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Why India Deported U.S. Researcher Working on Amnesty Report on Kashmir?

Good to see Amnesty Imternational publishing truth about Indian Army's brutalities and violation of human rights in Indian Occupied Kashmir (IOK).
More work should be done by human rights agencies to highlight Indian army's violation of human rights in IOK so that whole of the world can see it
 
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Good to see Amnesty Imternational publishing truth about Indian Army's brutalities and violation of human rights in Indian Occupied Kashmir (IOK).
More work should be done by human rights agencies to highlight Indian army's violation of human rights in IOK so that whole of the world can see it

You should also pay attention to AI's reports on Pakistan too before praising their work on India.
 
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I agree, AFSPA should be removed. Lot of innocent people died due to it.

Even more innocent minorities will die if you revoke AFSPA. In fact, AFSPA had to be enforced in 1990 ONLY after the terrorism killed/maimed/looted/hounded out countless Kashmiri Pandits out of their ancestral homes in late 80's!

AFSPA made law enforcement agencies act without thinking about consequences.. they can keep you in custody and torture and kill you just based on suspicion alone..

Well that is not the spirit of the law itself. Even today, with the exception of a few rogue elements, the security forces have been extremely professional in their conduct. In addition, the Central government has, time and again, thrown those forces found guilty to the wolves and prosecuted the guilty despite AFSPA!

terrorism has been lowest in kashmir for 5 years or so.. what do you expect .. zero terror, that wont happen even in mainland India.

Terrorism has been down mainly because of the power given to forces with laws like AFSPA that have given security forces a semblance of balance in the fight against terrorists who have little regard for law or law-abiding citizens or their properties or the security forces themselves!

Remove AFSPA, and you will have a free-for-all, a la 1989! In fact, AFSPA had to be enforced in J&K in 1990 ONLY after the cross-border terrorism peaked in late 1980's!

The whole world (including Amnesty International and the whole of Western world) ignored the plight of Kashmiri Pandits when they were literally getting slaughtered in their thousands but when the Government empowers security forces to take on the terrorists with AFSPA, guys like yourself and Amnesty International get restless!
 
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classic duplicity of Indian army, cant get out of kashmir and creates fake encounter to legitimize further stay.. its like the friend who has overstayed, eats all your food from your fridge, and wont give your remote.

That's right! Before 1990 (when the AFSPA was enforced), the Kashmiri Pandits were being showered with rose petals by their own neighbors. But the army, because it didn't have anything better to do, barged right in, just for eating food from your fridge!

You seriously need to look at why AFSPA had to be enforced in J&K in the first place!

even Indian govt and their interlocutors in kashmir agree, the tide of militancy has turned in kashmir.

The motive and motivation of the people who wanted to cause trouble in Kashmir hasn't changed at all. What has certainly diminished is their success rate. Only fools would confuse their failure to cause trouble as change of heart!

Fortunately, despite all their shortcomings, the guys in Delhi know what they are doing when it comes to Kashmir!
 
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amnesty international has scathing report about USA... and non affiliated journalists have written a lot about USA, in non flattering way.. nobody calls them preachy..

How does that matter ? Both she & Amnesty knew that they were in violation of the law but went ahead & did it anyways on the belief that the UPA would not implement the law. That much is clear from her own article in the Hindu. There have been other articles by former Amnesty staffers which clearly say that they warned Amnesty officials that they were putting this person at risk of deportation by getting her to do this work. Amnesty & the lady in question broke the law. Willfully & with full knowledge of what the potential consequences were.
 
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Army was called in only after unspeakable horror was committed against every Kashmiri loyal to Indian state - particularly those innocent Kashmiri Pandits, many of who have since been uprooted from their own homelands. This was after, countless of them were first murdered/humiliated/tortured their properties and women taken as war bounties.

Let the others be. What you have now in Kashmir is a military police state.

Are you suggesting that Indian security forces forbid Kashmiris going on about their business? You must have confused Kashmiri Muslims to those in Chinese occupation of Xinjiang!

I have never understood how the presence of Army in Kashmir hinders Kashmiri's daily life/business - unless that business is causing trouble itself! There are many regions throughout the world with Army cantonments, do they all complain the same way about the presence of Army in their area?

