Hidme Markam | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Sat, 07 Jan 2023 13:43:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Hidme Markam | SabrangIndia 32 32 Adivasi activist Hidme Markam walks out of jail 22 months after being branded a “terrorist” https://sabrangindia.in/adivasi-activist-hidme-markam-walks-out-jail-22-months-after-being-branded-terrorist/ Sat, 07 Jan 2023 13:43:05 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2023/01/07/adivasi-activist-hidme-markam-walks-out-jail-22-months-after-being-branded-terrorist/ Markam, a woman forest rights and prisoners’ rights activist, was falsely accused by the police and the NIA of involvement in Naxal activities and arrested on March 9, 2021. She was acquitted in four cases and granted bail in the last one; she was released on January 5 at 7 pm

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adivasi activist
Image Courtesy: theleaflet.in

Mumbai: ten months ago, on March 9, 2021, when dozens of Adivasi women from across different villages had gathered at Sameli village in the conflict-torn Dantewada district to mark International Women’s Day, a large group of paramilitary force personnel – aided by the local district police and District Reserve Guard (DRG) – swept down on the gathering.

The meeting was abruptly dispersed and the heavily armed force whisked away Hidme Markam in an SUV. Markam, a well-known forest rights and prisoners’ rights activist, was branded as a “dreaded Naxalite”. In s widely publicised campaign, the police,  claimed that she carried a reward of Rs 1 lakh. She was shown “wanted” in five cases of violent Naxal attacks and nearly two years of imprisonment later, the police have failed to prove the charges. Now, in January 2023, Markam has now been acquitted in four cases and granted bail in one. Her advocate, Xitij Dubey confirmed that a sessions court on January 4 acquitted her in the fourth case. In the fifth case, the lawyer confirmed, that the court had granted her bail a few months ago but Markam had waited to be acquitted in other cases to come out on bail. She was released from Jagdalpur Central prison finally on January 5 at 7 pm.  

While four of the cases were handled by the state police, one case was investigated by the National Investigation Agency. Markam faced serious charges under the Indian Penal Code and the draconian Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), but none could be proved. The courts, one after another, turned down the prosecution’s case. Since the process is the punishment in the mater of these laws, it cost her 22 months of personal liberty.

For over a decade, Hidme Markam has been working in the Bastar region as a forest rights and prisoners’ rights activist. The March 9 event in 2021 – from where she was arrested – was organised in response to the alleged police violence that had led to a death of an 18-year-old woman, Pande Kawasi, in custody. Kawasi’s death was later shown to be a case of suicide. 

She has also been at the forefront of protesting against several coercive mining projects. As a crucial part of the Jail Bandi Rihai Manch (Committee for the Release of Arrested Persons), Markam had been documenting information from every village and readying a case for the release of prisoners  – several of whom were arrested as part of excesses by the state and central forces in the region.  

Markam is an unlettered woman and can only converse in her native Gondi. Her intrepid work, led villagers to impose trust in her: they approached her each time there was an incident of state or Naxal excess in the region. 

‘Evidence did not prove any involvement’

The first case that Markam was arrested in related to an armed attack on the police team in 2016. In the second case of 2017, the police claimed that Markam was involved in the killing of a villager, who was first allegedly abducted and then murdered by the Naxals. “The trial, in this case, was already concluded and those arrested had already been acquitted by the sessions court. 

Besides the murder case, in which the victim’s family had testified, in other cases, the prosecution only had police witnesses to rely upon. “But these witnesses and the evidence shown in court failed to prove Markam’s involvement in the cases,” her lawyer explained to the media.

Markam, who led an active public life, traveling and participating in public mobilisations, also part of several fact-finding teams. Yet she was shown to be a “wanted accused” in these cases. 

The NIA’s case, similar to the local police’s cases, was also in connection with an alleged “terror attack”. This, says her lawyer, was one of the cases that she was acquitted in. Even though the police repeatedly failed to prove the charges, the Dantewada sessions court still denied her bail. Her bail application in the Chhattisgarh high court has also been rejected. Hence her legal team remained focused on the trial. 

 In the one pending case, Dubey said the court has already examined all witnesses. Only the statement of the accused under section 313 of CrPC is yet to be recorded after which the case is expected to conclude.

Markam, before her arrest, had been working closely with tribal rights activist Soni Sori, who also faced prolonged incarceration in the past. 

