Rights activists face a series of obstacles to their work. Rights
violations also have wider repercussions. They create a climate of fear.
The Karnataka convener of the National Alliance for People’s Movement,
A.D. Babu, was killed recently. He was on his way, along with two
colleagues, to a NAPM meeting on an anti-liquor campaign at Ramnagaram,
when a group stopped his vehicle at Mayanagram, a few km from the
venue, and attacked him with knives and swords. He died on the spot. It
is believed that a Karnataka liquor mafia is behind the gruesome murder.
In May, Lalit Kumar Mehta of Palamau district, Jharkhand, who
fearlessly raised the issue of corruption in implementation of the
National Rural Employment Guarantee Programme , was murdered. So was
Narayan Hareka — a naib sarpanch belonging to the Kandha tribal
community — of Kambivalsa village in Koraput district, Orissa, who
fought against liquor brewing, private money-lending, land alienation
and corruption.
Social activists Leo Saldanha and his wife Lakshmi Nilakantan of
Bangalore are being targeted by the Karnataka police and the Forest
Department in connection with sandalwood smuggling, forest encroachment
and theft, because of their role in unearthing the land scam in the
controversial Bangalore-Mysore Infrastructure Corridor Project.
Amnesty International’s monitoring highlights cases of human rights
violations, including killing and attacks, and threats and
intimidation, against rights activists in different parts of the
country. They are facing obstacles to their work. They have to stop or
radically curtail their activities. Direct attacks or threats to their
lives sometimes mean the activists fleeing their homes or even areas.
These violations also have wider repercussions. They create a climate
of fear. Other rights activists become aware how easily they too can
become targets of direct attack.
Harassment comes through a range of means, including surveillance. We
receive a large number of complaints of raids and break-ins at the
office of people’s organisations or at the homes of rights activists.
During these incidents, crucial human rights information related to the
work of the activists is seized. The legal system is misused to harass
and intimidate them. This also results in stigmatising the individuals
and organisations and creates a negative perception of their work.
Criminal proceedings initiated against the activists on unsubstantiated
evidence or judicial proceedings, which remain unresolved for extended
periods, also seriously curtail their ability to carry out legitimate
work. This is especially true of activists working in grass-roots
organisations at the local level.
Deteriorating situation
The human rights situation in the country has been deteriorating
rapidly. The killings of rights activists take place in a context
characterised by a fast-growing economy that is accelerated by
government policies. These policies, particularly on land, agriculture
and forced evictions, are creating serious tensions. The police and the
administration categorise all legitimate activities of rights activists
as criminal. At a time when human rights abuse against activists is
becoming widespread and is showing signs of further deterioration, with
governments showing their apathy, we need to draw attention to the
situation, point to the failure of governments to live up to their
obligations, and plan for concrete action so that the activists can
carry on with their important work free from attacks and fear of
reprisals.
At the heart of people’s rights work is the individual — as one at the
receiving end of rights abuses, as survivor, as partner in the defence
of rights, and as activist speaking out and working with, and for,
other individuals. Individuals, as part of the political, social and
cultural collective and spread through the length and breadth of the
country, lie behind much of the activism of social-political groups,
working at local, grass-roots and community levels. They try to change
lives by acting on their own or with other people and political groups
making the same demand — an end to injustice in all its forms. These
individuals are always at risk. Despite this, no mechanism exists at
the district, State, regional or national levels, to protect those
working to protect and promote our constitutional rights.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) and its State editions, and
the commissions established for women, the minorities and the Scheduled
Castes and the Scheduled Tribes are often approached by victim
activists for redress. However, in the absence of a focussed system for
monitoring, documenting and reporting rights violations against rights
activists, and for lack of a mechanism for timely and pro-active
intervention to provide justice to them, the commissions more often
than not fail to arrest the continuing violations. Why do the
commissions themselves not develop a system for taking action?
Where are our governments, which are parties to numerous international
and regional human rights treaties and have voluntarily undertaken a
legal commitment to protect the rights activists?
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights contains important standards
relevant to the work of rights activists. In addition to the UDHR, the
Declaration on the Right and Responsibility of Individuals, Groups and
Organs of Society to Promote and Protect Universally Recognised Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (Declaration on Human Rights
Defenders), adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1998, is
a set of safeguards designed to guarantee and ensure the protection of
human rights defenders. These include the right to know, seek, obtain
and receive information about human rights and fundamental freedoms;
the right to participate in peaceful activities against violations of
human rights; the right to criticise and complain when governments fail
to comply with human rights standards; and the right to make proposals
for improvement.
In line with the U.N. Declaration, why can’t the work of rights
activists, including those working on economic, social and cultural
rights, be recognised and legitimatised? Rather than harassing them,
governments should take steps to develop a national plan of action that
includes multidisciplinary proposals at the political, legal and
practical levels, which aim at improving the environment in which
rights activists operate; the measures to ensure their immediate
protection and the allocation of appropriate human and financial
resources.
Along with mechanisms and laws, there is need to call on a wider human
rights community for intervention and support. It must include
political activists and leaders, non-governmental organisations, human
rights bodies, international organisations and professionals. The
lukewarm response to Dr. Binayak Sen’s arrest from the established
bodies of the medical fraternity and inter-governmental organisations,
and the near non-response to the killings of Narayan Hareka and Lalit
Mehta from the people and groups working on NREGA show the lack of
solidarity, networking and common action in the human rights community.
Rights are not just concepts and laws. They are not just about
project-making, training, advocacy and building capacity. They also
mean showing courage and mobilising thousands of activists as fast as
possible when someone is arrested, killed, or faces immediate and often
life-threatening human rights violations. If a fragile “people’s rights
concern” is to withstand the vagaries of political ebb and flow, future
attacks on activists and practical applicability of rights will need to
be anticipated and forestalled. The continuous hardships of activists,
working in different contexts and cultures, reinforce the point that
they must not only remain our reactive agenda but should also be a
progressive proposition for a better future.
The existence of ‘failed states’ such as Chhattisgarh and Orissa —
those without any functioning human rights governance — is a formidable
challenge to human rights activists. Where the institutions necessary
for the delivery of justice — from law-enforcement to healthcare and
education — are either entirely lacking or dependent on a weak
authority, and the rights are regularly abused by companies, armed
groups, security forces and religious leaders, the challenge is to work
creatively with and through political and social structures. Only then
can immediate abuse be prevented and redressed, and a framework of
protective safeguards at the local and community levels built.
http://www.thehindu.com/2008/07/26/stories/2008072653711000.htm
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© 2008, The Hindu.