power dynamic is exacerbated when the victim is poor or of low caste, or a Muslim.

46. (SBU) Cremation is a common means to dispose of corpses in India. Religious traditions and, in some locales, a paucity of burial plots guarantees this method will continue, especially with unclaimed/unidentified corpses. This offers police a handy and non-suspect avenue to destroy evidence after a staged encounter. Punjab police in the 1980s-90s reportedly cremated hundreds if not thousands of encounter victims without notifying their families, according to NEW DELHI 00004667 013 OF 014 several Punjab-based NGOs. The IHRR indicates that several encounter victims in the Northeast in recent years were cremated without prior family permission. Evidence of Changing Attitudes ------------------------------

47. (SBU) It is encouraging to report that public attitudes regarding staged encounters appear to be changing. Inspector Pillai reflected that the image of the police dropped "down to zero" in large measure because of the common presumption that most reported encounters are staged. For example, PolFSN when asked for his assessment of the May 31 dawn attack on the hardline Hindu Rashtriya Swyamsewak Sangh (RSS) headquarters in Nagpur (Ref B) unambiguously told us he believed it to be a staged encounter crafted for the political gain of the RSS and the BJP.

48. (SBU) In a more tangible development, the CBI in May charged five Army officers with the March 2000 abduction and killing of five reportedly unarmed and innocent Kashmiris for having ostensibly massacred 35 Sikh villagers in Chittisinghpora, during President Clinton's visit to India (Ref C). The officers -- a Brigadier, a lieutenant colonel, two majors and a subedar (junior commissioned officerQ equivalent to a CW2) -- face multiple charges including fabricating evidence and witness statements, burying the bodies before they were examined, falsely displaying arms and ammunition as having been seized, and lying about what weapons the officers used in the engagement. The bodies of three of the five civilians were badly burned despite the officers' having reported they died of gunshot wounds, and none of the officers was injured in what they called a "major gun battle." The officers were all serving at the time in the Rashtriya Rifles (NOTE: Many encounter allegations in J&K name Rashtriya Rifles officers as the culprits. End Note.)

49. (SBU) According to Indian newspaper reports, evidence of the officers' crime began to emerge as early as April 2000, when relatives of the five purported terrorists began protesting against the J&K security forces, leading to police killing 10 during a demonstration that month. The case against the alleged assailants continued to crumble when the "link" person between Chittisinghpora and another terrorist attack was exonerated (November 2000) and a district government official publicly stated the five civilians were in fact innocent (April 2001). Despite these developments, it took the GOI six years before issuing even an announcement of pending charges against the soldiers. Sahni refers to the "Pathribal" encounter, where innocent civilians vice low-level terrorist thugs, are sacrificed so the security services can appear responsive, as a rare exception.

50. (SBU) In another example of cracking down on staged encounters, the Army on May 9 began the court-martial of Brigadier Suresh Rao for allegedly ordering his subordinates to fake terrorist kills to garner awards, citations, and positive public relations. One of Rao's subordinates, Colonel HS Kohli (no apparent relation to the above-mentioned Captain Sumit Kohli), was dishonorably discharged from the Army in November 2004 for having faked terrorist encounters in Assam in August 2003. His use of ketchup in staged photos NEW DELHI 00004667 014 OF 014 of supposedly dead terrorists earned him the sobriquet "the Ketchup Colonel." Comment -------

51. (SBU) In some respects encounter specialists represent the most egregious of police abuses. The corrupt gain personally, the violent criminal derives personal satisfaction, the perjurer perverts justice; the encounter man does all these, and is handsomely rewarded for his efforts. Respect for human rights is a mighty weapon -- perhaps one of the strongest -- in the war against terror. Without it, security forces and terrorists begin to appear indistinguishable from each other. If recent events indicate a new trend against staged encounters, we welcome it. We also must acknowledge, however, the massive cultural inertia that the Indian national and state security forces must overcome to make staged encounters a thing of the past. MULFORD

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