Reality of killing terrorists in Indian Held Kashmir
Friday, February 02, 2007
SRINAGAR: Police in Indian-held Kashmir (IHK) exhumed the body of a man believed to be a carpenter whom the authorities had deliberately branded a Pakistan-based Islamist militant and said was killed in a joint police-army operation, a day after the Jammu and Kashmir chief minister had ordered a probe into the disappearance, vowing that any police official found guilty of wrongdoing would be subjected to exemplary punishment.
The father of missing carpenter, Abdul Rahman Paddar, 35, collapsed in tears upon seeing the body, saying that he needed no medical analysis of the remains to know that it was his son.
I can tell you the body is of my son. I can recognise him. He is my blood, said a sobbing Ghulam Rasool Padder at Sumbhal town, 40 kilometres north of Srinagar.
Reporters at the graveyard where the body had been buried said that part of the face had been mutilated.
As the body was brought out of the ground, thousands of villagers pelted the police with stones, while shouting, punish the killer policemen. Police then used tear gas and batons to drive the crowd back.
An AFP photographer at the scene said that several villagers sustained injuries.
Authorities said they were preparing to conduct DNA tests on the body to determine its identity.
The exhumation came after New York-based Human Rights Watch earlier this week slammed the killing as an extra-judicial execution at the hands of police, while urging India to tackle the problem of fake encounter killings by its security forces.
Similarly, the leading rights group in IHK - Kashmirs Coalition of Civil Society also said earlier this week that 44 people had disappeared from the area in 2006, the majority of whom had been picked up by security forces.
Abdul Rahman disappeared December 8 after arriving in Srinagar and was shot dead a day later.
A report in the Indian Express newspaper asserted that Abdul Rahman had been arrested by Srinagar police, who later described him as a Multan-based member of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), adding that he had been killed in a gun battle.
On Monday, authorities in Srinagar confirmed that the carpenter had been killed in a staged encounter and falsely identified as an Islamist militant. Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad on the same day said that Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Ganderbal Hans Raj Parihar his deputy Bahadur Ram had been demoted, while two other police officers had been arrested over the incident.
The two detained officers had been rewarded with cash and honours after the alleged gun battle, while newspapers have said that they confessed to the killing before identifying the grave where Abdul Rahman he had been buried.
Police said they were also investigating three additional cases where civilians were allegedly killed and later described by police as Islamist militants.
Indian human rights groups say that 8,000 Kashmiri Muslims have gone missing in the region since 1989, most of them after being detained by security forces.
The government puts the number at between 1,000 and 3,900. afp
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan