THE ARMED FORCES SPECIAL POWERS ACT, 1958 – A CRITICAL ANALYSIS BY - AMRITPAL SINGH
THE ARMED FORCES SPECIAL POWERS ACT, 1958 – A CRITICAL
ANALYSIS
AUTHORED BY - AMRITPAL SINGH
Assistant Professor,
University School
of Law, Sri Guru Granth Sahib World University, Fatehgarh Sahib.
Abstract
In the wake of
serious disturbances following partition of the country in 1947, the government
of India issued four Ordinances[1]
which were later replaced by the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1948 but
this was a temporary statute enacted for one year. Due to the violence and
secessionist tendencies prevailing in some parts of the country including the
northeast, the government drafted this legislation for maintenance of internal
security of the country. The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, has been
validly enacted by the Parliament. This Act was initially known as Armed Forces
(Assam and Manipur) Special Powers Act, 1958.[2]
The Act applied to the entire State of Assam and the Union territory of
Manipur. After sometimes, the Act was made applicable to North-Eastern States
and Jammu and Kashmir. As justified
ever since by Parliamentarians that this Act is an effective counter terrorism
law in this country.[3]
Disaster relief and internal
security are the primary responsibility of governments with
their integral State police. Internal security is the activity by the State to
guarantee order, security and public tranquillity, to protect people, to
prevent criminality and contribute to ensure
the normal functioning of the democratic institutions, the exercise of
fundamental freedoms by the citizens and the respect for democratic system.
Usually, the internal security of the State is maintained by
police forces, but when State’s civil administration fails, then armed forces
are deployed to restore peace and harmony in that State.[4]
INTRODUCTION
The Army is trained and equipped for its primary role of defence of national
boundaries against external threat or aggression. However, governments can
deploy the Army in a secondary role
in aid of civil power for disaster relief, internal security and countering
insurgency. The centre has power
to deploy its armed forces or any other force under its control in aid of the civil power in a State to maintain
public order. The expression “in aid of the civil power” implies that
deployment of the armed forces of the Union shall be for the purpose of enabling the civil power in the State to deal with the situation
affecting maintenance of public order which has necessitated the deployment
of the armed forces in the State.[5]
Governments
have political power of the people’s vote and it is misuse of political power that leads to a situation
beyond the limits of civil administration, which ultimately
leads causing it to be declared a “disturbed area”.[6]
Armed forces are deployed to establish peace
in that disturbed area. For this purpose, armed forces are provided with extra
powers to tackle such situations successfully. Unless the armed forces are
provided with such special powers, they cannot be able to restore and maintain
civil administration efficiently in such areas. In a deteriorated civic-political situation with the State
the Army has the undesirable task of maintaining peace by
the threat or use of force to prevent violence against the State machinery.[7]
The state government intends
to revoke the ‘disturbed areas’ status of parts of the
state that have largely returned
to normalcy. The north- east is a strategically vulnerable region. Northeast of India has
a peculiar historical problem of its own, which it does not share with the rest of India. These include its implications for centre-state relations, its impact on the fundamental rights of citizens,
the tacit political message sent to areas singled out for such laws, such as
the Northeast and J&K, as being ‘different’ from the rest of India, the
possible empowering of the military to an extent of skewing the ‘civil
military’ balance, the strategic costs of the Act in terms of losing ‘hearts
and minds’ etc. The truth remains that, this piece of law still stands out
unaltered, even though provisions under this law give the security forces power
to go against the basic principles of ‘rules of law’.
Under the shadow of such laws the acts of omission
and commission by security
forces allegedly result in mass killings, rape, disappearances, torture etc.
Indian armed forces have been accused of violating human rights. From 1995 to
2010, 1400 cases of violation of human rights were reported against
the military. Only 54 of these got sanctions from the
central government for prosecution. This resulted in innumerable
court-marshals, where punishments ranged from life imprisonment to termination
of services. More than 37 officers were punished.[8]
But one thing is quite clear that the broad masses of the Indian people in the rest of India are now more aware about
what is going on in the North-Eastern States and Jammu and Kashmir
under the name of maintaining unity and integrity
of the country and they are
also trying their level best to ensure that the struggle for liberty, justice
and human dignity of the people there gets strengthened.
