Srinagar

Terming the recent PSA detention of Masarat Alam as brazen violation of SC ruling, an New Delhi based organization, People’s Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR) has strongly demanded quashment of 36th PSA on Masarat Alam Bhat, the incarcerated chairperson of Muslim League and senior resistance leader.

Pertinently, Masarat was slapped with 36th PSA recently and shifted to Kotbalwal Jail in Jammu.

PUDR while condemning the 36th Preventive Detention order served on Alam, said that the revolving-door-detention, where a person is booked under new detention order illegally irrespective of the earlier order being quashed by the High Court is a feature of Jammu and Kashmir.

It demanded that Preventive Detention order issued against Masrat Alam be quashed and the Jammu and Kashmir Police should be held liable for contempt of court.

In a hard hitting statement, the PUDR lashed out at the Jammu and Kashmir government and said that cases such as these also bring out the fact about the violation of law and contempt of Supreme Court orders by authorities is a cottage industry in armed conflict area like J&K.

The statement said that the state government has repeatedly held that Public Security Act (PSA) is a must for running the affairs of the state “That means, without the coercive stick, governance is not possible in J&K.”

“This new Preventive Detention (PD) order under PSA, violates judgments of the Supreme Court which have frowned on repeated and recurrent use of preventive detention and also ruled that without any fresh facts no new detention order can be passed.”

The statement said that on October 26 the Jammu and Kashmir High Court had quashed the 35th PSA of issued against Masarat Alam. Instead of setting him free, the police released and then re-arrested him claiming he was wanted in a case registered in 2015 in Kupwara and as a result was taken to Handwara. On November 16 while being under the detention, he was served his 36th detention order and taken to Jammu.

“Since insurgency began in Jammu and Kashmir in 1989-90, he has spent more than 20 years in preventive detention. He was first detained under Public Security Act (1978) of Jammu and Kashmir on October 2, 1990. The PSA allows for arrest and imprisonment of a person without trial for 6 months, renewable for up to two years on mere suspicion that he/she maybe acting “in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order” [Section 8(3)(b), or for activities “in any manner prejudicial to the security of the state” (S 8 (1)(a).   Since PD is an administrative measure, it requires no proof of criminal offence or even pretense of due process.

The important thing to note about Masarat Alam is that there are 49 FIRs against him and in 29 of them he is accused of “waging war against the State”. However, in 35 cases he was given bail and in 6 cases he was acquitted of all charges. Lacking evidence to convict him the authorities have chosen to employ PD to keep him in perpetual custody. Needless to say that in the cases filed against him, his detention under PSA and incarceration far removed from trial courts in Kashmir means that his right to speedy and fair trial is jeopardized. It is possible to perpetuate injustice under the system of “open FIRs” registered by J&K police against unnamed suspects participating in a crowd.”

The statement read: “The dastardly nature of J&K’s Preventive Detention Act is brought out by the fact that it overturns due process and infringes the constitutional rights governing the criminal justice system. As a result right to be informed of grounds of detention, make representation against such orders, consult legal counsel, to be produced before a Magistrate within 24 hours etc all get waived when a person is incarcerated under PSA. There is no provision for bail and the only remedy is to file a writ of habeas corpus before a High Court. J&K PSA provides for detention order to be referred within four weeks of date of detention before the Advisory Board headed by a sitting or retired High Court judge and allows the Board to report to the Government within four weeks. There is no provision for appeal against the decision of the Advisory Board and nor a provision for legal representation before the same.”

“Such blatant disavowal of the principles of Rule of Law to incarcerate someone for decades without trial and conviction, on mere suspicion is reminiscent of the colonial British Raj which too valorized arbitrariness and coercion for maintaining its control over Indians. Prevalence of the same practice in Indian administered J&K shows that the Indian State has much to hide and suppress in order to sustain its control.”

 

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