Shujaat Bukhari
When 46-year-old Liaqat Shah of frontier district Kupwara in Jammu and
Kashmir was arrested on March 23, 2013 at the Indo-Nepal border as a
“suspected” Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) terrorist, it created a furor in
Kashmir. From a commoner to the then Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, the
arrest was seen as a concocted story since Liaqat was returning home
from the other side of Kashmir along with his family under the
rehabilitation policy. The policy, announced by the government, is for
the youth who had crossed over to Pakistani side of Kashmir in early
1990s who now want to return home and live a dignified life.
Amidst resistance from the Jammu and Kashmir Police that was in loop in
case of his return and pressure mounted by Omar Abdullah, the case was
handed over to National Investing Agency (NIA) since people’s faith in
Delhi Police has shattered over a period of time. Though Liaqat was
granted bail, the investigations were taken up by NIA that finally
exonerated Liaqat and recommended punishment for the policemen who had
framed him as HM militant who was sent to guide a fidayeen attack in
Delhi.
The NIA probe has surely raised the hope for those who have been jailed
and condemned, unheard by Delhi Police’s special cell in past over two
decades. It has helped to restore faith and credibility in the
institution of justice. But Liaqat’s case was a unique case in which the
state government took extraordinary interest in seeing that the probe
is done by an elite agency such as NIA. It was perhaps about the
credibility of the state itself that had unveiled the much ambitious
policy for rehabilitation of youth under which more that 300 people
crossed back to Kashmir through the Indo-Nepal route that is not
designated as per the policy. It was an unwritten agreement between the
state and Central government and facilitated duly by the government in
Pakistan, that would have come under flak from extremists for draining
out the strength for a “cause that needed to be seen as indigenous”. But
restlessness among these youth who had been away from their families
for long time was increasing and it was difficult for any government to
stop them.
However, in the backdrop of Liaqat’s acquittal, the larger issue that
merits a debate is how scores of innocent Kashmiris have fallen prey to
machinations of certain agencies particularly Delhi Police, which has
been framing the young people in false and fabricated cases. When a
Kashmiri is arrested or booked in such a case outside the state, it
becomes extremely difficult for him and his family to get a defence.
In a hostile environment that works under the smokescreen of so-called national interest it defeats the very logic of civil liberties. Even the lawyers are not prepared to take up the cases fearing reprisals from the agencies that are responsible for these false and concocted cases which finally fail the test of the law. We have seen in the past how a respected journalist Iftikhar Gilani was framed despite being known to the media corps of Delhi as a genuine scribe.
In a hostile environment that works under the smokescreen of so-called national interest it defeats the very logic of civil liberties. Even the lawyers are not prepared to take up the cases fearing reprisals from the agencies that are responsible for these false and concocted cases which finally fail the test of the law. We have seen in the past how a respected journalist Iftikhar Gilani was framed despite being known to the media corps of Delhi as a genuine scribe.
There are ample evidences that suggest how lives of many Kashmiri youth
were ruined by the cops who went scot free. To cite a few examples :
Only in October 2014, Delhi High Court acquitted Farooq Ahmad an
engineer from South Kashmir after 18 years. He had been falsely
implicated in Lajpat Nagar blasts of 1996. Mushtaq Ahmad Kaloo of New
Colony, Sopore, accused of conspiring to bomb New Delhi Railway Station
in 2006 was acquitted of all charges by Delhi High Court in May 2013. In
November 2012, Delhi High Court acquitted Mohmmad Ali Bhat and Mirza
Nasir Hussain of Srinagar of all charges leveled against them in Lajpat
Nagar blast case of 1996. In April 2014, a Lucknow court acquitted
Gulzar Ahmad Wani of North Kashmir along with two others in a bomb blast
case of 2000.
In a detailed investigative report in 2012, titled “Framed, Damned and
Acquitted”, Jamia (Milia Islamia) Teachers’ Solidarity Association
nailed the “lies” in 16 high profile cases and concluded that all those
arrested were framed by various security agencies. Most of those framed
were Kashmiris. Calling it as “proverbial tip of iceberg” the JTSA
maintained that its investigation was purely based on court judgments.
“We document here 16 cases in which those accused of being operatives of
various terrorist organizations (Al Badr, HUJI, Lashkar-e-Toiba),
arrested in main by the Special Cell of Delhi Police, were acquitted by
the courts, not simply for want of evidence, but because the evidence
was tampered with, and the police story was found to be unreliable and
incredulous” reads the preface of 171-page report. In its demand note
JTSA had asked the government to take corrective steps to arrest this
growing trend.
Among other things it sought public apology from the government and the investigating agency to those who had suffered wrongful arrests, prosecution and incarceration and scrapping/disbanding of the Special Cell of Delhi Police.
Among other things it sought public apology from the government and the investigating agency to those who had suffered wrongful arrests, prosecution and incarceration and scrapping/disbanding of the Special Cell of Delhi Police.
Cases like that of Liaqat is an eye-opener in respect of both sides of
the story. While it unravels the impunity with which the innocent youth
have been framed in fabricated cases and in the manner the mechanism
going without any notice so far, it also generates hope that even the
sections of the system could work in bringing the justice. It is
pertinent to mention that in the case of fake encounter at Pathribal in
March 2000, when five Kashmiri youth were branded as foreign terrorists
and burnt to death by Army in the aftermath of killing of 35 Sikhs in
Chattisinghpora, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) had charged
five Army officers with murder. It is a different issue that they got
relief from Supreme Court when the CBI’s plea for trying them in civil
court was rejected.
Even as it is difficult for these acquitted young men to compensate for
the lost glory of their lives, but NIA’s investigation has a potential
to set a benchmark for justice in such cases. The circle can only be
complete when the fabricators are punished under the law, which they
tried to misuse apparently to get rewards and punishments. According to
Liaqat’s statement at least 1500 families were discouraged to return
after his case. This is how the systems fail when accountability is
given a damn by those who think they are above law and have protection
in the “national interest”.
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