Markam’s arrest had led to both national and international protests. A group of seven UN experts had written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking her immediate release. The People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) had petitioned the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) seeking its urgent intervention in the matter and also led many campaigns both in Chhattisgarh and Delhi.

PUCL’s state president Degree Prasad Chouhan highlighted the reason behind Markam’s incarceration. “The intention is never to prove these cases but to stifle courageous voices like that of Markam. Like Markam, several Adivasi youths have been languishing in jail for speaking up against state atrocity,” he said.

Related:

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Chorus grows for Hidme Markam’s release https://sabrangindia.in/chorus-grows-hidme-markams-release/ Sat, 12 Mar 2022 07:16:30 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2022/03/12/chorus-grows-hidme-markams-release/ A year after Markam’s arrest, Adivasis still haven’t seen a legitimate warrant for the activist’s imprisonment

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adivasi activist
Image Courtesy:survivalinternational.org

On March 8, 2022, the first anniversary of Adivasi activist Hidme Markam’s arrest, fellow rights defenders and international organisations called upon Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel to immediately arrange for her release. People voiced this demand at a press conference hosted by the Adivasi Lives Matter along with the Front Line Defenders, Survival International, People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) – Chhattisgarh, India Civil Watch International, and Hindus for Human Rights.

The 29-year-old environmental activist was arrested at an International Women’s Day event in March 2021 under the draconian Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA). For years, she led efforts to free incarcerated Adivasi youth held in pre-trial detention and to stop mining projects at the Nandraj Pahad hill, a sacred site for Koya Adivasis. According to a coalition of international and India-based organisations at the press conference, the UAPA law is used to arrest countless human rights activists.

Present at this conference was Adivasi human rights activist and Front Line Defenders Award 2018 Winner Soni Sori. She questioned the legitimacy of the charges levied against Markam and pointed out how the police repeatedly failed to show a court warrant. Even a year later, the police still have not produced the document to justify the sudden arrest.

“Hidme emerged as a leader and the government was scared. So they arrested her,” said Sori, emphasising that thousands of Adivasis have been arrested in a similar fashion. Sori too was arrested in 2011 on false charges and survived torture and sexual violence inside prison. In 2014, she was finally acquitted in six of the eight cases filed against her, and released.

Prabhat Kahabr’s Adivasi journalist and Indian Social Action Forum President Dayamani Barla, popularly known as the “Iron Lady” of Jharkhand also demanded justice for Markam and other activists saying, “Adivasis have had to keep raising the slogan that they will not allow a single inch of their ancestral land to be taken away. We will give up our lives, but we won’t give up our land.”

Similarly, Bastar’s independent writer, researcher, and human rights lawyer Bela Bhatia said that Markam’s arrest follows the same pattern used by authorities to arrest Adivasi activists in the district since 2005.

“Since 2015, we are seeing the use of the UAPA. If we include all seven districts, the use of the UAPA in Bastar must be the highest in India. Underlying this is the large-scale militarization we are seeing in Bastar since 2005,” she said, noting that estimates from a few years ago placed the number of armed troops on the ground at 1 lakh personnel.

Aside from local trailblazers, Front Line Defenders Asia Pacific Protection Coordinator Deanne Uyangoda also spoke at the event.

“We stand in solidarity with Hidme and all that this term embodies. The Government of India has managed quite successfully to target HRDs with impunity and with a certain callous disregard for the pushback locally, nationally, and internationally. What is particularly damning, is her engagement with members of government on the very issues she is facing. The charges brought against her are about prolonging detention,” said Uyangoda. The day after Markam was arrested, her organisation condemned the arrest.

Aside from condemning the government’s actions, Survival International’s Dr. Jo Woodman spoke about the global organisation’s recently released report titled Brutalized for resistance: The assault on Indigenous women in Modi’s India.

The group fighting for tribal peoples’ rights, observed that it is becoming alarmingly normal for dissenters resisting land-takeover to be killed by security forces. Woodman said that their deaths are sold to the media as the unavoidable outcome of encounters with insurgents.

“It is alarmingly normal for these security forces to storm into villages, to sexually abuse women, pillage supplies, kill and eat their domestic animals,” she said.

She condemned the central and state governments for enabling state and private mining corporations. Woodman closed by saying that such atrocities against Adivasis seek “to teach Adivasi communities that they must obey. But what it actually teaches them is that the State is pitted against them, and values the resources under their lands, but not their lives, their cultures, or the rich forests that they have nurtured and protected.”

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