And trust me, if Indian Army had in anyway interfered ordinary people's lives (let alone interfering in religious practices), your guys would have known it first and made it known to the whole world!

How long would you be able to run it before another mass uprising?

If somebody harbors that intention, they will do it irrespective of Army's presence. But when they do, Army is there to make sure that they won't have a free-for-all with the other minorities like in 1980's!

Did you know like India, Israel also prohibits foreign journalists to visit key areas in West Bank and Gaza? Why would they do that unless they have something to hide?

Even the uninhabited areas of Siachen are barred for Foreign Journalists. It could simply be that the place is littered with sensitive military installations!

The bigger question is where were these foreign journalists when Kashmiri Pandits were being hounded out like dogs? What was Amnesty International doing back in the height of Militancy in Kashmir?

But then you really have to be biased beyond cure to compare India's rule of Kashmir to Israel's occupation of West Bank/Gaza!

Because India has and will always remain a status-quo entity while Pakistan will continue to claim Kashmir even if it leads to bloodbath on both sides of the border!
 
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Amnesty depends on shock and awe reports to keep itself relevant. 99% of reports of Amnesty are sensationalist, and half backed truths without proper evidences.

On the deportation, she is on a visa in a foreign country. And visa have restrictions on what work a person can do or cannot do. This is a clear case of violation of visa rules.

she was not teaching she was just investigating and writing.. an Indian has every right to investigate and report about race riot in USA for example...

USA or Europe is not India. The freedom of speech can go to much higher level in west. India is diverse and sensitive country. You cannot allow law and order or other sensitive matters in India to go out of hand in the name of freedom of speech and create havoc and chaos.
 
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So why is India a member of UN Human Rights Council? Just to enjoy the party? :lol:
At least we allow activists to visit Kashmir, unlike Pakistan which has banned its own Human Rights Organization from visiting P0K or Balochistan! If they are allowed, which is extremely rare, they are accompanied by a band of ISI operatives and reps of the PA to ensure that what they see is all hunky dory!!

Lots to hide what? :P

How about this American researcher write about the gross human rights violations perpetrated by the Yanks themselves in Iraq (remember Operation Shock and Awe?) where more than 60,000 innocent men women and children were killed by American Daisy Cutters within the first week itself? How about Abu Graib? Afghanistan?

Oh well, America has the license to kill. It's a super power. They can do no wrong.
 
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Why India Deported U.S. Researcher Working on Amnesty Report
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Christine Mehta, an American researcher who said recently she was deported from India for investigating alleged human rights violations for Amnesty International, broke the conditions of her visa and contributed to a one-sided report, an Indian government spokesman said.

The spokesman, who asked not to be named, said on Monday that Ms. Mehta, who was in India on a permit that allowed her to live and work in the country for 15 years, acted against visa conditions that stipulate research requires special permission.

The spokesman added that “the government welcomes any criticism provided it’s based on facts” but any report made in a “clandestine manner” and projecting only negative aspects of the government is “highly objectionable.”

Ms. Mehta told India Real Time on Friday in a telephone interview from Washington D.C. that she believed she was deported because of the report she was working on about human rights in Kashmir.

She was part of the rights group’s “team on the recently released Kashmir report, and was involved in conceptualizing the research, carrying out the field work, drafting the report, conducting advocacy visits and working on related outputs, ” Amnesty International India said in an emailed response to questions Thursday.

Ms. Mehta has left Amnesty International since her deportation and isn’t currently affiliated with any organization.

The other authors of the report, titled “Denied: Failures in accountability for human rights violations by security force personnel in Jammu and Kashmir,” were Indian.

The research concluded that in the 25 years since a law came into force that protects security forces from prosecution, no member of the security forces has been tried for alleged human rights violations in a civilian court. The law, known as the Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir) Special Powers Act, is designed to tame armed militancy in the region.

Ms. Mehta, 25, first wrote about her deportation in an Indian daily The Hindu on Thursday, a day after the Amnesty report was released in India. She wrote that in 2014 she was “on the cusp of publishing a report on the abuses committed under the controversial Armed Forces Special Powers Act in Jammu and Kashmir.”