AFSPA & CONSTITUTION OF INDIA
Article 21 of
the Indian Constitution guarantees the right to life to all people. It reads,
“No person shall be deprived
of his life or personal
liberty except according
to the procedure established by law.” Judicial interpretation that
“procedure established by law means a “fair,
just and reasonable law” has been part of Indian jurisprudence since the
1978 case of Maneka Gandhi.[9]
This decision over rules the 1950’s Gopalan case[10]
which had found that any law enacted by parliament meet the requirement of “procedure established by law.” Since Maneka Gandhi’s[11]
case, the court has consistently ruled that the procedure prescribed by the law
must be fair and reasonable and the law in turn, must conform to the other
fundamental rights, especially those embodied in article 19(1) concerning all
aspects of civil liberties; that “personal liberty” means more than mere
absence of physical restraint and “life” means more than mere existence. Under
section 4(a) of the ASFPA, which Grants armed forces personnel the power to shoot to kill, the constitutional right to life is violated. This law is not fair, just
or reasonable because it allows the armed forces to use an excessive amount of
force.
The offence
under section 4(a) are: “acting in contravention of any law or order of the
time being in forced in the disturbed area prohibiting the assembly of five or
more persons or the carrying
of weapon or of things capable of being used as weapons
fire-arms, ammunition or explosive
substances.” None of these offences necessarily involve the use of force. The
armed forces are thus allowed
to retaliate with powers which are grossly
out of proportion with the offence.
Justice required
the use of force be justified by a need for self-defence and the minimum level
of proportionality. As pointed by the UN Human Rights Commission, since
“assembly” is not defined, it could well be lawful assembly, such as a family
gathering, and since “weapon” is not defined it could include a stone. These
shows how wide the interpretation of the offences
may be, illustration the law of use of force is disproportionate
and irrational.[12]
Several
incidents[13]
show how the Border Security Forces (BSF) and army personnel abuse their powers in the North East. In
April 1995, a villager in west Tripura was riding near the border out post when
a soldier asked him to stop. The villager did not stop and the soldier shot him
dead. Even more grotesque were the killings in Kohima on 5 March 1995. The
Rashtriya Rifles (National
Rifiles) mistook the sound of a tyre burst from their own convoy
as a bomb attack and began firing indiscriminately in the town. The Assam
Rifles and the CRPF who were camped
two kilometres away heard a gun shots and also began firing. The firing last
for more than one hour, resulting in the death of seven innocent civilians, 22
were also seriously injured. Among those killed were two girls aged 3 ½ and 8 years old. The injured also included 7 minors. Motars were used even though
using mortars in a civilian area is
prohibited under army rules.
Article 22 of the Indian Constitution states that “(1) No person who is arrested shall be
detained in custody
without being informed
the grounds for such arrest,
nor shall be denied the right to insult, and to be
defended by, a legal practitioner of his choice. (2) Every person who is arrested
and detained in custody shall be produced
before the nearest magistrate with in a period of twenty-
four hours of such arrest excluding the time necessary for the journey from the
place of arrest to the court of the magistrate and no such person shall be detained in custody beyond the said period without
the authority of a magistrate.” The remaining section of the Article
deal with limits of these first two sections in the case of
preventive detention laws. On its face, the AFSPA is not a preventive detention
law therefore the safeguards of
section (1) and (2) must be guaranteed to people arrested under the AFSPA.
Section (2) of Article 22 was the subject of much debate during the framing of the
Indian Constitution.[14]
There was argument over whether the time limit should be specified or whether
the words “with the least possible delay” should be used. Dr. Ambedkar, one of
the principal framers of the Indian Constitution argued that “with the
least possible delay” would actually result in the person being held for a shorter
period of time,
whereas “twenty- four hours” would result in person being held for maximum time of twenty-
four hours. The application of these terms
has since shown
that a specified time period
constitutes a greater safeguard. Under the AFSPA,
the use of “least possible
delay’ language has allowed the security forces to hold people for days and months at a time.
