Showing posts with label Irom Sharmila. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Irom Sharmila. Show all posts

Friday, January 16, 2015

IROM SHARMILA: Interview by Kavita Joshi

UPDATE: This article was published in 2006. Irom Sharmila's hunger fast against the AFSPA has now continued over ten years.  

IROM's IRON IN THE SOUL
Young, stoic and dogged, Irom Sharmila has been on a fast-unto-death since November, 2000. She wants the repressive Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act repealed. The Act gives draconian powers to the security forces and has repeatedly been used with brazen brutality in the Northeast. For five years, she has been imprisoned and force-fed by the State for her ‘crime’. Filmmaker Kavita Joshi spoke to her in the hospital room in Imphal, her prison

An eye: piercing, intent. A nose, covered by a swatch of medical tape, as a yellow tube forces its way in. Lips, stretched tight as if in pain. A woman sits against a bare wall, huddled under a blanket, tightly hugging herself. This is my first impression of Irom Sharmila as I walk to her hospital bed. She is incarcerated at the security ward of JN Hospital in Imphal, Manipur, in custody of the Central Jail, Sajiwa. It takes her immense effort to speak, but she tries her best. “How can I explain? This is not a punishment. It is my bounden duty at my best level.”

Irom Sharmila has not eaten for over five years now. For this, she has been locked up in jail by the government under very dubious charges and is being forcibly nose fed. Since November 2000, Sharmila has been on a fast-unto-death, demanding the removal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act 1958 (AFSPA).


FIND ALL ARTICLES ON IROM SHARMILA POSTED ON THIS BLOG, HERE

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Support Irom Sharmila, Show Your Solidarity

This post is for those young people who watch Tales from the Margins and ask what they can do to support Irom Sharmila:

In November 2011, Irom Sharmila Chanu’s epic fast demanding the repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) will complete 11 years.



In these 11 years, the government has done everything in its power to isolate Irom Sharmila. It has kept her under arrest by claiming that her fast is an attempt to commit suicide, and therefore punishable by law. Though she is an under-trial and therefore entitled to visitors as per law, under the guise of her own security the authorities make this process very difficult. Special permission has to be sought from the state to meet Sharmila, and it comes after a wait of many days, if at all. Activists, eminent citizens and people close to her are often not given permission to meet her. All this, in an attempt to break her indomitable spirit.

When I had met Sharmila for the first time, she'd told me that one thing she missed was people - human contact. Show Irom Sharmila your solidarity - write to her. Let her know that you stand with her in this struggle for justice. Each letter is also a sign to the government that people across this country are against AFSPA. Send your letters, cards and messages of solidarity to:
      Irom Sharmila Chanu
      c/o Security Ward
      Jawaharlal Nehru Hospital
      Porompat, Imphal – 795001
      Manipur

Or you can also send your messages by email to:
writetosharmila@gmail.com
or writetosharmila@hotmail.com

A compilation of the emails is periodically printed and delivered to Sharmila as a book, by the Pan Manipur group.

NOTE: There is a more that each of us can do to support Sharmila and the campaign against AFSPA.  Watch this space, we will be updating this with more info. You can also watch My Body My Weapon, a short film on Irom Sharmila and the AFSPA available on this blog. The film is free to view, share on FB and embed on your webpages.

Monday, March 31, 2014

Starving to live, not die

When the Supreme Court has recognised the right to go on hunger strike, why is Irom Sharmila’s protest against impunity of the armed forces a criminal act?

reposted from The Hindu.

Read the rest here:
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/starving-to-live-not-die/article4562373.ece?homepage=true

Monday, September 26, 2011

IROM SHARMILA: The Unlikely Outlaw

The immensity of Irom Sharmila Chanu's now six-year-old protest is matched only by the paralysing indifference of the State and the national media, says Shoma Chaudhury
An ordinary November evening in Delhi. A slow halting voice breaks into your consciousness. “How shall I explain? It is not a punishment, but my bounden duty…” A haunting phrase in a haunting voice, made slow with pain yet magnetic in its moral force. “My bounden duty.” What can be bounden duty in an India bursting with the excitements of its economic boom?

