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At a time when the election fever seems to have engulfed the country, in a small hamlet of south Kashmir, a family is still trying to come to terms with the death of their loved one.
On the intervening night of 18 and 19 March, Rizwan Asad Pandit, 29, from Awantipora in south Kashmir, died in police custody. As soon as the news of his death spread in the Valley, the state administration ordered a magisterial probe to find out the cause of death. The parents of Rizwan, who was a school principal at a local private school, speaking to media, alleged that their son was killed in “cold blood”, and pinned little hope on the magisterial investigation into the incident. Rizwan’s father, Asadullah Pandit, talking to media said, “We don't believe in any probe, as probes ordered in the last 30 years yielded nothing.”
Let us turn the pages of history.
The 1990s is known as the decade of massacres in Kashmir. Soon after the armed struggle started in the Valley in 1989, the Government of India, using its military might, left no stone unturned to crush the uprising. On 21 January 1990, nearly 53 civilians (unofficial figures) were killed by Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel on Gaw Kadal bridge; the incident is known as the ‘Gaw Kadal massacre’.
Soon after the incident, a Court of Inquiry (CoI) was ordered. 29 years later, not a single person has been booked till date.
On 6 January 1993, BSF soldiers killed nearly 57 civilians and burnt dozens of shops and other structures in what has come to be known as the ‘Sopore massacre’. Again, this was reportedly in retaliation to militants attacking BSF men of 94 battalion at Baba Yousuf Gali. The fate of the inquiry into these civilian deaths is yet to be known.
Similarly, investigations were ordered in a series of other “massacres” that include Khanyar (8 March 1992): nearly 22 civilians killed; Hawal (21 May 1990): nearly 70 people killed; Bijbehara (22 October 1993) nearly 51 people killed; Mashali Mohalla (8 August 1992): nearly 9 civilians killed; and Brakpora (25 March 2000): almost nine civilians were killed.
In all the above cases, not a single person has been booked till date.
Sheikh Showkat Hussain, a prominent scholar of human rights and international law, said that most of the probes ordered by the successive governments into human rights violation largely remain “inconclusive”.
“Under AFSPA Act, one cannot be put on trial without the prior permission of the Government of India, and that permission is seldom granted,” Hussain explained.
According to Section 6 of the AFSPA, “No prosecution, suit or other legal proceeding 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 the powers conferred by this Act”.
As per the data compiled by International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), in collaboration with the Jammu Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS), since 2008, 108 inquiries have been ordered to probe various human rights violations, but till date, “zero prosecutions” of the accused armed forces personnel have taken place.
Among these probes is that into the killing of 17-year-old student Tufail Mattoo.
On 11 June 2010, Tufail was returning home from tuition. When Tufail reached near Gani Memorial stadium in downtown Srinagar, he was hit on the head by a tear-gas shell (fired by the Jammu and Kashmir police), and died on the spot.
Tufail’s father, Ashraf Mattoo, terming probes in Kashmir as the “butt of jokes”, said it is nothing but a trick to play with the emotions of the victim’s family.
“This is all nonsense. Hundreds of probes were conducted in the past. What happened? I am running from pillar to post for the past nine years to get justice for my child,” Ashraf said. “And I know I will never get that justice.”
“The probes,” Ashraf said, “are only ordered so the politicians ruling the state get exonerated.”
Tufail’s case is still pending in the court.
During the 2016 agitation following militant Burhan Wani’s killing, Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti had announced the setting up of a Special Investigating Team (SIT) to probe the killing of a 30-year-old college lecturer, Shabir Ahmad Mangoo, at Khrew, part of South Kashmir's Pulwama district, and an ATM guard, Riyaz Ahmad Shah, at Karan Nagar in Srinagar.
On the night of 17 August 2016, Shabir was reportedly dragged from his home by security forces. The following day, his mortal remains were brought home. A probe conducted by the Jammu and Kashmir police has held 23 army personnel responsible for his death. But nobody has been booked till date.
Shabir’s father, Wali Mohammad Mangoo, said the family is still waiting for justice which seems to be elusive.
On 7 August, Riyaz was returning home from an ATM at Habba Kadal area, where he worked as a guard, on his Scooty. At 11:30 PM, his brother got a call from Shri Maharaja Hari Singh (SMHS) hospital, where he found his brother dead.
A pellet cartridge fired from close range had burst inside Riyaz’s abdomen and there were “more than 350 pellets” lodged in his chest and abdomen. His vital organs – including lungs and kidneys – were ruptured by the pellets.
Relatives alleged that Riyaz was shot in cold-blood by “CRPF personnel” who had a bunker near the area in which he was found dead. The Police registered an FIR (numbered 57/2016) at the Karan Nagar police station. The fate of the investigation is still unknown. In Riyaz’s case, the family had a similar story to narrate.
Human right activists Khurram Parvez said the probes ordered by the successive governments in Kashmir are nothing but an eye wash to calm public anger and distract attention till events fade from the public memory.
“These probes have lost sanctity. Everyone knows that nobody will be booked for their crimes,” Parvez said.
(Junaid Kathju is a Kashmir-based journalist and tweets at @junaidkathju. Views expressed are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)
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