AFSPA & INTERNATIONAL LAW
India is party to the international Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights
(ICCPR). Article 4 of the ICCPR provides under what circumstances state of emergency
can be declared. It states,
“In time of
public emergency which threatens the life of the nation and the existence of
which is officially proclaimed, the States Parties to the present Covenant may
take measures derogating from their
obligations under the present
Covenant to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the situation, provide that such measures are
not inconsistent with their other obligations under international law and do
not involve discrimination solely on the ground of race, colour, sex, language,
religion or social origin.”
Under the
ICCPR, states may, “in times of emergency which threatens the life of the
nation,” take measure which derogate from certain obligation, they may only do
so “to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the
situation.”[15] Under Article 4(3) of the ICCPR,
“Any State
Party to the present Covenant availing itself of the right of derogation shall immediately inform the
other States Parties to the present Covenant, through the intermediary of the
secretary – general of the United Nations, of the provisions from which it has
derogated and of the reasons by which it was actuated. A further communication
shall be made, through the same
intermediary, on the date on which it terminates such derogation.”
Declaring an
area, a “disturbed area” and granting the military extensive powers is in
practice imposing an undeclared emergency regime. In its ruling, the Supreme
Court refused this, claiming that the “Act does not displace the civil power
of the State by the armed forces” and does not amount to a “proclamation of
emergency under Article 352 or a proclamation under Article 356 of the
Constitution.”[16]
However, the Human Rights committee stated in its concluding observations on
India’s third periodic report:
“The Committee
regrets that some parts of India have remained subject to declaration as
disturbed areas over many years – for example, the Armed Forces (Special Power) Act has been applied throughout Manipur
since 1980 and in some areas of that state for much longer – and that in those
areas, the State party is in effect using emergency powers without resorting to
article 4, paragraph 3, of the Covenant.
The committee recommends that the application
of the emergency power be closely monitored so as to ensure its strict
compliance with the provisions of the Covenant.”[17]
Violation of the right to remedy
The AFSPA and other legislation relevant
to the armed forces – requires the “sanction” (i.e. permission) from the
central government before prosecutions can be initiated against members
of the security forces for acts committed, or purported to be committed, under the legislation. Section
6 of the AFSPA specifies that:
“no prosecution, suit or other legal proceeding shall be instituted, except with the previous sanction of the
Central Government, against any person in respect of anything done for
purported to be done in exercise of the powers conferred by this Act.”
Article 2(3) of the ICCPR provides
that state parties
must:
“...ensure
that any person whose rights
or freedoms as herein recognized are violated shall have an effective remedy,
notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons acting in an
official capacity.”
The right to
an effective remedy is implicit in Article 32 of the Indian Constitution. The
fundamental rights in the Constitution of India include
a right to enforceability of these
rights. However, even during the first debate in the Lok Sabha at the time the
AFSPA was being considered, one
member reportedly stated that Section 6 of the Act “immediately take away,
interrogates, pinches, frustrates the right to
constitutional remedy which has been given in Article 32(1) of the constitution.”[18]
The importance of avoiding impunity
has been articulated by the Supreme
Court: In order that the people may fell assured
that there is an effective check against misuse and abuse of powers by the
members of the armed forces it is necessary that a complaint maintaining an
allegation about misuse or abuse of the powers conferred under the Central Act
should be thoroughly inquired into and, if it is found that there is substance
in the allegation, the victim should be suitably
compensated by the state and the requisite
sanction under Section 6 of the
Central Act should be granted for institution of prosecution and /or civil suit
or other proceeding against the
person/persons responsible for such violation.”[19]
This direction has been supplemented in Paragraph 52 of the judgement, where the
court stated: “...we are of the view that since the order of the Central
Government refusing or granting the
sanction under Section 6 is subject to judicial review, the Central Government shall pass an order giving reasons.”[20]
Torture ill-treatment and “disappearances”
The sweeping
powers bestowed upon security forces upon the AFSPA have fostered a climate in
which security forces, and other agents of law enforcement, commit human rights
abuses with impunity. Article 7 of the ICCPR provides that: “no one shall be
subjected to torture or to cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.” Like the right to life, this
right is non-degradable, namely it must be fully adhered to in times of
emergency, including war and internal strife.
