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India Must Release Or Charge Kashmiri Teenage Protestor : Amnesty Internati

Shamil Khan

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LINK : FRONTLINE KASHMIR

The Jammu and Kashmir authorities must immediately release or charge a teenage anti-government protester who was rearrested this week after spending three months in administrative detention, Amnesty International said.
Murtaza Manzoor, 17, was briefly released from prison on Wednesday after the High Court found that his administrative detention was unlawful. He was immediately rearrested by police.

Amnesty International said it is likely that a repeat administrative detention order for Murtaza Manzoor will be passed, allowing police to detain him without charge or trial for up to two years.

"The police in Jammu and Kashmir are playing a game with the judiciary. Courts order a person's release only for the police to wait outside prison to re-arrest them. This farce should stop," said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific Director
.

"Murtaza Manzoor must be released immediately, unless he is charged with a recognizable criminal offence. If so, he should be remanded in custody by an independent court and his rights as a child should be recognized. The authorities must not order his repeat administrative detention."
Although he is 17 years old Murtaza Manzoor is being treated as an adult because the laws of Jammu and Kashmir define boys above the age of 16 as adults. This contravenes both Indian law and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.


The Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir has said that the laws will be amended to make them consistent with international law and standards.

"We can clearly see the need to amend the law in Jammu and Kashmir because teenage boys are held in jails with no special facilities for juveniles," said Sam Zarifi.

Police arrested Murtaza Manzoor on 21 January in the state capital Srinagar. He was accused of attempted murder, assault and rioting, based on allegations that he led a June 2010 protest against the Indian government that turned violent and resulted in protesters rioting and pelting police with stones.
On 8 February, fearing that Manzoor would be released on bail, police placed him in administrative detention under the highly problematic Jammu and Kashmir Public Safety Act (PSA), which allows for up to two years’ detention without charge or trial.

On 13 May the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir found Murtaza Manzoor's detention to be unlawful and ordered his release.On 18 May, instead of being released to his father who was waiting outside the Kot Bhalwal Jail, Murtaza Manzoor was escorted from the prison by four policemen of a specialist counter-insurgency team and taken to the Joint Interrogation Centre at Jammu.

Police told his father that Murtaza Manzoor would be kept at the interrogation centre for a few days before being handed over to a police station in Srinagar. "Murtaza’s case illustrates the ‘revolving door’ nature of detentions widespread in PSA cases, as documented in Amnesty International’s recent report: A Lawless Law,” said Sam Zarifi. “ Murtaza Manzoor's family was not given any information on the alleged offences for which he is being held. Amnesty International said it believes his detention may be unlawful.

At least 322 people are reported to have been detained without trial under the provisions of the Public Safety Act in Jammu and Kashmir from January to September 2010 alone.A number of them, including children, have been detained on similar grounds of stone pelting and rioting during various protests against the Indian government throughout the summer of 2010.

READ MORE
Child at risk of detention without charge (Urgent action, 19 May 2011)
Jammu and Kashmir urged to release teenage protester held in administrative detention (News, 15 April 2011)
India: A 'lawless law': Detentions under the Jammu and Kashmir Public Safety Act (Report, 21 March 2011)
 
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Why do you post this jihadi crap from Pakistani media?
 
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No but its true....we are wasting money of our taxpayers.....these fools have destroyed tax property...at one time SC even said about Gurjar protest that money should be recovered from those who is responsible for destroying public property and same should be applied to these people...they want them to be treated like rest of the Indians and i say yes they should be treated....they enjoy special attention which is not right...
 
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LINK : FRONTLINE KASHMIR

The Jammu and Kashmir authorities must immediately release or charge a teenage anti-government protester who was rearrested this week after spending three months in administrative detention, Amnesty International said.
Murtaza Manzoor, 17, was briefly released from prison on Wednesday after the High Court found that his administrative detention was unlawful. He was immediately rearrested by police.

Amnesty International said it is likely that a repeat administrative detention order for Murtaza Manzoor will be passed, allowing police to detain him without charge or trial for up to two years.

"The police in Jammu and Kashmir are playing a game with the judiciary. Courts order a person's release only for the police to wait outside prison to re-arrest them. This farce should stop," said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific Director
.

"Murtaza Manzoor must be released immediately, unless he is charged with a recognizable criminal offence. If so, he should be remanded in custody by an independent court and his rights as a child should be recognized. The authorities must not order his repeat administrative detention."
Although he is 17 years old Murtaza Manzoor is being treated as an adult because the laws of Jammu and Kashmir define boys above the age of 16 as adults. This contravenes both Indian law and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.


The Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir has said that the laws will be amended to make them consistent with international law and standards.

"We can clearly see the need to amend the law in Jammu and Kashmir because teenage boys are held in jails with no special facilities for juveniles," said Sam Zarifi.

