Court seeks AFSPA in Meghalaya as Sharmila clocks 15 yrs of fasting
GUWAHATI/IMPHAL: On Wednesday, Irom Shar mila conveyed a crisp message after 15 years of her indefinite fast against the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act that allegedly gives soldiers the license to kill at will. It read: “I will carry on until my mission is accomplished.”
But the call for repealing the controversial AFSPA from the northeast — specifically Manipur — was somewhat muffled by the Meghalaya high court’s directive to New Delhi earlier this week for imposition of the legislation in the troubled Garo Hills region of the state.
Noting the unending cycle of violence, extortion, kidnapping and shutdowns by myriad militant outfits, the court said there was no alternative to AFSPA for restoring law and order in the Garo Hills area bordering Bangladesh.
The 43-year-old Sharmila, known as the Iron Lady of Manipur, has lived only on liquids force-fed by doctors since she began her protest against the legislation on November 5, 2000.
Human rights organisations that have rallied behind Sharmila to highlight AFSPA- induced fake encounters, said the act was no solution to ensuring peace. They cited the example of Tripura, which last May decided to withdraw AFSPA from the state.
Security officials, however, said Tripura’s decision was an outcome of the peace 18 years of life under AFSPA brought. Conflict experts, on the other hand, felt the act really did not matter since most encounters are by the state police forces that do not come under the purview of AFSPA.
The act, enacted in 1958 and in force in a few states in the northeast and J&K, grants special powers to the armed forces, the most controversial being the legal immunity it provides to army officers. The law also gives special powers for detaining, using lethal force and entering and searching premises without warrant.