You are tempted to walk away. You are busy and the voice is not violent in its beckoning. But then an image starts to take shape. A frail, fair woman on a hospital bed. A tousled head of jet black curls. A plastic tube thrust into the nose. Slim, clean hands. Intent, almond eyes. And the halting, haunting voice. Speaking of bounden duty.

That’s when the enormous story of Irom Sharmila begins to seep in. You are in the presence of something historic. Something unparalleled in the history of political protest anywhere in the world ever. Yet you have been oblivious of it. A hundred TV channels. An unprecedented age of media. Yet you are oblivious of it.

Irom Sharmila, 34, has not eaten anything, or drunk a single drop of water for six years. Six years. She has been forcibly kept alive by a drip thrust down her nose by the Indian State. For six years, nothing solid has entered her body. Not a drop of water has touched her lips. She has not combed her hair. She cleans her teeth with dry cotton and her lips with dry spirit so she will not sully her fast. Her body is wasted inside. Her menstrual cycles have stopped. Yet she is resolute. Whenever she can, she removes the tube from her nose. It is her bounden duty, she says, to make her voice heard in “the most reasonable and peaceful way”.

Yet we have remained oblivious to it. The Indian State has remained oblivious to it.

Thursday, September 01, 2011

The Fake Encounter of Chongkham Sanjit, Manipur

MURDER IN PLAIN SIGHT
In Manipur, death comes easy. In this damning sequence of photos, a local photographer captures the death of a young man, killed in a false encounter by the police in broad daylight, 500 metres from the state assembly. How can a State justify such a war against its own people, asks TERESA REHMAN, here:

http://www.tehelka.com/story_main42.asp?filename=Ne080809murder_in.asp

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Irom Sharmila back in custody

Irom Sharmila back in custody -The Imphal Free Press

IMPHAL, March 10: As expected, hunger striker Irom Chanu Sharmila, who was released from the security ward of JN Hospital on March 8 afternoon, has been rearrested today on the same charge of attempting to commit suicide.

Sources said Sharmila has been rearrested today at about 5.30pm from PDA complex, Porompat where she has been continuing her fast unto death stir in demand for repeal of the controversial Armed Forces Special Powers Act.

Mention may be made that Sharmila went straight to PDA complex moments after she was released from JN Hospital (security ward) on March 8 and continued her stir at the spot where the Sharmila Kanba Apunba Lup had been conducting relay hunger strike in support of her cause.

In the meantime, the Sharmila Kanba Apunba Lup, which has been staging relay hunger strike for the past 420 days in support of Sharmila and to save the life of the hunger striker has submitted memorandum to the Governor, Chief Minister, Speaker of the Manipur Legislative Assembly and Opposition leaders urging them to take action to repeal AFSPA, save Sharmila and restore Right to Life of the people.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Irom Sharmila's Health Deteriorating: The Telegraph

Hospital buzz on Sharmila’s health
OUR CORRESPONDENT

Imphal, Jan. 4: Hospital authorities are worried over the “deteriorating” health of Manipur’s human rights crusader Irom Sharmila who has refused nasal feeding for the past 12 days.

Sharmila, who has been on a fast unto death since November 2000, is surviving only on nasal feeding for more than seven years now in the security ward of Imphal’s Jawaharlal Nehru Hospital.

read more here:
The Telegraph - Calcutta (Kolkata) Northeast Hospital buzz on Sharmila’s health<B> Irom Sharmila. </B>A file picture

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Solidarity Fast for Irom Sharmila

Mail from NAPM and Sharmila's supporters

Dear friends,

Some of us have decided to organize a solidarity fast in support of Irom Sharmila, who is in her 7th year of fast with a demand to repeal the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (for more information see below).

This solidarity fast will be organized in Imphal, Manipur where Sharmila is presently confined to the Jawaharlal Nehru Hospital, from 13th September, 2007, and will go on for 3-5 days. We invite more people from all over India and even outside to come and join this solidarity fast for as many days as you can. This is the least we can do to support one of the longest solitary peaceful struggles of our times which saddens our hearts but doesn’t move the authorities a bit.