Moreover, the prohibition against torture is a “norm of customary law.”
Amnesty
International has received reports that the AFSPA has in practice facilitated the torture all ill-treatment of people
while in custody. In 1991, Supreme Court Advocate Nandita Haksar recorded the
use of torture by armed forces and police in the Northeast to include: beating
with rifles butt, kicking with boots and hitting with blunt weapon, ii) giving
electric shocks, iii) depriving persons of food and drink and beating on soles
of the feet, iv) threat to shoot, interrogation with gun pointed at forehead or
inside the mouth.”[21]
Torture and
ill-treatment are strictly prohibited in all circumstances, and are not
permitted under the AFSPA. Amnesty
International is concerned that torture and ill-treatment are routinely
in areas where the AFSPA is in force on account of the wide powers given to
security forces deployed
in “disturbed areas” and the expectation
of impurity which it generates
soldiers and which, unfortunately, is often fulfilled.
Violation of the rights to liberty and security
of person
Several
provisions of the AFSPA violate the protection against arbitrary detention
contained in the ICCPR and other international instruments. Section 4(c) and
Section 5 of the AFSPA do not conform to Article 9 of the ICCPR. Section 4(c)
provides:
“any commissioned
officer, warrant officer, non-commissioned officer or any other person of equivalent
rank in the Armed Forces may in a disturbed
area,
(c) arrest,
without warrant, any person who has committed a cognizable offence
or against whom a reasonable suspicion exist that he has committed
or is about to commit a cognizable offence and use such force as may be
necessary to effect the arrest.”
Article 9 of
the ICCPR provides that “...No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or
detention...” the HRC has explained
this provision as follow: “...the
Committee recalls that the
notion of “arbitrariness” must not be equated with “against the law” but be interpreted more broadly to include
such elements as inappropriateness and injustice. Furthermore, remand in custody could be
considered to prevent flight or interference with evidence: the element of
proportionality becomes relevant in this context.”[22]
There are reported breaches
of the ICCPR even when the AFSPA is followed.
Article 9 of the ICCPR further
provides that “anyone
arrested or detained
on a criminal charge shall be brought promptly before a judge
or other officer authorized by law to
exercise judicial owner ...” The Supreme
Court of India in 1997 ruled that arrested persons be produced
before a magistrate within 24 hours of arrest,
excluding journey time.[23] While section 5 of the AFSPA provides for the arrested person
to be handed over to the nearest police station “with the least possible
delay” and despite
the fact that the courts – and in the late 1990s the
National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) – have issued directives that this
provision should be interpreted as
meaning “within 24 hours.”
The key
provisions of AFSPA contravene international human rights law and have led to gross and systematic violations of
indigenous peoples. Under relevant international human rights and humanitarians
law standards there is no justification for such an act as the AFSPA, by its form and in its application,
violates the Universal Declaration of Human Rights[24],
the international convent on civil and political rights, the Convention Against
Torture, the UN Code of Conduct for
Law Enforcement Officials, the UN Body of Principles for Protection of All
Persons Under any form of Detention etc.
AFSPA violates
the following provisions of UDHR, as follows; Article 1 – Free and Equal
Dignity,[25]
Article 2 – Non-discrimination,[26]
Article 3 – Life, Liberty, Security of person,[27]
Article- 5 – No torture,[28]
Article 7 – Equality before the law,[29]
Article 8 – Effective remedy,[30]
Article 9 – No Arbitrary arrest.[31]
Violation of the rights to life
The greatest
outrage of the AFSPA under both Indian
and international law is the
violation of the right to life. This comes under Article 6[32]
of the ICCPR, and it is a non- derogable right. This bans no situation, or
state of emergency, or internal disturbance, can justify the suspension of its right. Section 4 of the AFSPA
empowers officers (both commissioned and non-commissioned) in cases of
self-defence, but against any person contravening laws or orders
“prohibiting the assembly
of five or more person.”
