Add The Wire As Your Trusted Source
For the best experience, open
https://m.thewire.in
on your mobile browser.
AdvertisementAdvertisement

Amit Shah, Once Accused in Fake Encounter Cases, Chief Guest at Rights Body Event

Though Shah, as Union home minister, is responsible for law and order in the country, he is not known to be a politician with strong concerns about human rights.
Though Shah, as Union home minister, is responsible for law and order in the country, he is not known to be a politician with strong concerns about human rights.
amit shah  once accused in fake encounter cases  chief guest at rights body event
Union home minister Amit Shah with former Chief Justice of India H.L. Dattu at the NHRC Foundation Day function at DRDO Bhawan in New Delhi on Saturday. Photo: PTI
Advertisement

New Delhi: Home minister Amit Shah was the chief guest at the National Human Rights Commission’s Foundation Day celebrations on Saturday, October 12.

The NHRC has existed as a body for 26 years, since 1993, and has reportedly disposed of nearly 18 lakh cases. It has directed about Rs 176 crore of relief to various victims of human rights violations.

The current chairperson of the NHRC, a quasi-judicial body with the powers of a civil court, is Justice H.L. Dattu.

Though Shah, as Union home minister, is responsible for law and order and security in the country, he is not known to be a politician with strong concerns about human rights.

Advertisement

He recently gave a speech where he questioned the argument that the 65-day communications blockade imposed on the people of Kashmir was a human rights violation.

The amendments to the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act which he piloted in the last session of parliament have also been criticised for undermining civil liberties by allowing the government to designate individuals as "terrorists" without filing formal charges or holding a trial of any sort. In his speech to the Lok Sabha, Shah made it clear that the new amendments were also aimed at what he called "terrorist literature" – a term undefined in statute – whose propagation was encouraging young people to become terrorists.

Advertisement

Though home ministers have been fixtures at NHRC events, he is perhaps the first incumbent to have once been accused of  a serious violation of human rights – involvement in the custodial killing of three persons in Gujarat while he was home minister in the state government.

Though Shah was charged by the Central Bureau of Investigation with complicity in the fake encounter killings of a woman, Kausar Bi, her husband Sohrabuddin Shaikh and his associate Tulsiram Prajapati, he was discharged by a CBI special court in December 2014, the year the BJP under Narendra Modi's leadership came to power at the Centre.

Advertisement

The CBI refused to appeal his discharge.

Advertisement

Shah’s name also featured in the 'Snoopgate' controversy in 2013 – in which audio recordings of Shah and senior police officers supervising the tailing and tapping of a young woman surfaced. An inquiry by the Gujarat state government subsequently declared that the snooping had been carried out at the behest of the woman's father, who claimed he had been worried about the security of his (adult) daughter.

In another 'encounter' case – that of Ishrat Jahan case, a 19-year-old woman killed by the Gujarat police in 2004 – the CBI probed Shah's role but concluded it had no evidence to make him an accused along with the senior officers who were eventually charged.

Also read: Why the Haren Pandya Murder is Back in the Spotlight

More recently, Shah has courted controversy by referring to Muslim immigrants in India as “termites”.

This article went live on October twelfth, two thousand nineteen, at twenty-three minutes past seven in the evening.

The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments.

Advertisement
Advertisement
tlbr_img1 Series tlbr_img2 Columns tlbr_img3 Multimedia