We are confident that the truth will emerge victorious one day

READ THE REST HERE
http://manipurfreedom.org/alert_solidarity_fast_in_support_of_irom_sharmila

Monday, August 13, 2007

Support Irom Sharmila – Repeal Of AFSPA: AN UPDATE

Irom Sharmila Chanu – Repeal Of AFSPA Update:

Irom Sharmila continues to fast in the Security Ward, J.N. Hospital, Imphal. Confined to a solitary existence!

Dear friends,

It is now almost five months since Irom Sharmila returned to Imphal on 5th March 2007, to continue her hunger fast against the draconian Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA). The situation continues to be grim - both for Sharmila as well for all those suffering under the prolonged implication of AFSPA.

For those of you reading about Sharmila's epic struggle for the first time – on 4th November 2000, 28 year old Irom Sharmila Chanu started her hunger fast seeking repeal of the draconian AFSPA. This was her response to one among countless incidents of arbitrary killing by the Armed Forces in the north east when on 2nd November 2000, 10 innocent civilians were killed at Malom near Imphal, Manipur.

Sharmila has since been incarcerated at J.N. Hospital Imphal. Over the years she has been repeatedly arrested and detained under Section 309 IPC (attempt to commit suicide). In October 2006, for the first time Sharmila left Manipur and continued her protest fast at Jantar Mantar, and then at AIIMS and RML hospitals in New Delhi where she was kept under constant police vigil.

Sentenced to solitary confinement?

Now in her 7th year of the fast, Sharmila's health is deteriorating. Far from responding to her demand of Repeal of AFSPA, the state is doing everything it can to isolate her and her peaceful struggle.

At the hospital, Sharmila is not allowed visitors on a regular basis. This is in complete violation of the law, which permits anyone in custody, be they an undertrial prisoner or a convict in a high security prison regular visits by his or her family members, friends, supporters and/or lawyers. And yet, Sharmila does not even this basic freedom, despite the fact that there is no court order commanding her isolation. Her family, friends and supporters are put through an arduous and cumbersome process to meet her.

The 'Special' process takes to meet Sharmila can take up to 20 days and involves an application to the Joint Secretary Home Department, Government of Manipur; the DGP, Prison, Central Jail, Manipur; the Additional Superintendent, Sajiwa Jail, Manipur and the SI, Sajiwa Jail – who if the application gets all the due clearances, then 'accompanies' the visitor to meet Sharmila!

What are we to surmise except that the Government is attempting to isolate her from all contact with the outside world in the hope of weakening her struggle?

Matter of honour.

It is unlikely that the Government of India will acknowledge or respect, let alone honour Sharmila for her determined struggle for justice and peace. Satyagraha, after all, has been disregarded repeatedly in these times.

On 18th May 2007, Sharmila was awarded the Gwangju Prize for Human Rights in Seoul, Korea. Her brother Singhjit received the award on her behalf and returned to Manipur only to be told that the certificate would not be shown to Sharmila. He had to wait till 30 June to get 'permission' to visit Sharmila and give her an update of the events surrounding the award.

The Gwanju Prize includes a cash award of $25,000 (approx. Rs. 12 lakhs). Sharmila and her family have decided that this money will go towards assisting the victims of the human rights violations in Manipur. The Ministry of Home Affairs (FCRA department) claims it has 'lost' the FC-5 application required to facilitate transfer of the award amount. What will it take for the Government to expedite and release it without any further game playing?

AFSPA – No response to the demand for repeal.

At both, the Central and State level, the government is simply refusing to address the peoples' demand for repeal of AFSPA – despite the voices against it being raised against it from Kashmir to Kerala to Delhi to Manipur and Nagaland, for over two decades now. In addition of course, have been the recommendations for Repeal of the Act by the Justice Jeevan Reddy Committee set up by the government as well as the Administrative Reforms Commission headed by Mr. Veerappa Moily.

Meanwhile in the shadow of this draconian Act, and the impunity it offers the armed forces, everyday the people of Manipur are disappearing, being killed and tortured. Mr. Nongmaithem Tomba alias Chinung (37 years), Miss. Soniya alias Najama Latif (15 years), Mr. Moirangthem Gandhi Singh (24 years) everyday AFSPA continues to claim new victims.

Need for urgent action

It is imperative that as individuals and groups who believe in democracy and justice, we raise our voice against the continued injustice under AFSPA and the continued harassment of Irom Sharmila.