Article 6 of the
ICCPR provides for a non-derogable right to life, encapsulated in the
provision that “No one shall be
arbitrarily deprived of his life.” In its general comment the Human Rights
Committee[33] has stressed that “it is a right which should not be interpreted narrowly.”[34] It went on to state:
“The Committee
considers that States parties should take measures not only to prevent and punish deprivation of
criminal acts, but also to prevent arbitrary
killing by their own security forces. The deprivation of life by the
authorities of the State is a matter of the utmost gravity. Therefore, the law
must strictly control and limit the circumstances in which a person may be
deprived of his life by such authorities.”[35]
The United
Nations has developed other standards which elaborate upon this provision. For
example, Article 3 of the UN Code of Conduct
for Law Enforcement Officials, adopted by the
General Assembly in 1979, and the UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and
Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials, adopted by the UN Congress on the
Prevention of crime and Treatment of Offenders in 1990.
The core principles require law enforcement officials to:
Ø “As far as possible, apply
non-violent means before restoring to the use of force and firearms. They may use force and firearms only if
other means remains ineffective or without any promise of achieving the intended
result.”[36]
Ø Use the firearms only “when a
suspected offender offers armed resistance or otherwise jeopardizes the lives
of others and less extreme measures are not sufficient to restrain or apprehend
the suspected offender.”[37]
Indian human rights groups point out the excessive
powers this section
of the AFSPA bestows upon the armed forces as under ordinary criminal
law the violation of an order under Section 144 which prohibits the assembly of
5 or more persons is punishable with a month’s imprisonment. A person can be
killed for the same act under the AFSPA.
The United
Nations Human Rights Committee while examining the third periodic report of India in 1997 held that India is in
violation of article 4.3 of the ICCPR. In its Concluding observations after
examination of India’s third periodic report, Human rights Committee regretted
that-
“Some parts of
India have remained subject to declaration as disturbed areas over many years- for example the Armed Forces (Special Power) Act has been
applied throughout Manipur
since 1980 and in some areas of that state
for much longer – and that, in these areas, the State party is in effect using
emergency powers without resorting to article 4 paragraph 3,[38]
of the Covenant.”
The Code of Criminal
Procedure (“CrPC”)
The CrPC
establishes the procedure police officers are to follow for arrests, searches
and seizures, a procedure which the army and the other Para- military are not
trained to follow. Therefore, when the armed forces personnel act of civil
power, it should be clarified that they may not act with broader power than the
police and that these troops must receive specific training in criminal
procedure.
The CrPC has
the section on the maintenance of public order, chapter X, which provides more
safeguards than the AFSPA. Section 129 in that chapter allows for the disposal
of an assembly by use of civil force. The section empowers an Executive
Magistrate, officer-in- charge of a police station or any police officer not
below the rank of sub-inspector to disperse such an assembly. It is interesting
to compare this section with the power of the army has to disperse assemblies under section 4(a) of the Act. The CrPC clearly
delineates the ranks which can disperse such an assembly,
whereas the Act grants the power to use maximum force to even to non-commissioned officers. Moreover, the CrPC does not state that force to the extent of causing death can be used
to disperse an assembly.
Moreover,
dispersal of assemblies under chapter X of CrPC is slightly more justifiable than dispersal under section 4 (a) of the AFSPA. Section
129-131 of CrPC refer to the unlawful assemblies as ones which
“manifestly endanger” public security. Under the AFSPA the assembly is only classified as “unlawful” leaving open the
possibility that peaceful assemblies can be dispersed by use of force.
Chapter V of the CrPC sets about the procedure of police are to follow.
Section 46 of CrPC
establish the way in which
arrest are to be made. It is only if the person
attempts to evade arrest that police
officer may be use “all means necessary to make the arrest.” However
sub-section (3) of section 46 of CrPC limits this force of use by stipulating
that this does not give the officer right to cause the death of the person, unless
they are accused of an offence punishable by death and life imprisonment. This power is already too broad. It allows the police to use more force than stipulated in the UN Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement officials19. Yet
the AFSPA is even more excessive. Section 4(a) of AFSPA lets the armed forces kill a person who is not suspected
of an offence punishable by death or life imprisonment.
