Maoists top violators of human rights in India - report

GN Bureau | April 19, 2010




Among all insurgent groups in India, the Maoists are the worst violators of human rights, says a study. “The Maoists have been responsible for brutal killing of their hostages after abduction,” the report says.

The report was released last Tuesday by the Asian Centre for Human Rights, a New Delhi based human rights watchdog. It adds that killing and extortion by the Maoists are done with the blessings of its top leaders.

According to the report titled ‘Torture in India, 2010,’ “the Maoists have been responsible for brutal killing by slitting throats of the hostages or beheading them.” It says that killings are generally authorised in the ‘people’s courts or Jan Adalats run by the Maoists to give justice to its own people.'

The report highlights that there has been rise of such torture by the Maoists from 2000 to 2008. “The Maoists specially target civilians on the allegation of being “police informers”, members of the anti-Maoist civilian militia such as “Salwa Judum” and for not obeying their diktats,” the report points out.

The report has cited at least 17 examples of Maoists killing civilians, including the 4 September, 2009 slaughter of four villagers in Bijapur of Chhattisgarh on suspicion of being police informers. Calling this a blatant disregard for the international humanitarian law committed by the Maoists, the report, however, also blamed the government for “failing in its efforts to hold perpetrators of abuses accountable for their actions, whether committed by the state, the Maoists or other armed opposition groups.” 

Read the complete report here.

 

Comments

 

Other News

Bullet Train Project: Third mountain tunnel breakthrough achieved

A major engineering milestone has been achieved in the Mumbai–Ahmedabad Bullet Train Project with the successful breakthrough of the third mountain tunnel (MT-07) at Ambesari village in Dahanu Taluka of Palghar district, Maharashtra.   With this achievement, three mountain

Supreme Court gets five new judges

Five new judges were appointed to the Supreme Court of India on Monday. "Vide Notifications of even number dated 01.06.2026, in exercise of the powers conferred by clause (2) of Article 124 of the Constitution of India, the Hon’ble President of India is pleased to appoint (i) Shri

Astonishing breadth and depth of ancient Indian knowledge systems

The Greatest Books of Ancient India: Incredible Ideas about Science, Music, Maths, Art and More By Dr. Pradeep Chakravarthy and Dr. R. Thiagarajan Hachette India, 208 pages, Rs 399  

Strong El Nino threat over India`s monsoon, food & water security

India is heading into the southwest monsoon season this year under the shadow of a rapidly strengthening El Nino, with meteorologists warning that the climate phenomenon could significantly disrupt rainfall patterns, intensify heat stress and place additional pressure on the country’s agriculture-d

How corporates can nudge real change

The Business Of Business Is (Not) Just Business: How Behavioural Tools Can Drive Real Change Edited by Sutapa Banerjee, with Foreword by Nadir Godrej HarperCollins, 336 pages, Rs 699  

India stopped jailing people for paperwork. Now comes the hard part

A small pharmacist in Rajkot neglects to change a notice in his store under a little-known clause of a public health law. This was not only a non-compliance matter, but also a criminal offence, and a jail sentence was the punishment under the old system. Not a fine. Not a warning. Jail. Now scale





Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter