Amnesty blames Delhi police for ‘grave abuses’ during riots

Published August 29, 2020
The group said it spoke to 50 riots survivors, eyewitnesses, lawyers, doctors, human rights activists and retired police officers. It also analysed several user-generated videos. — AFP/File
The group said it spoke to 50 riots survivors, eyewitnesses, lawyers, doctors, human rights activists and retired police officers. It also analysed several user-generated videos. — AFP/File

NEW DELHI: Delhi police are guilty of “grave human rights violations” during communal riots in the Indian capital earlier this year, and were even “active participants” in the violence, Amnesty Interna­tional said on Friday.

The worst unrest in years between India’s majority Hindus and minority Muslims killed around 50 people, most of them Muslims, over several days of running battles in the city’s northeast in February.

A field investigation by Amnesty “has documented a disturbing pattern of grave human rights violations committed by the Delhi police during the riots”, the rights group said in a statement.

“These violations include police officers indulging in violence with the rioters; torturing in custody; using excessive force on protesters; dismantling sites of peaceful protests and; being mute bystanders as rioters wrea­ked havoc,” Amnesty said.

Read | Indian police deliberately targeted Muslims during Delhi riots: NYT report

The group said it spoke to 50 riots survivors, eyewitnesses, lawyers, doctors, human rights activists and retired police officers. It also analysed several user-generated videos.

One such video showed officers “kicking and hitting a group of five wounded men... poking them with rifles and asking them to sing the Indian national anthem,” Amnesty said. Six months on, there has been no investigation into the role of the police in the unrest, it added.

“This ongoing state-sponsored impunity sends the message that the law enforcement officials can commit grave human rights violations and evade accountability,” said an Amnesty executive director.

Published in Dawn, August 29th, 2020

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