1. Send a statement. Let's be heard this time!
Here is a draft statement you could use to lend your support:
We, the undersigned, as individuals and groups who believe in democracy and justice, demand that the government of India:
· Respect the peaceful struggle of people like Irom Sharmila and immediately withdraw all restrictions on her mobility as well as her freedom to meet and interact with people
· Release her from custody without any further delay
· Drop all facetious cases against her

Moreover, the government must:
· Repeal the AFSPA with immediate effect
· Implement the recommendations of the Justive Jeevan Reddy Committee and the Administrative Reforms Commission.
· Bring the armed forces within the democratic framework of accountability and justice without any further delay.
Only then can the people of the north-east and J&K have any chance or hope to live with security and dignity.

Sd/-

Please email the Statement to the following (and copy us in so we know how much support the campaign is getting):

President of India, Ms. Pratibha Patil, Prime Minister of India, Dr. Manmohan Singh, Minister of Home Affairs, Mr. Shivraj V. Patil, Minister of Defence, Mr. A. K. Antony, Minister of State for Labour & Employment, Mr. Oscar Fernandes,
Chairperson, National Human Rights Commission of India, Chief Minister of Manipur, Mr. O. Ibobi Singh, Governor of Manipur, Shri Ved Marwah.

Compiled email list: presidentofindia@rb.nic.in, pmosb@pmo.nic.in, svpatil@sansad.nic.in, ak.antony@sansad.nic.in, oscar@sansad.nic.in, chairnhrc@nic.in , cmmani@hub.nic.in, govmani@hub.nic.in

Copy to: onilrights@gmail.com, preetiverma10@yahoo.com , mailto:vanishes@gmail.com

2. Sign the petition!
· Please forward this to as many people as you can on your mailing list and various list serves, and sign the online petition against Armed Forces Special Powers Act 1958 at this link: http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi?afspa

3. Stay in touch with Sharmila!
· You can also write directly to Sharmila and send her messages of solidarity at:- Irom Sharmila Chanu Security WardJawaharlal Nehru HospitalPorompat Imphal – 795001Manipur

This update is an attempt to keep informed all those in solidarity with Sharmila, who resolutely persists in her demand for the repeal of an anti-people law.

In Solidarity

Kshetrimayum Onil (Reachout) – onilrights AT gmail.com
Preeti Verma (Human Rights Law Network) –
preetiverma10 AT yahoo.com
Vani Subramanian (Saheli) –
saheliwomen AT hotmail.com

Monday, April 30, 2007

Irom Sharmila: photo



Irom Sharmila under arrest at the J. N. Hospital, Imphal, in 2005

(c) Kavita Joshi

Friday, March 02, 2007

Irom Sharmila: Back home into waiting police arms

Back home into waiting police arms
- by Robert Sapam in the Telegraph, Front Page, Monday 5th March 2007

Imphal, March 4:

A brief demonstration and an even briefer visit to the historical Kangla Fort was all that Irom Sharmila could manage in the one-and-a-half hours that she was “free” since returning to Manipur today from New Delhi.

The mascot of the troubled state’s campaign against the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act found herself in police custody the moment she entered the Kangla premises in a Maruti car. As on previous occasions, police termed it “preventive arrest” and shifted her to the security ward of the government-owned Jawaharlal Nehru Hospital.

Sharmila, who has been fasting for the past six years except during periods in judicial custody, had been prevented from returning to Imphal before the elections, lest her presence cause trouble for the Congress-led government. She spent the better part of her exactly five-month New Delhi sojourn under police watch in hospital.

The 33-year-old resident of Kongpal Kongkham Leikai, in Imphal East district, arrived here at 9 am on an Indigo Air flight and headed straight to the Nupi Lal Complex, just 100 metres from chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh’s office. After a short sit-in demonstration against the army act, a feeble Sharmila whispered to her brother Singhajit that she would like to visit the temple on the Kangla Fort premises for prayers.

A police team intercepted the car that was taking Sharmila, her brother and rights activist Babloo Loitongbam to Kangla around 10.30 am. Minutes earlier, Babloo and a police officer had been involved in a heated exchange of words at the Nupi Lal Complex. Both he and Singhajit were detained for some time, sources said.

