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“All Citizens are Equal before Law and are Entitled to Equal Protection of Law”-Article 27 of the Constitution of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh
 



Issue No: 118
May 16, 2009

This week's issue:
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Fact file

Migrants detained without reason

THE Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) on 8 May had issued a statement exposing the controversial steps taken by the Rajasthan state government in the excuse of ensuring security in the state. The statement also highlights the misuse of Section 109 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 by the law enforcement agencies, including the judges and lawyers.

This provision of law is misused by the authorities, particularly the police and the Executive Magistrates, to lock up the poor migrants who come to the cities in India seeking employment and to escape from poverty, starvation and caste and religion based discrimination in rural India. Unfortunately for many, what awaits them in the city is the brute misuse of law and procedures by the authorities, with which they imprison individuals without any due process of law and with impunity.

The practice in Rajasthan, as highlighted in the AHRC statement, is not unique for that state. Innocent persons, imprisoned for having committed no offense at all, are found in prisons throughout the country. Many of them first enter the detention centres at a relatively young age, for having committed no offense other than coming to the city and finding a job that would not provide them a decent place to sleep during the night.

Inside the detention centres, the detainees are inhumanly treated, threatened and humiliated that prepares many of them to begin a career of crime. Inside the prisons in states like Kerala, these detainees are the candidates who are later recruited to commit crimes for political parties. Once indoctrinated and offered the possibility of release and thus freedom, they are sent out of custody to commit murders and other crimes for political parties. The Kanoor Central Prison in Kerala alone houses more than 100 such detainees.

The best time in the lives of these young men is thus spent twiddling their thumbs or being bullied by other inmates convicted for serious crimes, who are actually ruling the roost. It is an irony of reality that the Warders depend on these convicted inmates for enforcing discipline and to maintain the 'law and order' in the barracks and on the campus.

Even if they write a post-card gifted by some voluntary agency, they are not sure whether it would be posted. This has nothing to do with censoring of correspondence of the inmates. No one really has time for the inmates. The easiest thing for the prison officials is to just shove the post-cards into the garbage. Of the two Warders, who are supposed to assist the Jailor, one is rarely seen on the campus, the other busies himself attending to the paper work.

There is no law in India that allows the police or a Magistrate to detain persons arbitrarily.

None of them are provided any legal representation. In fact not many in the city are aware that innocent persons are detained in the Borstal. Alam and his friends in the Borstal are aware that even if they are sent out, the society will not accept them as ordinary innocent individuals who have been sent to jail for no purpose. Due to this stigma, the possibilities of Alam and his friends being any further employed in the city are also remote. It must not be a matter of surprise, if some among the 31 innocent inmates at the Borstal, upon release, resort to making a living by committing crimes.

It is just not a mere irony that a correction system, intended to reduce crime in the society, in fact due to its misuse, creates criminals. The state as well as the central administration cannot absolve themselves from the responsibility in this process of absolute miscarriage of justice. The practice of arbitrarily detaining innocent persons is a violation of the domestic laws in the country, particularly the Constitution and India's commitment to international human rights norms, specifically to those India has affirmed allegiance to and are contained in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

 

Source: The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC).

 
 
 
 


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