“Despite the need for reform amongst the ranks, the Indian government remains extremely sensitive to the image of its army and other security forces,” she wrote. “The state terms anyone who raises questions about the conduct of the security forces as ‘anti-national.’”

Before taking up the research on Kashmir, Ms. Mehta says she and her employer discussed the consequences of her work after discovering a restrictive clause relating to her status as a PIO, or person of Indian origin, that prohibited her from conducting research activities without consent from the government. She and her employer took the chance, confident that the-then “government wouldn’t use the little-known and apparently rarely used provision” against her, Ms. Mehta wrote.

Amnesty International India said in a separate emailed response on Tuesday: “At the time, there was no existing precedent to our knowledge of anyone with PIO/OCI status being deported or having their status revoked for undertaking research. At no point did either Amnesty International India or Christine herself misrepresent her PIO/OCI status.”

“In the latter half of 2014, when there were indications that the government was examining these restrictions more closely, we immediately started a conversation with Christine about her taking on a different role within the organization,” Amnesty International India said in the response. It said that it “maintains that the government order asking Christine Mehta to leave the country was unwarranted.”

Ms. Mehta said in the interview that her friends in India and family in the U.S. were very “shocked and surprised” at her deportation. She writes in The Hindu that she didn’t challenge her deportation in any court or speak publicly about it until now, hoping this might earn her another chance to publish or continue her work. After Amnesty International published the report that Ms. Mehta spent nearly two years working on, it “was time for me to speak out,” she wrote.

As an activist, Ms. Mehta lays out her idea of India: A “country of thriving debate, intellect, and diversity; a country that should be able to confront its darkest aspects and rectify its mistakes.”

For breaking news, features and analysis from India, follow WSJ India on Facebook .

Why India Deported U.S. Researcher Working on Amnesty Report - India Real Time - WSJ
AFSPA should be withdrawn from JnK and imposed on the JNU campus in Delhi.
 
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This is the biggest protest I have ever seen. One person carrying one board.

Paid agents want AFSPA to be removed so that they can play the blood game with joy. Stand of army is clear. When situation is out of control, Army is called for. Now to work under this extra ordinary situation and get it back to normal, you need a special power.
 
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simple man....we have to be bad...so that we do not loose our territory...rest of the excuses only..at end of the day....territorial integrity matters most than anti national human sentiments,,,that is the bottomline,,,
 
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classic duplicity of Indian army, cant get out of kashmir and creates fake encounter to legitimize further stay.. its like the friend who has overstayed, eats all your food from your fridge, and wont give your remote.
even Indian govt and their interlocutors in kashmir agree, the tide of militancy has turned in kashmir.

What do you mean ' can't get out' ?

The IA does not want to do the work of civilian police and administration.

Its been asked by the GOI to do so & for that the AFSPA is needed. If the Govt wishes to withdraw it - go ahead only dont expect the army man to do your dirty work for you . Clean up your own mess.

Kill the terrorists. Let the others be. What you have now in Kashmir is a military police state. How long would you be able to run it before another mass uprising? Did you know like India, Israel also prohibits foreign journalists to visit key areas in West Bank and Gaza? Why would they do that unless they have something to hide?

Do you feel that India & Israel do not have an active & free press who would love to highlight excesses ?

Unlike the Zarb e Azb the IA does not impose a media black out , clear out towns & villages to ' free' from the bad boys using tanks and AF.
 
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Everybody in india knows that AFSPA has no place in a democracy. But AFSPA was needed for a particular situation, to counter foreign funded terrorists, who at times are very heavily armed with weapons like RPGs etc.
We have a naxal problem as well, but AFSPA has not been applied there. Even the army is not present in those areas.

Till the time the terrorists keep infiltrating the borders and also get even a little bit of support from the local population, the army will keep on opposing removal of AFSPA. Otherwise if AFSPA is prematurely removed, it will be really hard to regain the peace that has come to the valley.

Here the kashmiri population has to come in and make a stand, that they will not let violence be used in their protests and will not support the terrorists and GoI must reciprocate by removing AFSPA

But people like Geelani are still there who term terrorists killed by security forces as martyrs.
 
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