New York
The United Nations has again called on India to probe cases of forced disappearance and mass graves in Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir.
In a letter this week addressed to the Indian government, at least nine UN rapporteurs also asked New Delhi to reconsider the closure of the State Human Rights Commission (SHRC) in the disputed Jammu and Kashmir.
“We urge [India]…and local authorities in Jammu and Kashmir to undertake prompt, thorough and impartial investigations into all alleged enforced disappearances…and take measures to identify the remains in each of the thousands of unmarked graves,” said the letter, which was posted to the government on July 1 but only made public two months later.
According to Kashmir-based Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons or APDP — that looks after the families of forcibly disappeared people — there are at least 8,000 Kashmiris allegedly disappeared by Indian forces. “These disappearances began in the 1990s even before the enactment and implementation of the Jammu & Kashmir Armed Forces Special Powers Act [AFSPA] in September 1990, which provides impunity for India’s armed forces,” according to the APDP.
“We also urge [India] to reconsider the closure of the SHRC or to promptly establish an equivalent independent body or bodies that could assist and guide official investigations and help ensure that they are in full compliance with international human rights norms,” the UN experts demanded.
The latest letter by the UN is one of several such communications sent to India over Kashmir seeking the redressal of the rights issue in Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir.
“If India will not take any genuine and immediate steps to resolve the situation, meet their obligations to investigate historic and recent cases of human rights violations and prevent future violations, then the international community should step up,” the experts said.
In another report on cases against Kashmiri journalists, the UN rapporteurs had said: “India’s bid to prosecute Kashmiri journalists suggests a pattern of silencing independent reporting on the situation in Jammu and Kashmir.”
In July, at least four UN special rapporteurs asked the Indian government to investigate the torture and custodial killings of several Kashmiri Muslim men since January 2019.—KMS