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It was Republic Day this year. As the country was busy celebrating 67 years of its Constitution, the police in suburban Mumbai were allegedly torturing a 24-year-old man for executing one of his basic constitutional rights – the right to freedom of religion.
Sunil Keni alias Mohammed Sadik, converted to Islam willingly ten months ago. But when the Malad police found out, they allegedly picked him up from his residence, assaulted him with belts and batons, kicks and blows, and threatened to implicate him in a false terror case. They warned him that if he did not mend his ways, they would accuse him of being associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). His crime, they said, was Islam.
“They made me do sit ups, kicked me, even assaulted me with fists and blows. And then, they called for sindoor (vermillion) from a local shop and made a tika on my forehead, the sign of a Hindu. They told me that I should shave my beard, cut my hair, and report at the police station every day with the tika on my forehead. If I did not obey them, they said that they would accuse me of being a terrorist with the ISIS, and slap a false case against me. They threatened me saying that if I were shown as a terrorist, they could shoot me with bullets or chop me into pieces and throw my remains away, and no one would ever found out,” said Sadik, who delivers imitation jewellery, and lives in north Mumbai’s Malad area.
Recollecting the day it all started, Sadik said that it was his stepmother who caught him offering the evening namaz at home on 18 January, and informed his father. The father, a practicing Hindu, was furious and took Sadik to the local police station. The cops questioned the youth, even slapped him. Sadik tried to explain to them that he had chosen the religion out of his own volition, and that his wasn’t a case of radicalisation. But the cops refused to understand. They warned him, but when he did renounce Islam, they picked him up on 26 January and allegedly tortured him.
After the assault, Sadik did not return home. He went to his friend’s place, and told him about his tragedy. He showed him the wounds; there were several of them. The friend took Sadik to a local maulana, who, in turn, decided to help the youth. The maulana, with Sadik, submitted a letter to the zonal deputy commissioner of police with details of the torture, and also served a legal notice to the concerned police station. The DCP, says Sadik’s friend, promised inquiry and action against the policemen. However, the complaint has seen no progress yet. Sadik, meanwhile, is in the hospital, trying to recover from the physical wounds and mental trauma inflicted on him.
Two days ago, when Sadik was offering prayers at a mosque close to his friend’s home, he experienced a sudden pain in his chest. He told his friend to rush him home, and had two lemons to make himself feel better. He thought that the sinking feeling in his heart was acidity, but he didn’t realise it then that it was fear – a strong fear that was clutching at his heart, making him fold his limbs, and eventually stop breathing. His blood pressure and heart rate both plummeted substantially. Doctors at the hospital had to use electric shocks to revive him. But when requisite tests were conducted, doctors realised that his ailment was psychosomatic.
“If you talk to him, you’ll know how scared he is,” says Hussain Taj, 35, Sadik’s friend.
But even while at the hospital, Sadik says that he is only worried about his family. The cops, he alleges, have been troubling his family after he submitted the letter to the DCP. “They keep calling my parents to the police station, madam. They’re pressuring my family to withdraw the allegations, harassing them. My family is not at fault. And I do not know why they don’t understand that I’m not at fault either,” said Sadik.
Shashank Sandbhor, senior inspector of Malad police station acknowledged that the DCP had accepted the complaint letter submitted by Sadik, and had ordered an inquiry.
He refuted allegations of torture saying, “The allegations are baseless. His parents had approached us with a complaint that he had converted to Islam. We told them that he was over 18 years of age, and it was his constitutional right to practice any religion of his choice. I cannot comment any further as the DCP’s inquiry is in progress.” Vikram Deshmane, DCP, Zone 11 was not available for comment despite repeated calls.
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