An undeclared state of emergency
for undefined reasons
and for unlimited periods
India is party to the international Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Article
4 of the ICCPR provides under what circumstances state of emergency
can be declared. It states,
“In time of
public emergency which threatens the life of the nation and the existence of
which is officially proclaimed, the States Parties to the present Covenant may
take measures derogating from their
obligations under the present
Covenant to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the situation, provide that such measures are
not inconsistent with their other obligations under international law and do
not involve discrimination solely on the ground of race, colour, sex, language,
religion or social origin.”
Under the
ICCPR, states may, “in times of emergency which threatens the life of the
nation,” take measure which derogate from certain obligation, they may only do
so “to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the
situation.”[39] Under Article 4(3) of the ICCPR,
“Any State
Party to the present Covenant availing itself of the right of derogation shall immediately inform the
other States Parties to the present Covenant, through the intermediary of the
secretary – general of the United Nations, of the provisions from which it has
derogated and of the reasons by which it was actuated. A further communication
shall be made, through the same
intermediary, on the date on which it terminates such derogation.”
Declaring an
area, a “disturbed area” and granting the military extensive powers is in
practice imposing an undeclared emergency regime. In its ruling, the Supreme
Court refused this, claiming that the “Act does not displace the civil power of
the State by the armed forces” and does not amount to a “proclamation of emergency
under Article 352 or a proclamation under Article 356 of the Constitution.”[40]
However, the Human Rights committee stated in its concluding observations on
India’s third periodic report:
“The Committee
regrets that some parts of India have remained subject to declaration as
disturbed areas over many years – for example, the Armed Forces (Special Power) Act has been applied throughout Manipur
since 1980 and in some areas of that state for much longer – and that in those
areas, the State party is in effect using emergency powers without resorting to
article 4, paragraph 3, of the Covenant.
The committee recommends that the application
of the emergency power be closely monitored so as to ensure its strict
compliance with the provisions of the Covenant.”[41]
The Jeevan Reddy Committee
Review of AFSPA[42]
While the campaign against
the Armed Forces (Special Powers)
Act, 1958 in North-
Eastern States
and Jammu and Kashmir has been going on for many years, it was the alleged rape
of a young Manipuri woman, named Manorama Devi, in 2004 that sparked off a more
intense movement. Since that incident Manipur and other areas of the North-East
States have been simmering. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh promised, later that
year, to set up a Committee to make recommendations for a more humane law. A Committee
headed by former Chief
Justice, B.P. Jeevan Reddy J. was
appointed by Prime Minister in the year 2005.
It submitted its 147-page report in 2005 which made three main
recommendations:
i.
To amend the provisions of the Act to bring them in consonance
with the obligations of the government towards protection of human rights;
ii.
To replace the existing Armed Forces (Special Powers)
Act, 1958 by a more humane Act.
iii.
Recommended insertion of appropriate provisions in the
Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (as amended in the year 2004) which is
a cognate enactment as pointed out in Chapter III Part II of this Report
instead of suggesting a new piece of legislation.
The reason
that the Committee made for the third recommendation was that the Unlawful
Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967, is applicable to entire territory
of India including
the North-Eastern States, and is more comprehensive in terms of dealing
with terrorism. Besides this, the Committee
also pointed out that the deployment of armed forces for the said
purposes should be undertaken with great care and circumspection. Unless it is
absolutely essential for the aforesaid purposes, the armed forces of the Union
should not be so deployed, since too frequent a deployment, and that too for long periods of time,
carries with it the danger of such forces
losing their moorings
and becoming, in effective, another
police force, a prey to all
the temptations and weaknesses such exposures involve. Such exposure for long
periods of time may well lead to the brutalization of such forces, which is a
danger to be particularly guarded against.[43]
Unfortunately, the Committee did not discuss the human rights abuse and the
ill-treatment meted out with the people, comprehensively.
Second Administrative Reforms Commission[44]
Nevertheless, the Jeevan Reddy Committee Report clearly stated that the Armed
Forces (Special Powers)
Act, 1958, “has become a symbol of oppression, an object of hate
and an instrument of discrimination and high-handedness,” and should be
withdrawn”. The Central Government ignored the judgment of its own Committee,
with the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, still in continuance in the
Northeast and now in Jammu and Kashmir too. In June 2007, the Second Administrative Reforms
Commission, chaired by Mr.