Manipur’s most determin-ed crusader against the army act had slipped out of Imphal unnoticed barely 12 hours after being freed from police custody in Imphal on October 3 last year. She dramatically resurfaced at Jantar Mantar to turn her “regional” campaign into a “national” one.

The highpoint of Sharmila’s stay in the capital was the support she garnered from rights activists, including Iranian Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi. Sitting beside Sharmila at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in November, she vowed to solicit global support for the campaign against the army act.

Ebadi urged Sharmila to accept medical aid. “Carry on your struggle but accept medical aid because the world needs you,” she said.

Sharmila began her crusade against the army act after the death of 10 civilians in firing by Assam Rifles personnel at a bus stop in Malom, near Imphal airport, on November 2, 2000. She has since survived only on liquids, fed through a nasal pipe whenever she has been in hospital.
An aide said Sharmila would continue the campaign with “renewed vigour” and pressure the government to lift the army act from the state. At present, the legislation is not in force only within Imphal municipal limits.

Every party except the Congress pitched for the repeal of the army act — the controversial legislation vests extraordinary powers on security forces engaged in counter-insurgency operations — in the run-up to Assembly elections

Read the original article in the Telegraph here

Friday, January 26, 2007

Irom Sharmila's Health Deteriorates

IROM SHARMILA'S HEALTH DETERIORATES
New Delhi: 19th January 2007

The health condition of Irom Sharmila Chanu deteriorates under the arbitrary detention of Delhi police in Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital. Since 7 th October 2006 she has been detained in two different hospitals (AIIMS and RML) at Delhi. Since then she has lost 4 kgs. and her current body weight is only 37 kg.

Today, the Delhi High Court heard the two fresh applications filed by her brother Singhajit. The first application asked for RML to be made a party to the case and also to handover all medical records to Sharmila's family. So far the hospital had refused to give any medical reports. The High Court has now asked for copies of all medical records to be produced on Tuesday, 23 rd January – the next date of hearing. The Court has expressed its opinion that Sharmila can be detained in order to protect her health. It is critical to note that during six years of detention in Manipur her weight had remained almost constant.

The second application was for Sharmila to be allowed to attend a meeting in New Delhi. The Court will decide the application on Tuesday after receiving and assessing for itself Sharmila's health status.

Since November 2000, the 'Iron Lady of Manipur', Sharmila has been on hunger fast for the repeal of the repressive Armed Forces Special Powers Act. Determined to continue her agitation for justice and peace, she is currently detained at Room No. 8 A, Nursing Home, Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital.

Press Release Issued By:
Coordinator Desk for Sharmila's Struggle

Thursday, November 16, 2006

IROM SHARMILA: Combat Law Cover Story

New private ward. All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi. As you enter the building, about a dozen policemen and intelligence personnel stop you. After seeking permission from a reluctant inspector, about five suspicious and armed policemen stationed at the door of room number 57 carry on the interrogation and more questions follow. Inside the room, a frail young woman is lying on her back on the hospital bed...

READ MORE IN COMBAT LAW
http://combatlaw.org/information.php?article_id=835&issue_id=31

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

IROM SHARMILA [still]



Irom Sharmila in Custody

SUPPORT IROM SHARMILA

SUPPORT IROM SHARMILA
SUPPORT THE PEOPLE OF MANIPUR AND CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS IN THEIR FIGHT AGAINST THE AFSPA


On 9th October 2006, Irom Sharmila refused all medical attention. Sitting in her tiny hospital room in the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS, Delhi), she resolutely withdrew the force-feed tube from her nose against all medical advice.

Sharmila Irom has been on a fast-to-death for over six years now. Six years without food, without even a drop of water touching her lips. Six years without meeting her mother, and rarely being allowed access to her family. Six years of being held under arrest repeatedly on charges of “attempted suicide” by the government.

Sharmila’s demand is simple – repeal the Armed Forces Special Powers Act 1958. But this is a demand the Indian government is simply not prepared to listen to. The Armed Forces Special Powers Act is a particularly black piece of legislation that gives the authority to India’s armed forces, to arrest, search or destroy property without warrant; to shoot – and even kill – on suspicion alone. What is more, it gives the armed forces near-total immunity against any judicial action. Sharmila’s home state of Manipur has been reeling under this act for decades now. So have large parts of North-Eastern India.

