Kashmiri journalist was held for 41 months without trial
R W B has interviewed Maqbool Sahil,
a journalist based in Srinagar, the summer capital of the northern
state of Jammu and Kashmir, who was detained for 41 months without
trial. Now the incharge editor of the Urdu-language weekly Pukaar, Sahil has spent 19 years covering the conflict in Kashmir, in which thousands have died since 1989.
Arrested in 2004 after covering the rape of an Australian tourist for Chattan,
the newspaper he then worked for, he was beaten and tortured during two
weeks of interrogation and accused of spying for a Pakistani network.
He was nonetheless never tried although Indian law says every detainee
must be indicted before a court within 60 days. He decided to resume
working as journalist following his release on 9 January 2008.
Sahil wrote seven books while in detention. His prison
diary, “Shabistan-e-wajood,” was acclaimed by Reporters Without Borders
last year.
RWB: Why were you arrested?
MS: I was detained solely because of my work as a journalist for the weekly Chattan,
covering crime and doing investigative reporting. A few days before my
arrest, I covered the story of an Australian woman visiting Kashmir who
said she was raped by the owner of the houseboat she had been staying
on. Almost all the newspapers covered the case but I dug up facts that
contradicted the Australian woman’s account and I wrote about this for
the weekly.
On 16 September 2004, a few days after my story was
published, I was arrested by plain-clothes policemen as I left an army
barracks in Srinagar. They bundled me into an unmarked car and took me
to the Hari Nivas interrogation centre. There I was told that I had
been arrested by the Criminal Investigation Department for being
involved in some sort of Pakistani espionage network.
RWB: What were the charges?
MS: I was interrogated and tortured for more than two
weeks. They told me charges would be brought against me under the
draconian official secrets and espionage laws, charges which carry the
death penalty and do not permit release on bail.
RWB: Could you describe the conditions in which you were held for those 41 months?
MS: I was put with criminals such as pickpockets,
murderers and robbers and others. During interrogation, they used a
wooden roller on my legs, they suspended me from the roof and caned my
feet, they regularly beat me and they did many other vicious things to
me. Then they increased the intensity of the torture because I was
unable to provide them with the information they were seeking about my
supposed involvement.
I was so wrecked by the torture that I was unable to
stand on my feet. Other detainees used to help me change my clothes and
eat.
Meanwhile, CID personnel raided my home three times,
taking my computer, books, CDs and diaries, which still have not been
returned to me.
I was transferred to Srinagar central jail on 1 October
2004, but a month later I was taken back to the Hari Nivas
interrogation centre for more interrogation and the next day I was
transferred to Kote Bhalwal Jammu central jail under a two-year Public
Safety Act detention order. The High Court quashed the PSA detention
order after one year, so I was brought back to Srinagar for more
interrogation at the Humhama interrogation centre, another PSA
detention order was issued and I was taken back to the Kote Bhalwal
jail. This process was repeated four times in 40 months, until January
2008.
In the summer of 2007, I was moved to the Amphalla
district jail, where I was kept in an individual, dark cell in the hot
summer months of May, June, July and August without a fan or water. I
was allowed out of the cell only once every 24 hours to use a latrine.
The rest of the time, I had to use a tin can in my cell as a toilet.
RWB: How did all this time in detention affect you?
MS: During those 41 months, I was almost completely cut
off from my family. I hardly had any chance to see my children. I saw
my mother after two years at the Humhama Interrogation centre. She had
grown older and her health had deteriorated. My brother repaired radio
and TV sets at home to feed my eight-member family.
RWB: And how did all this affect you as a journalist?
MS: As a journalist, it was very difficult to spend so
much time in such a strange and tough place as a jail. I decided to
read and write. I also I started studying crime as prisons have all
kinds of criminals. I spent my time with Kashmiri detainees, Muslims,
Sikhs and Dogras. I was surprised that more than 80 per cent of the
inmates insisted on their innocence.
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