Millennium Post

‘UP cops targeted vulnerable social groups’

- ZAFAR ABBAS

Senior lawyer Prashant Bhushan dubbed the police encounter killings in UP as "murders" and demanded a probe into all such cases by independen­t teams of NHRC

NEW DELHI: The families of victims of encounter killings in UP have filed a petition with the National Human Rights Commission for immediate inquiry in the killings, which the families feel were planned ‘Cold blooded murders' raising doubts over the police version of events.

The families were brought together in Delhi by a group called ‘ Citizens against Hate' which prepared a documented report of 16 incidents of alleged encounter killings in UP and 12 cases in Mewat region that took place in 2017- 2018.

Senior Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan dubbed the police encounter killings in UP as "murders" and demanded a probe into all such cases by independen­t teams of National Human Rights Commission(nhrc).

“These are extra judicial killlings. How can you expect fair investigat­ion in the killings when a nearby police statio is doing the investigat­ion in the case. This is why NHRC should step in and investigat­e.” Bhushan said.

The report said that in all cases, FIRS have been filed against the very victims, instead of the erring police officers as mandated by the supreme court. FIR accessed by the team showed an identical template of sequence of events leading to the encounter - raising questions on the credibilit­y. In every case, one person is killed while another person always manages to escape. This is remarkable considerin­g the victim and alleged “criminals” are surrounded and trapped in a planned encounter, with the police far out numbering the criminals, the report stated.

Almost all the victims of these killings belonged to vulnerable social groups - muslims, dalits and bahujans, and come from low-economic households, states the report.

“My brother Mansoor, 31, was picked up by policemen from home in Pathan Pura, Behat in Saharanpur, and later we got the news that he was involved in a robbery and was killed in an encounter in Meerut on December 6, 2017. He was mentaly unstable for 2.5 years after he was tortured by police earlier. Why was he picked up when he could barely know what was right and what was wrong, had he been picked up earlier we had no regrets.” said Waseem Khan, Mansoor's cousin. NEW DELHI: Taking suo motu cognizance of a media report, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) issued notice to Uttar Pradesh government in the matter of assault of a 19-year-old boy, belonging to a Dalit community and his 16-year-old nephew, who were allegedly assaulted by some upper caste people at the behest of the Pradhan of their village Kamala in district Baghpat, Uttar Pradesh on April 27, 2018.

The Commission has observed that the contents of the news report, if true, raise serious issue of violation of human rights of the victim as well as the other families belonging to the Dalit community, residing in the area.

The incident indicates lawlessnes­s in the region and plight of the people belonging to the Dalit community suffering due to highhanded­ness by the people belonging to upper caste. Accordingl­y, it has issued notices to the Chief Secretary and the Director General of Police, Uttar Pradesh calling for a detailed report in the matter.

The Commission has asked them to inform about the steps taken for the relief and rehabilita­tion of the affected families and to maintain law and order in the area. They have been given four weeks to respond.

According to the media reports, the youths were attacked following an affair between a Dalit man and a Gujjar woman of the village. Reportedly, the Inspector General of Police, Meerut Range has said that all the seven accused involved in the attack have been arrested and police personnel have been deployed near the house of the victim in a bid to prevent further flare-ups.

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