M. Veerappa
Moily, published its Fifth Report on Public Order. The Commission of Inquiry was set up by the President to prepare a
detailed blue print for revamping the public administration system. A review of
the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, was included as part of the Report’s Chapter
entitled “Constitutional Issues and Special
Laws”. The Second Administrative Reforms Commission’s Report relied heavily
on the findings of the Review Committee chaired
by Justice Reddy so that ultimately the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, should be repealed and appropriate provisions should be inserted
into the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967. The Second
Administrative Reforms Commission’s recommendations support those of the Review
Committee with the exception that the
proposed addition made to the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967, incorporating the provisions governing
the deployment of the armed forces of the Union
in aid of civil power would only apply to the North-Eastern States. The
Commission’s recommendation was submitted to the Government of India on 1 June
2007 and met with immediate resistance stating the time had not come to scrap
the law, adding, “But there is always scope for improvement.”[45]
The Armed Forces (Special
Powers) Amendment Bill, 2011[46]
Recently the Amendment Bill of AFSPA was introduced in Rajya Sabha on 5th August, 2011. For Section 6 of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act,
1958, the following Section shall be substituted, namely “No prosecution, suit
or other legal proceedings shall be instituted
against any person
in respect of anything done or purported to be done in exercise of the powers conferred
by this Act where the Central Government provides reasons in writing and the competent court upholds
the legal validity of these reasons.” For Section 7 of the Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir) Special
Powers Act, 1990, the following
Section shall be substituted, namely “No prosecution, suit or other legal proceedings shall be instituted against
any person in respect of anything done or purported
to be done in exercise of the powers conferred
by this Act where the Central Government provides reasons in writing and the competent court upholds
the legal validity of these reasons."
Under Section 6 of
the Armed Forces Special Powers Act,
1958 and Section 7 in Armed Forces Special Powers (Jammu and
Kashmir) Act, 1990 says "no prosecution suits or other legal proceedings
shall be instituted, except with the previous sanction of the Central
Government, against any person in respect of anything done or purported
to be done in exercise of the powers conferred by this Act." This requirement confers de facto impunity on all personnel of Armed Forces violating the Act.
The Central Bureau of Investigation had indicted army officers for the murder
of innocent civilians at Pathribal in 2000 but their trial could not take place because the Central Government refused to give sanction for prosecution. The government even do not have to give any reasons for denying the permission for prosecution. It is, therefore, long over that this provision
should be amended by providing that while denying the permission for prosecution, the Central Government must give reasons in writing and the competent court upholds the legal validity of these reasons.
[1] The Bengal Disturbed Areas (Special Powers of Armed Forces)
Ordinance, 1947 (Act 11 of 1947); the Assam Disturbed Areas (Special Powers of
Armed Forces) Ordinance, 1947 (Act 14 of 1947); the East Punjab and Delhi
Disturbed Areas (Special Powers of Armed Forces) Ordinance, 1947 (Act 22 of
1947), and the united Provinces Disturbed Areas (Special Powers of Armed
Forces) Ordinance, 1947 (Act 22 of 1947).
[2] Available at: https://www.mha.gov.in/sites/default/files/armed_forces_special_powers_act1958.pdf
[3] Suvrokamal Dutta, “On the Issue of
Repeal of AFSPA”, Mainstream 19 (2006).
[4] S.G.Vombatkere, “Armed Forces Special Powers Act Governance
by Ballot or Bullet”, Mainstream,
December
21 (2006).
[5] Entry 2A of List-I.
[6] Section 3, the Armed Forces (Special
Powers) Act, 1958.
[7] Supra note 1 at 22.
[8] Lt. Gen. Harwant Singh (retd), “Withdrawing AFSPA: It
Will Affect Army’s Functioning in J&K”, the Tribune, November 3, 2011 p.6.
[9] Maneka Gandhi v. UOI, AIR 1978 SC 853.
[10] A.K Gopalan v. State of Madras, AIR
1950 SC 27
[11] Supra note 9.