On 4th October this year, Sharmila arrived from Manipur to Delhi to continue her epic fast on the streets of Delhi. For days and nights, she camped and slept on the footpaths of Delhi, at Jantar Mantar. Thereafter, in a characteristic midnight swoop, a large force of over a 100 police personnel picked up Sharmila and detained her at AIIMS on the night of Friday the 6th. Once again, her "crime" – attempted suicide!

Sharmila is currently under arrest in Delhi, at AIIMS.

READ MORE ON THIS SUBJECT

READ KAVITA JOSHI’S INTERVIEW OF IROM SHARMILA IN TEHELKA
Young, stoic and dogged, Irom Sharmila has been on a fast-unto-death since November 2000. She wants the repressive Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act repealed. The Act gives draconian powers to the security forces
http://www.tehelka.com/story_main17.asp?filename=Cr032506_Iroms_iron.asp

READ SHOMA CHAUDHURY's SEARING PORTRAIT: THE UNLIKELY OUTLAW
“How shall I explain? It is not a punishment, but my bounden duty…” A haunting phrase in a haunting voice, made slow with pain yet magnetic in its moral force...
http://www.tehelka.com/story_main23.asp?filename=Ne120906The_unlikely_CS.asp&id=1#
and page 2
http://www.tehelka.com/story_main23.asp?filename=Ne120906The_unlikely_CS.asp&id=2

READ HARSH DOBHAL IN COMBAT LAW
New private ward. All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi. As you enter the building, about a dozen policemen...
http://combatlaw.org/information.php?article_id=835&issue_id=31

READ NANDINI SUNDAR’S ARTICLE ON SHARMILA IN TOI
When we first heard of Irom Sharmila in 2004, she had already been fasting for four years in protest against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA). In July that year, a young woman…
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/2132074.cms

READ KARTYK VENKATARAMAN ON IROM SHARMILA’S ARRIVAL IN DELHI; INDIAN EXPRESS
Manipur's most famous protestor, Sharmila Chanu, poses a tough dilemma for the national government
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/14153.html

READ SIDDHARTH VARADARAJAN ON THE AFSPA; IN THE HINDU
The question of repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act needs to be debated publicly in the light of the Justice B.P. Jeevan ReddyCommittee's report.
http://www.hindu.com/2006/10/10/stories/2006101002661100.htm

READ THE: BARE ACT OF THE AFSPA 1958
please follow this link
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGASA200252005
A pdf will open. Go to Appendix I, page 25. Or, go to:
http://kavitajoshi.blogspot.com/2006/10/afspa-1958-read-bare-act.html

JEEVAN REDDY COMMISSION REPORT IS NOW ONLINE
http://www.hindu.com/nic/afa/

FACTSHEET ON AFSPA: SAHELI AND PUDR
http://kavitajoshi.blogspot.com/2006/10/armed-forces-special-powers-act-1958.html

READ MORE ON: MANIPUR CAMPAIGN WEBSITE
http://manipurfreedom.org/

PRESS COVERAGE OF IROM SHARMILA's PROTEST IN DELHI
http://manipurfreedom.org/press/

PHOTO GALLERY OF IROM SHARMILA's DELHI FAST
please see the link on the blogroll

Monday, October 09, 2006

AFSPA 1958: Read the "Bare Act"

Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958

An Act to enable certain special powers to be conferred upon members of the armed forces in disturbed areas in the State of Assam and the Union Territory of Manipur.

Be it enacted by Parliament in the Ninth Year of the Republic of India as follows:
1. (i) This Act may be called [The Armed Forces (Assam and Manipur) Special Powers Act, 1958].
(ii) It extends to the whole of the State of Assam and the Union Territory of Manipur.

2. In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires:
(a) "armed forces" means the military forces and the air forces of the Union so operating
(b) "disturbed area" means an area which is for the time being declared by notification under section 3, to be a disturbed area;
(c) all other words and expressions used herein, but not defined and defined in the Air Force Act, 1950 (45 of 1950), or the Army Act, 1950 (46 of 1950) shall have meanings respectively assigned to them in those Acts.