Police arrested Murtaza Manzoor on 21 January in the state capital Srinagar. He was accused of attempted murder, assault and rioting, based on allegations that he led a June 2010 protest against the Indian government that turned violent and resulted in protesters rioting and pelting police with stones.
On 8 February, fearing that Manzoor would be released on bail, police placed him in administrative detention under the highly problematic Jammu and Kashmir Public Safety Act (PSA), which allows for up to two years’ detention without charge or trial.

On 13 May the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir found Murtaza Manzoor's detention to be unlawful and ordered his release.On 18 May, instead of being released to his father who was waiting outside the Kot Bhalwal Jail, Murtaza Manzoor was escorted from the prison by four policemen of a specialist counter-insurgency team and taken to the Joint Interrogation Centre at Jammu.

Police told his father that Murtaza Manzoor would be kept at the interrogation centre for a few days before being handed over to a police station in Srinagar. "Murtaza’s case illustrates the ‘revolving door’ nature of detentions widespread in PSA cases, as documented in Amnesty International’s recent report: A Lawless Law,” said Sam Zarifi. “ Murtaza Manzoor's family was not given any information on the alleged offences for which he is being held. Amnesty International said it believes his detention may be unlawful.

At least 322 people are reported to have been detained without trial under the provisions of the Public Safety Act in Jammu and Kashmir from January to September 2010 alone.A number of them, including children, have been detained on similar grounds of stone pelting and rioting during various protests against the Indian government throughout the summer of 2010.

READ MORE
Child at risk of detention without charge (Urgent action, 19 May 2011)
Jammu and Kashmir urged to release teenage protester held in administrative detention (News, 15 April 2011)
India: A 'lawless law': Detentions under the Jammu and Kashmir Public Safety Act (Report, 21 March 2011)

Even AMNESTY talks about human right violation in your favorite country Pakistan....any thought about it...Just a small note...If India accepts demand of the Kasmiri separatists ...then it will be just a cake a walk for separatist forces to disintegrate India....So for our survival...we can not leave Kashmir...
 
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The ringleaders of the stone pelters need to be punished. Especially those who were receiving funds from abroad. But the judicial processes should be faster and more transparent.
 
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We have two more options:

1. Encounter for the hardcore ones.
2. Economic incentives, jobs for the amenable ones.

I, personally, am in favour of the second option. After all, these are our countrymen no matter how misguided.

For the exceptional cases, though, we may resort to the first option.
 
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Indian attrocities against the inncont Kashmiri muslims will not be forgotten.
 
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Indian attrocities against the inncont Kashmiri muslims will not be forgotten.

So sure?

When people in today's Pakistan have forgotten the atrocities committed upon their ancestors by the Mughals, Bin Qasims and their ilk and in fact name their kids after these pillagers and looters, what makes you so sure that the so-called 'Indian atrocities' will not be forgotton?
 
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What's the Jihadi thing in it my boy? Please open your eyes first

Stop worrying about Kashmir. Indian Govt. is doing its best and any good you can do to Kashmiris is by keeping ur Nose-Poke out of it.


Get a life dude...
 
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Indian attrocities against the inncont Kashmiri muslims will not be forgotten.

What about attrocities of Pak Govt. on Pak itself?? You should take care of it first I suppose...

Pak province cancels 6 US aid deals May 21, 2011, 05.44am IST Reuters LAHORE: Pakistan’s most populous province has cancelled six aid agreements
with the United States in protest over the
US. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, its
law minister said. Pakistan hailed bin Laden’s death as a big step against militancy but was incensed
by the raid in a garrison town not far
from the capital, saying it was a violation
of sovereignty. The operation severely
strained already uneasy ties between the
United States and Pakistan, whose cooperation is needed to stabilise
Afghanistan. “We have cancelled six MOUs (memorandums of understanding) with
the United States in the fields of health,
education and solid waste management,” said Rana Sanaullah, law minister of
Punjab, the country ’s political nerve centre. “We have told their concerned departments about our decision. This is
our protest against the Abbottabad
incident.”


Six MOUs (memorandums of understanding) with
the United States in the fields of health,
education and solid waste management, the basic necessesities of common masses are being cancelled instead of Arms supply...

A pure eg. of ATTROCITY... It equaly funny... :P
 
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Indian attrocities against the inncont Kashmiri muslims will not be forgotten.

And also this one...

16 people killed in blast in NATO fuel
tanker in Pakistan May 21, 2011, 10.17am IST Reuters LANDIKOTAL: At least 16 people were
killed early on Saturday when an
explosion in northwest Pakistan hit a
truck carrying fuel supplies for NATO
forces in Afghanistan, officials said. "The tanker was on fire because of a blast
late in the night. There was another blast
early in the morning in the same tanker
and 16 people who gathered near it to
collect oil were killed," a senior local
administration official told Reuters. Police officials said the first blast was
caused by a bomb. Taliban militants
seeking to topple the US-backed
Pakistani government often claim
responsibility for such attacks. Pakistan has seen a surge in militant
violence since US special forces killed
Osama bin Laden in his compound not far
from the capital Islamabad this month.


Dude Leave Kashmir Just try to save the leftover Pakistan if you can...
 
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