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PSA must be immediately repealed in IOK: Amnesty

Srinagar, June 12, 2019 (PPI-OT): The world human rights watchdog Amnesty International has demanded immediate repeal of draconian law, Public Safety Act, in occupied Kashmir saying that the PSA is contributing to inflaming tensions between the occupation authorities and local population. The Amnesty International in a statement said the Public Safety Act (PSA) circumvents the criminal justice system in Kashmir to undermine accountability, transparency and respect for human.

The human rights watchdog emailed the statement to media outlets and other stakeholders after it was denied permission by the occupation authorities to launch a report titled “Tyranny of a ‘lawless law’: Detention without charge or trial under the J and K Public Safety Act” in Srinagar, today. The report analyses the case studies between 2012 and 2018 of 210 detainees who were booked under the PSA, which allows for administrative detention for up to two years in occupied Kashmir.

“The briefing revisits the PSA in the 42nd year of its existence and studies how it continues to facilitate administrative detentions and violate Indian and international human rights laws. This Act is contributing to inflaming tensions between the state authorities and local populace and must be immediately repealed,” said Aakar Patel, Head of Amnesty International India-chapter.

The text of the PSA violates several of India’s obligations under international human rights law, including respecting detainees’ fair trial rights. Examining several government and legal documents of the detainees, the report provides a pattern of abuse by the authorities. This includes detaining children, passing PSA orders without due diligence and on vague and general grounds, ignoring the limited safeguards under the Act, subjecting individuals to “revolving-door detentions” and using the PSA to prevent release on bail and undermine the criminal justice system.

Amnesty International found 71 cases of revolving-door detentions, where authorities had either issued a new detention order, or implicated a detainee in a new FIR, to ensure that they remain in detention. “In 90% of the cases analysed, detainees faced both PSA detentions and criminal proceedings in parallel, on the basis of the same or similar allegations,” said the rights body.

“The police appear to use the PSA as a safety net, using it to secure the detention of suspects who are released, or likely to be released, on bail. Conversations with the local lawyers suggest that the state police do not favour criminal proceedings as they involve a higher standard of proof and a presumption of innocence,” said Zahoor Wani, who led the research of the briefing for Amnesty International.

The Amnesty International also found that in many cases the grounds of detention mentioned in the police dossiers and in the PSA orders passed by the District Magistrate were identical which demonstrates non-application of mind. Further, regressive amendments to the Act in 2018 have also led to detainees being held in prisons far from their homes, in violation of international human rights standards.

Meanwhile, people who were arbitrarily slapped with PSA and later acquitted continue to face difficulties in obtaining jobs or continuing their education. Amnesty International called upon the occupation authorities to immediately repeal the Public Safety Act and other legislation facilitating the use of administrative detentions and ensure that all detainees held in administrative detention are released. Authorities should also provide full reparation to all detainees held in unlawful detention under the PSA, it demanded.

The watchdog said that the authorities in occupied Kashmir should also initiate a prompt, independent and impartial investigation into all allegations of unlawful detention and torture or other ill-treatment in custody, and bring to justice those responsible.

“While the J and K High Court routinely quashes detention orders which fail to comply with procedural safeguards, it does little to tackle the impunity enjoyed by executive authorities,” it said adding that the authorities would have to break with the past and show the people of Jammu and Kashmir that their rights matter. “It must not waste this opportunity,” said Aakar Patel.

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