Representative image. Photo: Tum Hufner/Unsplash
New Delhi: A 22-year-old man
has alleged that he has lost his right arm as a result of police
brutality during an illegal detention in Bengaluru’s Varthur police
station, Indian Express has reported.
Salman, who lives in the Varthur neighbourhood of east Bengaluru
alleged that he was picked up by police over the theft of a car battery
in late October this year. He used to work in a chicken shop but lost
his job amidst the pandemic.
Police who came to pick him up late in the evening were allegedly in
plain clothes. Salman told the newspaper that he was “assaulted
mercilessly” by three people at the Varthur police station. In addition
to taking him to the people to whom Salman had sold the battery, police
also pressured him to confess to crimes he did not commit, he said.
Salman’s family have said that he was one of the breadwinners of the
family and also that Varthur police denied having taken anyone called
‘Salman’ when they went to ask after him after spotting his slipper on
the road.
“I was tied upside down and beaten badly. Three cops assaulted me for
three days. They targeted one body part at a time. They beat my right
hand and also kicked in their legs one after the other,” he told Express.
He was released after three days and in a while began experiencing
loss of strength on his right arm and a worsening of this injury. His
family took him to three hospitals, all of whom told them that
amputation was crucial for his survival.
On November 8, the surgery for the amputation took place.
Salman’s family have said that he was one of the breadwinners of the
family and also that they did not know that he had been taken to a
police station initially.
Deputy Commissioner of Police (Whitefield) D. Devaraj told Indian Express that he has sought a report from the Assistant Commissioner of Police in the Varthur jurisdiction regarding the incident.
A report by the National Campaign Against Torture
– a platform for NGOs working on torture in India – has found that
every day, an average of five people die in custody in India, with some
of them succumbing to torture in police or judicial custody.
The report also highlighted how while probing non-heinous crimes,
like the theft in Salman’s case, police personnel in several states went
to the extent of torturing the suspects to death.
There has not been a single conviction in the deaths of 500 persons
allegedly due to torture in police custody between 2005 and 2018.
In 2020, the custodial deaths of a father and son sparked protests
across Tamil Nadu and India, with many taking to the streets to demand
justice. Jayaraj, 59, and his son Bennix, 31, were allegedly brutalised
by the Sathankulam police for reportedly keeping their mobile shop open
for a few minutes after the time permitted by COVID-19 guidelines.
India has failed to ratify the UN Convention Against Torture for almost a quarter century.
source ; the wire
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(With input from news agency language)
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