Security forces in Kashmir. Photo: PTI/Files
Srinagar: The Jammu and
Kashmir administration has set the ball rolling for creating a new
investigation agency which will take charge of militancy-related cases
filed in the union territory and prosecute the offenders.
The announcement comes days after Union home minister Amit Shah
winded up his first visit to Jammu and Kashmir after the Union
government read down Article 370 on August 5, 2019 and divided the
erstwhile state into two union territories.
Security analysts and political observers believe that the decision
to set up a new anti-terror agency immediately after Shah’s visit
demonstrates the Union’s failure after it stripped Jammu and Kashmir of
its semiautonomous status.
Professor Noor A. Baba, former dean of social sciences at the
University of Kashmir, said the announcement is an “implicit admission”
by New Delhi that “different challenges continue to exist” in Jammu and
Kashmir despite Article 370 being read down.
“In certain respects, it
is the undoing of Article 370 revocation which was carried out by the
Government of India with the specific claim that the Central laws were
going to extend to J&K and investigation agencies will directly
probe cases,” he said.
“Having a new agency implies that existing mechanism has not been
able to address the specificities of the situation in Kashmir,” added
Baba, who is based in Srinagar.
“It is an oblique admission of failure of the Central government
(which directly runs J&K),” said Ajai Sahni, executive director,
Institute for Conflict Management. “The new agency can become a
substitute, an excuse or another element in the theatre of action where
the government has failed.”
The Union government had defended the unilateral August 2019 decision
by saying that it will put an end to militancy in Kashmir. Senior BJP
ministers, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi as well as the home
minister, have been stating in public rallies and official functions
that militancy in Kashmir has ended following Article 370 being read
down.
However, during his J&K visit in October, which came close on the heels of a spate of targeted killings
of the members of Kashmir’s minority communities and migrant workers,
Shah had reportedly expressed displeasure with the situation in Kashmir.
Also read: What an Angry General’s Unwarranted Admonition of Kashmiris Says About the Army and Politics
As reported by The Wire, the home minister, during a meeting
at Raj Bhawan in Srinagar with top officers of various security
agencies, wanted to know why, despite massive public outreach by the
Union Ministers and heavy deployment of security forces, the situation
had not stabilised in Kashmir.
“How will the new agency work differently?” asked Sahni, a terrorism
expert based in New Delhi who runs the South Asia Terrorism Portal, an
online platform that tracks militancy in the region. “They operate in
same old frameworks and under same political bosses, so what is going to
be different this time?”
In an order, the J&K’s Home Department said the new agency, which
has been named State Investigation Agency (SIA), will coordinate with
the National Investigation Agency (NIA) and other Central agencies to
investigate and prosecute the offenders in militancy and related
offences.
The SIA will probe cases filed in J&K under the Unlawful
Activities (Prevention) Act, Explosive Substances Act, Anti-Hijacking
Act and Arms Act among over two dozen laws which have been listed in the
order issued by the Home Department on Monday, November 1.
The agency will be headed by the chief of the J&K Police’s
Criminal Investigations Department (CID), the police’s intelligence
wing. Once the SIA starts work, all the station house officers (SHO) in
J&K will have to necessarily report to the SIA when a
militancy-related case is filed at police stations under their charge.
While the NIA has been mandated to probe the cases of terrorism under
section 6 of the National Investigations Agency Act 20o8, it can ask
the SIA to investigate such cases in J&K. Earlier, the SHOs reported
the daily record of new cases filed at police stations to the concerned
district Superintendents of Police or Deputy Superintendents of Police.
Now, they would have to report militancy-related cases to the SIA as
well.
The J&K administration has not offered any explanation for the
rationale behind setting up a separate investigation agency in the union
territory. Other than the SIA head, the Home Department order also
doesn’t clarify the ranks of other officers who are going to work in the
agency and whether they will be brought on probation from existing
investigation agencies or hired afresh by the government.
Experts believe the move to create a new agency in J&K has been
designed to give more teeth to the police’s intelligence wing. But this
doesn’t answer why having a separate agency was preferred over
increasing manpower of the J&K Police, arguably the country’s most
experienced police force, and training them to carry out scientific
investigations in a more professional manner.
Sources in the Home Department said the new agency will “take away
the load of cases” under the UAPA and similar anti-terror legislations
which, according to legal experts, are being invoked more frequently by
authorities to curb dissent in J&K.
According to official data, more than 2,300 people have been booked
under the UAPA while more than 1,000 suspects have been held under the
draconian Public Safety Act by J&K Police since 2019, when the Union
government read down Article 370. The Home Department order states that
the such cases would be filed at the offices of CID in Jammu and
Srinagar which have been notified as police stations under SRO-230 of
1977.
The investigation and
trial of the cases taken over in J&K by the NIA is presently
conducted in New Delhi, putting the families of suspects at grave
inconvenience and restricting their chances of mounting a strong legal
defence. “The new agency will lead to speedy trial of cases which
sometimes linger on for months or even years,” the Home Department
source said.
However, the announcement has sparked fears in Kashmir that the new
agency will become a “tool in the hands of New Delhi” to “suppress and
intimidate the people of J&K”.
“Creating a new investigation agency would only be perceived in
Kashmir as another tool of repression to humiliate them [Kashmiris].
Such cosmetic changes will in no way help BJP to sustain its false
narrative that Article 370 was the root cause of separatism and
terrorism in Kashmir,” said a former official from a national-level
intelligence agency.
“Rather than heaping further miseries on the people of Kashmir, it is
time for BJP to acknowledge its mistake and undo what was done to
J&K on August 5, 2019,” the official continued, speaking anonymously
because of new government rules penalising retired officers for
speaking publicly about their “domain” area of expertise..
Asked whether the new agency was a tacit admission of the failure of
the BJP-led government’s policy, former J&K chief minister Mehbooba
Mufti told The Wire that the “only progress” post Article 370
being read down “has been to successfully create more tools of state
suppression” in J&K.
“As if the Enforcement Directorate, Central Bureau of Investigations,
J&K Police, NIA and other compromised institutions and draconian
laws weren’t enough to maintain the facade of normalcy, we now have
another agency with sweeping powers,” she said.
CPI(M) leader M.Y. Tarimagi said the agency would be “empowered with
unbridled powers” to launch an “assault on democratic rights and civil
liberties of citizens”. “In the name of fighting terrorism these
agencies and laws are being weaponised against the citizens who hold a
different viewpoint from the government,” he said in a statement.
The PDP chief also suggested that the Central government will arm the
new agency with “sufficient impunity to repress people” in Kashmir.
“Institutions that gave people a sense of security and justice such
as women’s commission and others have all been dismantled but GOIs
priority is to expand the instruments of suppression in its toolkit,”
she added.
Baba agrees: “What was the need for a separate agency when J&K is
a centrally administered territory? With a clear focus on J&K, the
agency will be more repressive with more power and it will act more
arbitrarily?”
“It is a stark reminder that Kashmir continues to be the challenge that it was before Article 370 was read down,” he added.
“There has been clear lack of progress on the claims that removal of
Article 370 would end all terrorism in J&K,” said Sahni. “The new
agency is a clear admission that the government has failed to realise
its plans.”
SOURCE ; THE WIRE
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