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Human Rights
The defense of human rights and upholding the rights of
the oppressed is a fundamental Sikh principle. The Sikh
Coalition is committed to working to ensure that this universal
principle is upheld. The Coalition works with other human
rights organizations objectively documenting and reporting
on human rights violations.
Today, most of the world's 25 million Sikhs reside in the
Indian state of Punjab. For this reason, although The Sikh
Coalition advocates championing human rights throughout
the world, this section focuses on human rights issues in
India, with an emphasis on the country's following minority
communities: Sikhs, Christians, Muslims, Dalits (those labeled
as Untouchables under the caste system), and women.
The Indian State and its proponents seek to blame past
governments for human rights abuses and assert that India
is no longer violating human rights. Independent research
by numerous organizations, however, indicates otherwise.
International human rights organizations, such as Human
Rights Watch and Amnesty International, continue to repeatedly
condemn India for its failure in preventing, and in many
cases advocating, the violation of human rights against
its minority and underprivileged communities, including
women.
Amnesty International's report published in 2000 clearly
shows that the Indian state continues to pursue its policy
of state terror against the Sikhs. ("Persecuted For
Challenging Injustice: Human Rights Defenders in India,"
Amnesty International, 2000.) Human rights violations are
blatantly obvious in prisons throughout the country. In
1999, Human Rights Watch declared, "Virtually everyone
detained in Punjab is tortured." Common documented
methods of torture by police authorities include: severe
beatings; gang raping of women; application of electric
shocks to genitals and extremities; inserting an iron rod
onto which chili paste has been applied into the rectum;
badly burning skin, often with hot iron rods; forcing apart
hips, sometimes to 180 degrees, for prolonged periods; rolling
heavy logs over legs to permanently destroy muscles; and
immersion into foul water until near suffocation. These
methods apply to members of all of India's victimized communities
(Human Rights Watch, 1999; Physicians for Human Rights,
Denmark, 1999).
According to Dr. Cynthia Mahmood, "Many Western academics
could also be accused of keeping their eyes shut in face
of a dangerous turn in the Indian national mood over the
past few decades, on which Paul Brass likens to the 'murderous,
pre-fascist stage' of 1930s Germany (1994:353-354) . . .
Urban pogroms against Sikhs and Muslims that have repeatedly
taken place involved not just small bands of hired thugs
but large numbers of people, and, furthermore, were never
widely protested or repudiated by the Indian citizenry as
a whole . . . Consider Bal Thackeray of the Hindu chauvinist
group Shiv Sena . . . who when asked if the Muslims were
beginning to feel like the Jews in Nazi Germany said that
if they behaved like Jews in Nazi Germany, then there is
nothing wrong if they are treated as Jews were in Nazi Germany
. . . Anti-Sikh and anti-Muslim rhetoric that would be considered
'hate speech' in most Western countries is tolerated in
major media outlets in India" (Jeffrey A. Sluka, ed.,
Death Squad: The Anthropology of State Terror, 2000).
With the goal of educating and encouraging further research
in the area of human rights, we are providing this resource
section. It is our hope that through heightened awareness
of actual conditions in Punjab and India in general, people
and governments around the world will take a strong stand
against state-sponsored human rights violations.
Sikhs
Sikh Genocide Project
The Sikh Genocide Project documents and disseminates evidence of massive human right violations suffered by the Sikhs in India. The project seeks to reconstruct a critical phase of contemporary Sikh history that is often misrepresented in contemporary media. The Project's website contains a four-part movie entitled the "Third Sikh Holocoaust", which provides fresh research into three major events: The simultaneous invasion of the Darbar Sahib (also known as the Golden Temple) and 37 other Sikh shrines; the pogroms against the Sikhs in November 1984; and the large scale genocide of the Sikhs in 1990s. Using pictorial evidence and human rights reports, the movie is a powerful tool intended to educate the world community about the genocide against the Sikhs of India. |
ENSAAF
Ensaaf means justice in many South Asian languages. Ensaaf works to end impunity and achieve justice for mass state crimes in Punjab, India by documenting and exposing human rights violations, bringing perpetrators to justice, and organizing survivors to advocate for their rights.
Impunity means the institutional refusal to hold perpetrators of human rights abuse accountable. Ensaaf believes that impunity is the root cause of ongoing abuses and perpetually violates survivors’ rights to truth, justice, and reparations. Ensaaf has established an international reputation for innovative and effective advocacy.
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Who are the Guilty?
Report of a Joint Inquiry into the Causes and impact
of the Riots in Delhi from 31 October to 10 November |
Movement Against State
Repression
Rural Suicides - A Quantum Jump |
Enforced Disappearances, Arbitrary Executions and
Cremations:
Victim Testimony and India's Human Rights Obligations
Interim Report
[page 1] [page
2] [page 3] [page
4] [page 5] [page
6] [page 7] [page
8] |
Custodial Deaths in Punjab
1997-2001 |
Compilation of Investigation
Reports
Lawyers for Human Rights International |
List of Deaths in Police
Custody
January 1997 - June 2001 |
List of Prison Deaths in
Punjab
January 1997 - June 2001 |
News Bulletins
February 22, 2001 - April 6, 2001 |
www.carnage84.com
Documentation related to the 1984 massacre of 4,000
Sikhs in Delhi |
Christians
Anti-Christian
Violence on the Rise in India
Politics
by Other Means: Attacks Against Christians in India
Muslims
We
Have No Orders to Save You: State Participation and Complicity
in Communal Violence in Gujarat
Dalits and India's Poor
Broken
People: Caste Violence Against India's Untouchables
Police
Abuse and Killings of Street Children in India
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