Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Irom Sharmila to end epic fast, plans to contest polls

- Sobhapati Samom letters@hindustant­imes.com

IMPHAL: Irom Sharmila, whose 16-year hunger strike thrust rights abuses by Indian armed forces into public imaginatio­n, is set to end her fast, contest elections and, if everything goes to plan, also marry her Goan-British boyfriend.

The 43-year-old has been campaignin­g to scrap a law that shields troops from prosecutio­n, but on Tuesday she said her struggle had been lonely and unfruitful. This left her with little choice but to “change my approach as I want to see success”.

“In my 16-years journey, I see no visible change except the routine detention,” said Sharmila, speaking with her nose tube on that the authoritie­s have used for years to force-feed her a sludgy mix of nutrients.

She told reporters that she would eat again on August 9 — ending probably what is the world’s longest hunger strike — and contest assembly polls.

Sharmila stopped eating and drinking in 2000 after allegedly witnessing the army kill 10 people at a bus stop near her home in Manipur.

“My fight so far has been all alone and so I have decided to wage a war against the Act democratic­ally by becoming a lawmaker instead of continuing with my fast,” she said, referring to the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act (AFSPA).

From the days of Mahatma Gandhi to the more recent anti-corruption protests of Anna Hazare, India has had a long history of activists using hunger strikes as a tool of protest. But Sharmila’s fast caught global attention for its sheer duration.

Almost immediatel­y after she began her fast she was arrested under a law that makes attempting suicide a crime, leading Amnesty Internatio­nal to call her a “prisoner of conscience”.

She has been confined to a hospital ward in Manipur’s capital, Imphal, and is force-fed via a plastic nasal drip several times a day.

The controvers­ial law, which traces its origins to a British-era ordinance used to suppress the Quit India Movement of 1942, is blamed by human rights groups for illegal killings and arbitrary detentions by security forces. The military denies misusing the law.

Earlier this month, the Supreme Court dealt a blow to the army’s immunity under the law, saying it can’t use “excessive or retaliator­y force” even in troubled places, and agreed to an investigat­ion into hundreds of alleged illegal killings by security forces in Manipur.

Some of Sharmila’s aides said her decision to call off her fast might have been influenced by her boyfriend, who is also an activist. She told a court, where she appeared on Tuesday in connection with her attempted suicide case, that she would like to marry.

Sharmila’s brother, Singhajit, said her family backed her new fight.

BAR PATOWARY IN GUWAHATI

 ?? HT FILE ?? Sharmila was force-fed through a tube during her hunger strike.
HT FILE Sharmila was force-fed through a tube during her hunger strike.

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