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Two men from Moradabad (UP, India) recently went to an airport
in New Delhi to receive a guest.
While waiting for the visitor they started exchanging views
on their daily concerns and used the word masail
in their conversation in Urdu.
The hyper-sensitive cops present there concluded that they
were talking of missiles. They
were promptly marched off towards a prison where they spent a night
before some influentials’ intercession won them release.
This
will be considered a minor incident, but it can be used as a footnote to the
growing account of erosion of human rights in the crazy post-September 11
world. The values recognised as
universal and indivisible human rights after centuries of struggle are being
thrown overboard by parties best-equipped to protect them and which had, till
recently, used them as one of the principal cold war weapons. In this process the worst sufferers are
prisoners and those held captive before being recognised as prisoners.
The
case of Taliban supporters, Afghans as well as other nationals, who were
brutally killed after being taken prisoner, has been dismissed in a most
repulsive manner. The demand by highly
respected international human rights organisations that the massacre at
Qila-i-Jangi, overseen by the holy warriors of the US-led coalition forces,
must be judicially investigated was turned down with contempt on two grounds,
that the victims had taken up arms against the guards and that as members of Al
Qaeda they deserved no mercy. The first
excuse was an issue in the probe demanded and the matter could not be
arbitrarily disposed of. The second
plea smacked of primitive savagery. The
only evidence against the victims was that they had fought against invaders of
their land, original or adopted. They
had not blown up the towers in New York and had not committed crimes against
humanity of the kind perpetrated in the Nazi concentration camps. The only possible conclusion was that as
prisoners of war belonging to a vanquished and despised adversary they were not
entitled to respect for their human rights.
Then
began the macabre drama of prisoners’ transfer to the US base in
Cuba. They were drugged
and chained for the long flight, supposedly for reason of security.
At the detention centre they have been put in cages (open
to elements) of the type hitherto used only for wild animals, shaved
and gagged against their will, and given a costume identifiable
as a target from a distance. They
are denied access to both friend and counsel and have been deprived
of recourse to judicial redress under the system applicable to their
captors in the latter’s own land.
They have been further humiliated by the release of photographs
depicting their wretchedness.
In
the eyes of international humanitarian law these men are prisoners of war and
they have been deprived of protection under the Geneva Conventions. The US authorities argue that they
are‘unlawful combatants’ and not prisoners of war, disregarding the fact that
the moment they use the expression combatants, the prisoners come under the
purview of the Geneva Conventions which demand that prisoners’ lives must be
respected, that they should be properly housed, fed and cared for, and that
they should not be subjected to inhuman treatment.
Even
if, for the sake of argument, these men are not treated as prisoners of war,
they are in any case prisoners and to them the UN Minimum Standard Rules for
Prisoners apply, which prohibit inhuman and degrading treatment of detainees
regardless of the charges against them.
They are also covered under the Convention against Torture. Disregard for these instruments implies that
the prisoners are not considered human beings.
This is a most dangerous development as it reveals a mindset determined
to discard all humanitarian considerations while fighting terrorism and accuse
anyone who raises questions of human rights of sympathy with terrorists. This pernicious logic, which is based on
absolute falsehood, is extremely ominous. International humanitarian law is
neither universally respected nor is it considered comprehensive enough to
reflect modern civilisational values.
The Geneva Conventions too need progressive updating as the dignity of
the human person is recognised on an increasingly higher scale. This important work is going to run into
snags if the present aberrations by big powers go unchallenged.
The
government of Great Britain, the seniormost and perhaps the most enthusiastic
ally of the US in its war and post-war strategies, was shocked to learn of the
presence of one of its nationals at the Cuban base. It demanded and secured consular access to him. Who will speak for the Afghans? The interim regime in Kabul cannot even be
suspected of entertaining such daring ideas
No one can say with surety that there are no Pakistanis in the miserable
lot. Islamabad has not thought of
caring for them. It will be a grave
setback to human rights if people in any circumstances begin to be denied the
rights accruing to them by virtue of belonging to a nationality.
Unfortunately, the downward slide in the international community’s
perception of the rights of prisoners of war is likely to adversely
affect treatment of prisoners in national jurisdictions.
The fate of the people detained in the United States and
elsewhere in the context of the probe into the September 11 events
is a pointer to this regression. In Pakistan, too, many detainees have been
denied the due protection of law only because the authorities allege connections with terrorist organisations or
their sympathisers.
Such abuse of authority is likely to enlarge the scope of
preventive detention regulations at the cost of citizens’ rights
to liberty, and freedoms of association and expression.
Human rights activists have a duty to demand treatment of
all detainees in accordance with due processes in the international
humanitarian law. They cannot be accused of condoning any mischief, including terrorism,
for they are manifestly opposed to it. The rights of prisoners will have to be given their due place in
both national and international discourses.
Otherwise, we will push humankind back into a savage dispensation,
escape from which has been one of its most radiant achievements
in the long journey towards civilisation and self-discovery.
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