3. If the Governor of Assam or the Chief Commissioner of Manipur is of the opinion that the whole or any part of the State of Assam or the Union Territory of Manipur, as the case may be, is in such a disturbed or dangerous condition that the use of armed forces in aid of the civil powers in necessary, he may, by notification in the Official Gazette, declare the whole or any part of the State or Union territory to be a disturbed area.

4. Any commissioned officer, warrant officer, non commissioned officer or any other person of equivalent rank in the Armed Forces may, in a disturbed area,
(a) if he is of opinion that it is necessary so to do for the maintenance of public order, after giving such due warning as he may consider necessary, fire upon or otherwise use force, even to the causing of death, against any person who is acting in contravention of any law or order for the time being in force in the disturbed area prohibiting the assembly of five or more persons or the carrying of weapons or of things capable of being used as weapons or of fire-arms, ammunition or explosive substances;
(b) if he is of opinion that it is necessary so to do, destroy any arms dump, prepared or fortified position or shelter from which armed attacks are made or are likely to be made or are attempted to be made, or any structure used as a training camp for armed volunteers or utilised as a hide-out by armed gangs or absconders wanted for any offence;
(c) arrest, without warrant, any person who has committed a cognisable offence or against whom a reasonable suspicion exists that he has committed or is about to commit a cognisable offence and may use such force as may be necessary to effect the arrest;
(d) enter and search without warrant any premises to make any such arrest as aforesaid or to recover any person believed to be wrongfully restrained or any arms, ammunition or explosive substances believed to be unlawfully kept in such premises and may for that purpose use such force as may be necessary.

5. Any person arrested and taken into custody under this Act shall be made over to the officer-in-charge of the nearest police station with the least possible delay, together with a report of the circumstances occasioning the arrest.

6. No prosecution, suit or other legal proceeding shall be instituted, except with the previous sanction of the Central Government against any person in respect of anything done or purported to be done in exercise of the powers conferred by this Act.

7. (1) The Armed Forces (Assam and Manipur) Special Powers Ordinance 1958 is hereby repealed.
(2) Notwithstanding such repeal, anything done or any action taken under the said Ordinance shall be deemed to have done or taken under this Act, as if this Act had commenced on the 22nd day of May, 1958.

Source: Extraordinary Laws in India. Indian Social Institute. New Delhi: 2002.


Armed Forces (Assam and Manipur) Special Powers (Amendment) Act 1972

An Act to amend the Armed Forces (Assam and Manipur) Special Powers Act, 1958.

Be it enacted by Parliament in the Twenty-Third Year of the Republic of India as follows:

1. This Act may be called the Armed Forces (Assam and Manipur) Special Powers (Amendment) Act 1972.

2. In the Armed Forces (Assam and Manipur) Special Powers Act, 1958 (hereinafter referred to as the principal Act), in the long title, for the words "in the State of Assam and the Union Territory of Manipur" the words "in the States of Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland and Tripura and Union Territories of Arunachal Pradesh and Mizoram" shall be substituted.

3. In section1 of the principal Act(a) in sub-section (1) for the words, brackets and figures "the Armed Forces (Assam and Manipur) Special Powers Act 1958" the words, brackets and figures "the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act 1958" shall be substituted:(b) for sub-section (2) the following sub section shall be substituted, namely:
(2) It extends to the whole of the States of Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland and Tripura and the Union Territories of Arunachal Pradesh and Mizoram.

4. For section 3 of the principal Act, the following section shall be substituted, namely:
[5] If in relation to any State or Union Territory to which this Act extends, the Governor of the State or the Administrator of the Union Territory, as the case may be, is in such a disturbed or dangerous condition that the use of Armed Forces in aid of civil power is necessary, the Governor of the State of the Administrator of that Union Territory or the Central Government, as the case may be, may, by notification in the Official Gazetter, declare the whole or such State of Union Territory to be a disturbed area.

5. As from the Commencement of this Act, the principal Act, as extended by notification of the Government of India in the Ministry of Home Affairs No GSR 1970, dated 25th November 1970 to the then existing Union Territory of Tripura, shall cease to operate in the State of Tripura.

