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Chhattisgarh Fake Encounter: Exhume Body of 13-year-old, Re-do Post-mortem, Orders HC

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On December 16, while simply trying to collect a red ant nest, teenager Somaru Pottam was gunned down leading to widespread protests on the alleged Metapal Fake Encounter

In a breakthrough for Survivors of state repression and Maoist violence in Chhattisgarh, the High Court today ordered the exhumation of the body of 13 year old Somaru Pottam, killed after being allegedly tortured on December 16. The order was passed today on a petition filed by his parents, Kumma and Jamil Pottam, yesterday. A second post portem will also be carried out at the Maharani District Hospital Jagdalpur tomorrow, Sunday, December 25 as part of the inquiry ordered by the court on serious allegations of an extra judicial killing. The HC ordered inquiry has to be completed within 3 days and “considering the seriousness of the allegations of torture and killing”, the inquiry team should be constituted at the discretion of the Commissioner, Jagdalpur and a “video graph of the second post mortem shall also be prepared and preserved.” The court order specifically directs that the petitioner parents be allowed to remain present during both the exhumation of the young boy’s body and the subsequent second post mortem “The post mortem  report should be kept in a sealed cover”, the order reads.

The parents of the deceased, 13 year old Somaru Pottam filed a case in the High Court yesterday, on December 23 and demanded a judicial investigation of the matter. After the death of Somaru on December 16, villagers had protested in front of the Gangaloor Police Station and demanded a fair post-mortem which the police had denied. 13 year old Somaru was out with his friends on the morning of  December 16 after threshing of grains and was trying to collect a red ant nest from a Mahua tree when he and his friends were rounded up by security forces hiding in bushes nearby. While everyone else ran away, little Somaru who was short of hearing and was facing skin rashes couldn’t comprehend and escape.

 Kumma Pottam, father of Somaru, who speaks only Gondi recounted the events at a Press Conference organised by People’s Union of Civil Liberties(PUCL) in Bilaspur Press Club today. “That day, police and armed forces entered into our village and started intimidating people. Many ran away but they caught me and my cousin near our house and led us to the place where they had already tied Somaru to a tree and were beating him mercilessly. 3-4 of the D.R.G were stabbing him with their bayonets. Despite our cries and pleas to stop, they continued torturing Somaru and then shot him from a close distance in his chest, collar bone and abdomen. Then they lay the body on the ground, removed Somaru’s t-shirt and knicker and put on a black rebel uniform on his dead body. After putting a pistol near the body, they clicked pictures”.

Stories of torture and deaths have become common and widespread in this Adivasi heartland. Villagers have alleged that, after barbarically killing Somaru, the police ordered his own father and kith and kin to carry the dead body after them to the Gangaloor Police Station. They then sent the body for post-mortem to Bijapur Hospital and handed over the naked remains of little Somaru wrapped in a plastic sheet demonstrating extreme disrespect to human lives especially those of Adivasis. According to Kumma Pottam, they were also forced to put thumb prints in documents that they couldn’t read after the post-mortem.

Advocate Shalini Gera appeared for the petitioners. The High Court has ordered an inquiry within 3 days that will entail exhumation of the body and its repeat post mortem. Villagers had earlier only buried the body as they were hoping that another post mortem by independent authorities could be conducted. The Commissioner of Bastar Division has been asked to preside over the proceedings so that investigations are fair.

The spine chilling events that unfolded in Patelpara of adivasi village Metapal in district Bijapur on the morning of December 16 are, as has become the norm, one of contradictory narratives. On one hand the police claim that the encounter of a 13 year old to be one of a dreaded Maoist, while local villagers have put forward an entirely different version to the fact-finding team comprised of human rights activists and journalists. According to Metapal residents, a 13 year old child was cornered, beaten, tortured mercilessly and shot in cold blood in front of his parents. A post-mortem was conducted hurriedly, without following due procedures, and the gunning down was quickly touted as another glorious victory of police over armed rebels.

The High Court Order may be read here
 
 

Police crackdown forces Mumbai fishermen to give up Shivaji memorial protest ahead of Modi visit

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At least 150 protesters have been detained and the police has informally imposed Section 144 around the fishermen's colony.

Police crackdown forces Mumbai fishermen to give up Shivaji memorial protest ahead of Modi visit
Image credit: Aarefa Johari
 

With Prime Minister Narendra Modi on his way to Mumbai to inaugurate Maharashtra government’s controversial mid-sea Shivaji memorial, a police crackdown has forced fishing communities in the city to give up their planned protests against the memorial’s location.

On Friday evening, the Mumbai police detained at least 150 members of the Koli community who took out a motorbike rally with black flags in the Colaba neighbourhood. The detainees included Damodar Tandel, the president of the Akhil Maharashtra Machhimar Kruti Samiti, a leading state-wide fishermen’s association. According to other community leaders, the protesters are unlikely to be released till Prime Minister Narendra Modi has completed the inaugural “bhoomi-pujan” prayer ritual at the site of the planned Shivaji memorial on Saturday afternoon.

Various fishermen’s associations were also served police notices on Friday evening, ordering them not to hold any other form of protest against the memorial during Modi’s visit. Even though the police has not officially announced the imposition of Section 144 of the Indian Penal Code – which prohibits unlawful assembly of more than five people – fishermen claim it has been informally imposed.

“We are still ready to protest, but there is a lot of fear in the community because the police is not allowing groups of more than five people to even step out of our colony alone,” said Mahesh Tandel, the Mumbai president of the Macchimar Sangathan. “I have never seen so much police and coast guard security bandobast in our area.”
The police crackdown will make it nearly impossible for the Kolis to carry out their planned sea rally of 5,000 boats with black flags and a rally of fisherwomen forming a human chain along the coast, without courting arrest or detention.

The fishing community of Mumbai has been opposing the 192-metre high Shivaji memorial ever since it was announced in 2010, because the location of the memorial is a breeding ground for at least 32 species of the city’s most commonly eaten fish. Building the memorial (which will include a statue, museum, amphitheatre and jetties) is likely to involve reclamation of around 60 acres of the sea. This, according to Koli groups, will effectively rob thousands of fishing families of their livelihoods.

This week, said Tandel, fishermen’s associations were finally granted two meetings with Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis. “He assured us that after December 25, the government will set up a committee to look into our issues,” said Tandel. “Today we may not be able to protest but we are observing a kala din [black day] in our homes.”

Courtesy: Scroll.in
Home page photo courtesy: The Hindu