[12] Available at: http://www.hrdc.net/sahrdc/resources/armed
forces.htm>accessed on 12.12.2011.
[13] S. Bhaumik, “India targets North-east Rebels,” BBC News
29th Oct 1995 as available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south
asia/43881 accessed on 2.12.2011.
[14] M.P. Jain, Indian Constitutional Law, 6th edn., 98 (1998).
[15] Article 4(1) and 4(3) of ICCPR.
[16] Code of Conduct for law enforcement Officials adopted
by General Assembly Resolution 34/169 of 17 Dec, 1979, available at http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/codeofconduct.htm
accessed on 21.12.2011.
[17] Concluding observations of the
Human Rights Committee: India, Report of the Human Rights Committee, UN Doc.
A/52/40 (1997), p 434.
[18] South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre. “Armed
Forces Special Powers Act- A study in National Security tyranny:” 93 (1995).
[19] Supra note 16.
[20] Ibid.
[21] Nandita Haksar, Submission to the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Human Rights Committee: Armed Forces (Special Powers)
Act, 1958: A report on Human Rights Violations in North East India (New York,
1991) available at www.amnesty.org
accessed on 20.04.2011.
[22] A. v. Australia, Communication No.
560/1993, UN Doc. CCPR/C/59/D/560/1993 (30 April 1997), para. 9.2.
[23] Naga People's Movement of Human rights
v. Union of India, AIR 1998 SC 431.
[24] Hereinafter UDHR.
[25] All human being are born free and equal in dignity and
rights.
[26] Everyone is entitled to all rights
and freedoms set forth in this declaration, without distinction of any kind,
such as race, color, sex, language, religion, political other opinion, national
or social origin, property, birth or other status. Furthermore, no distinction shall
be made on the basis of the political, jurisdictional or international status
of the country or territory to which a person belongs, whether it is
independent, trust, non-self governing or under any other limitation of
sovereignty.
[27] Everyone has the right to life, liberty
and security of persons.
[28] No one shall be subjected to torture
or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
[29] All are equal before the law and entitled without any
discrimination to equal protection of the law. All are entitled to equal protection
against any discrimination in violation of this Declaration and against any incitement
to such discrimination.
[30] Everyone has the right to an
effective remedy by the component national tribunals for acts violating the
fundamental rights granted him by the Constitution or by law.
[31] No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest detention
or exile.
[32] Every human being has the inherent
right to life. This right shall be protected by law. No one shall be
arbitrarily deprived of his life.
[33] Hereinafter the HRC.
[34] Human
Rights Committee, General Comment No.
6: The right to life, art. 6
(sixteenth session, treaty Bodies,
UN Doc. HRI\GEN\1\Rev. 1 at 6 (1994, para.1).
[35] Ibid.
[36] Principle
4 of the UN basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law
Enforcement Officials (UN Basic Principles), adopted
by the Eighth United Nations
Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders, Havana, Cuba, 27
August to 7 September 1990.
[37] Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials, adopted by UN General
Assembly resolution 34/169 of 17 December 1979, Article 3
[38] Any State
party to the present Covenant
availing itself of the right
of the right of derogation shall immediately
inform the other State parties to the present Covenant, through the
intermediary of the Secretary-General of the United Nations, of the provisions
from which it has derogated and of the reasons by which it was actuated. A
further communication shall be made, through the same intermediary, on the date
on which it terminates such derogation.
[39] Article 4(1) and 4(3) of ICCPR.
[40] Supra note 16.
[41] Supra note 17.
[42] The Jeevan Committee Report, Ministry of Home Affairs
73 (2005).
[43] Available at: http:// www.hindu.com/nic/afa/afa-part-i.pdf
(accessed on Dec. 10, 2011).
[44] Second Administrative Reforms Commission, Government of
India, 5th Report 235 (2007).
[45] Available at http:// corecommittee.cgg.gov.in/pdf2/public_order5.pdf
(accessed on Jan. 5, 2012).
[46] Available at http://164.100.24.219/BillsTexts/RSBillTexts/asintroduced/armd.pdf
(accessed on Jan. 10, 2012)