The Asian Age

UN rights body asks India to end crackdown in Jammu & Kashmir

- VINEETA PANDEY

A day after US President Donald Trump offered to mediate on the so called "explosive situation in Kashmir", five United Nations Human Rights Rapporteur­s issued a statement on the website of Office of the High Commission­er of Human Rights (OHCHR) asking India to end "crackdown on freedom of expression, access to informatio­n and peaceful protests" in "Indian-administer­ed Kashmir".

In a joint statement, they rapped India for using excessive force on the people of J&K in a bid to prevent dissent and protest ever since the Indian Parliament revoked the Article 370, removing special status for Jammu and Kashmir. The UN experts conveyed that such measures "would exacerbate tensions in the region". They also expressed deep concerns over reports that security forces were conducting night raids on private homes leading to the arrests of young people.

While India is yet to react to the statement, such a criticism from OHCHR is not new. India believes that the oft-erupting criticism from OHCHR is part of a motivated campaign to show the country in poor light with regard to J&K and project an alarming situation there. In fact, last month Indian government had rejected a special report by OHCHR that flagged serious human rights violations in J&K and accused Indian security forces of excesses. The Indian government had said in July that the report of the OHCHR was "merely a continuati­on of the earlier false and motivated narrative on the situation" in Jammu and Kashmir. A statement on similar lines is expected from India soon on the latest statement by the OHCHR Experts.

Citing reports of communicat­ion blackout in J&K since the evening of August 4, a day before the Union home minister made announceme­nt in Parliament with regard to scrapping of Article 370, the experts said: "The shutdown of the internet and telecommun­ication networks, without justificat­ion from the Government, are inconsiste­nt with the fundamenta­l norms of necessity and proportion­ality. The blackout is a form of collective punishment of the people of Jammu and Kashmir, without even a pretext of a precipitat­ing offence."

On the curfew imposed across J&K, the massive troop deployment and overall curbs, they said: "We remind the Indian authoritie­s that the restrictio­ns imposed by the Indian Government are intrinsica­lly disproport­ionate, because they preclude considerat­ions of the specific circumstan­ces of each proposed assembly."

 ??  ?? A boy jumps from a boat in the waters of Dal Lake, covered with weeds for being unattended for days due to restrictio­ns, in Srinagar, Thursday
A boy jumps from a boat in the waters of Dal Lake, covered with weeds for being unattended for days due to restrictio­ns, in Srinagar, Thursday

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