Once every few months, tribal women from Sarkeguda village in Chhattisgarh바카라s deep interiors walk the 52-km road to Bijapur town and then take a rickety bus ride to Jagdalpur바카라Bastar바카라s district headquarters바카라in pursuit of the law. They are seeking justice for the killing of 17 villagers, including seven children, on the intervening night of June 28-29, 2012, by security forces, who fired upon villagers, allegedly mistaking a gathering (where preparations for an upcoming festival) were being discussed to be a meeting of Maoists. The multiple journeys to Jagdalpur bring the villagers face to face with the security personnel they testified against, and the stares they get from them and other policemen, for obvious reasons, are anything but friendly.
The Sarkeguda killings had triggered public debate on fake encounters in conflict-torn regions. And when news of the killing of eight undertrial prisoners from Bhopal central jail on October 31 rekindled that debate, the focus was on Muslim identity and outlawed SIMI connections.
바카라Fake encounters바카라 or extra-judicial killings by policemen are a recurring phenomenon that allows questions to be raised on the legal accountability of law-enforcement agencies바카라although when there바카라s a context of 바카라national security바카라, raising those questions becomes difficult and politically charged. It is hard to forget the image of Manipuri women protesting bare-bodied following the extra-judicial killing of Thangjam Manorama, alleged member of the PLA, an outlawed Manipuri insurgent group. The focus that time was AFSPA바카라the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, which is often criticised for having enabled impunity in cases of excesses during counterinsurgency operations.
Also from Manipur was the 바카라encounter바카라 story of Chungkham Sanjit, the 27-year-old Meitei who was killed barely 500 metres from the state assembly in Imphal. A local photographer captured the whole sequence of events, leaving little room to doubt that it was a murder in cold blood by personnel of the Manipur Police Commandos. The pictures were published by a national newsmagazine, eventually leading to a Supreme Court-monitored CBI probe into alleged fake encounters in the state. A chargesheet was filed in 2010, and accused no. 3, head constable Herojit Singh admitted this January to have shot the unarmed Sanchit six times.
October 31 has brought the encounter debate, literally, centrestage바카라not the Northeast, but pat in the middle of the 바카라mainland바카라. At 8 am that day, news agency ANI had tweeted: 바카라8 SIMI terrorists flee from Bhopal Central Jail after murdering a jail guard.바카라 The undertrials were labelled 바카라terrorists바카라 and 바카라justice바카라, it turned out, was just the squeeze of a trigger away. In the days following the encounter, there were claims and counter-claims on whether the undertrials were armed or not.
Police excesses바카라illegal detentions, custodial torture, extraction of forced (often false) confessions바카라have been routine in investigations as well as maintenance of law and order. Tracing the history of fake encounters in Kafkaland, Manisha Sethi observes that the 바카라modus operandi of these killings was established early in the life of our Republic바카라 and 바카라the methods of elimination have hardly changed바카라.
바카라Northeast, Kashmir and Punjab were the laboratories where police brutality was developed. These have moved out from the conflict zones to the rest of the country, with the state carving out exceptions to justify illegal police action,바카라 says Sethi. In the Northeast and Kashmir, AFSPA gives unfettered powers to armed forces, but police and paramilitary personnel too use it to carry out illegal killings.
In the early 1970s, youth in Calcutta were routinely rounded up and killed for being 바카라Naxals바카라. During the Khalistan insurgency, several police officers in Punjab won accolades for 바카라dealing with the insurgency with an iron hand바카라. Many pointed out that the state바카라s policing system was built on the blood of Punjabi youth. Last year, former Punjab police officer Gurmeet Singh Pinky exposed the truth of the encounters in a conversation with Outlook.


Some of these methods moved to the streets of Mumbai and, in popular culture, the epithet 바카라encounter specialist바카라 stuck to cops such as inspector Daya Nayak, who were portrayed as heroes meting out INStant justice to criminals. An 바카라affidavit of conscience바카라 filed by Ketan Tirodkar바카라an occasional journalist who acted as a fixer for the police and the underworld바카라changed the narrative about Nayak, who is back in uniform after the Supreme Court threw out the case against him citing a matter of technicality.
With the turn of the century, when the focus of 바카라counter-terrorism바카라 shifted towards Muslims, the 바카라Punjab method바카라 could be discerned in numerous cases involving youth with that identity. Many were labelled as 바카라operatives바카라 of the proscribed Student바카라s Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) and later the Indian Mujahideen (IM).
On September 19, 2008, the Delhi Police Special Cell shot dead two Muslim youth in Batla House, alleging they were IM operatives. Inspector Mohan Chand Sharma too was killed and that was used to authenticate the encounter.
In 2003, a year after the Godhra riots, there were several wee-hour encounter killings in Gujarat, beginning with that of Sadiq Jamal Mahar on January 13. The police alleged that those killed were terrorists on their way to assassinate the then CM Narendra Modi, former deputy PM L.K. Advani and VHP leader Praveen Togadia.
Following the Bhopal encounter, Kiren Rijiju, MoS in MHA, said that people should give up the 바카라habit of raising doubts and questioning the authorities and the police바카라, If it concerns national security, no questions should be asked바카라that바카라s the message.
Late advocate Mukul Sinha, though, had asked many questions and challenged the killing of Sadiq and others in the Gujarat High Court. Through a CBI probe and Tirodkar바카라s affidavit, it appeared that Daya Nayak had arrested Sadiq in Mumbai and, even though the Intelligence Bureau (IB) cleared him, allegedly handed him over to the Gujarat cops. The then DIG DG Vanzara and Dy SP Tarun Barot were arrested but later bailed out as the case dragged on.
In years that followed Sadiq바카라s killing, other encounters spilled out of Gujarat. Ishrat Jahan, Sohrabuddin Sheikh and Kauser Bi were all described as LeT operatives on their way to assassinate politicians.
Recently, the CBI told a court that it had evidence of 바카라323 SPOs/policemen바카라 and 95 CRPF/CoBRA personnel being involved in the burning down of 160 houses in Tadmetla village in Chhattisgarh바카라s Sukma district.
바카라Encounters should be the last resort when you are fired upon or when you land in an ambush,바카라 says former Chhattisgarh DGP Vishwa Ranjan, who also served with the IB for several years. 바카라When I was DGP, Chhattisgarh recorded the highest number of arrests. I insisted on taking suspects into custody as you can then interrogate them to gather intelligence and evidence. But, when witnesses turn hostile or don바카라t show up in courts, it leads to acquittals by default, provoking policemen to adopt short-cuts.바카라
Imran Ali, a Bhopal-based advocate, has a different view about terror cases that he has followed closely. 바카라Most cases in which young men were accused of being SIMI operatives and terrorists have fallen apart,바카라 he says. 바카라They were acquitted because of lack of evidence, leading to frustration among the investigators.바카라
The poor and marginalised are not the only victims of police excesses. Singapore-based biscuit baron Rajan Pillai fled to India when a Singapore court found him guilty of corporate fraud in 1995. Indian authorities arrested him from a New Delhi hotel in the middle of the night and whisked him away to Tihar jail, where he died four days later.
The prison authorities first said he died from liver cirrhosis, but the autopsy revealed that Pillai had died of asphyxiation. The Leila Seth commission failed to probe the conspiracy, but the case did change the standards of healthcare in Tihar jail.
The multitude of violations notwithstanding, there are safeguards in the law against police excesses and the new Model Police Bill has proposals for greater police accountability. And yet, when clashing ideologies determine what is 바카라anti-national바카라, what바카라s extra-constitutional becomes a question that often goes unheeded.
By Ushinor Majumdar in Delhi