Source: Extraordinary Laws in India. Indian Social Institute. New Delhi: 2002.

Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act 1958: A Fact Sheet

[- a factsheet adapted by the SAHELI and PUDR team from earlier reports and submissions to the Jeevan Reddy Committee]

Over the last five decades, heavy militarisation in the north east has taken its toll on normal civilian life and led to innumerable instances of violations committed against the civilian populations there. Encounter deaths, extra judicial killings, disappearances, arbitrary arrests, rape and torture have been a regular feature among the relentless series of atrocities meted out to the people by the army with impunity, especially in areas where they are protected by legislation like AFSPA.

Some of the most widely known incidents of such excesses in the north east are:

• army torture and violence against the villagers of Oinam (Manipur) in 1987 who were detained in army camps, beaten mercilessly, given electric shocks. At least 3 women were raped, 15 villagers killed, and many left permanently disabled;
• the gang rape of the women of Ujanmaidan (Tripura) by security forces;
• the terror wreaked by the army in Assam during Operation Rhino in 1991;
• the shelling of the town of Ukhrul (Manipur) with mortars in May 1994 by the Assam Rifles when they violently ransacked the town, leaving many homes damaged, over a hundred men and women bleeding with serious injuries and 3 dead;
• four women raped at gunpoint, and homes and shops set on fire by the Maratha Light Infantry, killing others people in December 1994 in Mokokchung (Nagaland);
• indiscriminate firing on civilians and combing operations by the combined forces of the 16th Rashtriya Rifles, CRPF and Assam Rifles when a tyre of an army jeep burst in the Kohima town (Nagaland) in March 1995;
• torture, forced detaining, starvation, sexual assault of women and looting in the 5 villages of Namtiram (Manipur) in 1995 by the 21st Rajputana Rifles;
• the army’s reign of terror in Jesami (Manipur) in January 1996;
• the rampage of the village of Huishu (Manipur) by the Assam rifles in March 1996
• the massacre of 10 innocent civilians by the Assam Rifles in Malom (Manipur) on 2 November, 2000 by security forces
• the torture, rape and killing of Thangjam Manorama in Imphal (Manipur) in 2004

Outside the north east too, human rights violations in Jammu & Kashmir under the AFSPA are commonplace, including disappearances, torture, arbitrary killings and numerous instances of mass rape of Kashmiri women by security forces.

AFSPA : Constitutional Contradictions

The large scale violations of fundamental rights in the north eastern states is a direct consequence of the provisions of the AFSPA, of areas declared as Disturbed Areas under Section No. 3 and the simultaneous acquiring of wide powers by army personnel under Section 4 of the Act.

The AFSPA which grants armed forces personnel the power to shoot to arrest, search, seize and even shoot to kill, violate the Right to Life enshrined in Article 21 of the Constitution of India which guarantees the right to life to all people.

The AFSPA also violates the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Indian signed the ICCPR in 1978, taking on the responsibility of securing the rights guaranteed by the Covenant to all its citizens. In particular, the Act is in contravention of Article 6 of the ICCPR guaranteeing the right to life.

Crucially, the AFSPA effectively undermines civil authority. For instance:
After the Oinam incident (1987) the Chief Minister, wrote to the Union Home Minister, “The civil law has, unfortunately, ceased to operate in Senapati District Manipur due to excesses committed by the Assam Rifles with complete disregard shown to the civil administration. ....the Deputy Commissioner and the Superintendent of Police were wrongfully confined, humiliated and prevented from discharging their official duties by the Security Forces”. And consequent to the Kohima incident in 1995, even the Superintendent of Police, Kohima, was stopped at gun point by army personnel.

At the same time, the AFSPA is an emergency legislation that Constitutionally requires to be reviewed every 6 months. Yet it has been imposed in Manipur and other states of the north east for years on end, which contributes the misuse of unbridled and arbitrary powers by the armed forces.

END THE LAW THAT GIVES THE ARMED FORCES IMMUNITY FOR RAPE, MURDER, TORTURE AND OTHER HEINOUS CRIMES.
END THE ARMED FORCES (SPECIAL POWERS) ACT 1958

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