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DAM-L t.o.I: amnesty reaction to nba arrests



Date: Sat, 26 Aug 2000 06:38:01 +0530
From: Himanshu Thakkar <cwaterp@del3.vsnl.net.in>
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Subject: Times of India: Amnestry International Flays Gujarat Govt for NBA arrests
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Source: The Times of India, Ahmedabad, Aug 26, 2000

                 Amnesty International flays
                 arrest of NBA activists

                 GANDHINAGAR: The Amnesty International has taken
                 a strong exception to the detention of anti-dam
activists in
                 the Narmada Valley on Thursday. In a letter faxed to
the
                 Gujarat government from London, the authoritative
                 international human rights body has said "those
arrested
                 in Vadodara and other parts of Gujarat" had been
                 "detained solely on the grounds" that they were
"planning
                 to exercise their right to freedom of opinion and
freedom
                 of peaceful assembly and association."

                 Quoting articles 19 and 20 of the Universal Declaration

                 of Human Rights, the Amnesty has told the state
                 government that these articles "provide that everyone
has
                 the right to freedom of opinion and expression and
                 association." The Amnesty emphasises, "these rights are

                 reflected in Article 19 of the Constitution of India,"
                 adding, around 600 people were detained when they
                 were planning to go to Maharashtra to "attend a public
                 hearing."

                 The Gujarat government declared here on Friday that the

                 Amnesty had no business to poke its nose into what
                 happened in and around Vadodara. But veteran
                 Congress leader Haroobhai Mehta is agrees with the
                 view that the detention was "unconstitutional and
                 undemocratic." Mehta, one of those detained along with
                 Narmada Bachao Andolan activists, has said that he,
                 along with former Delhi High Court chief justice
Rajinder
                 Sacher, wanted to attend the public hearing in
Domkhedi,
                 Maharashtra as "independent observers and not part of
                 the NBA."

                 Mehta said, "the Gujarat government has no right to
                 intervene in an event that was to take place in
                 Maharashtra," and it had "misused the law and order
                 machinery." But, talking with The Times of India,
                 additional chief secretary (home) V V R. Subba Rao
                 said, "the Amnesty seems to taking part in a
vilification
                 campaign against the state government," adding, "it is
well
                 within the jurisdiction of the district magistrate and
the
                 local police to take whatever steps they may consider
fit
                 to stop any agitation likely to turn violent."

                 He added, "the A only provided the NBA activists a safe

                 cover, nothing else," adding, "we do not understand why

                 the NBA wants to create problems when it knows the
                 public sentiments in Gujarat."

                 Officials said, at a time when the case on Narmada is
                 pending in the Supreme Court, "the method adopted by
                 the NBA would only disrespect towards the democratic
                 institutions," adding, "those restrained were left
                 immediately. The government is not concerned with what
                 the activists think or what they would have said in the

                 public hearing. It was a preventive restraint."

                 Yet, no official in the state government is ready to
                 confirm as having received the Amnesty protest fax.
                 Ahmedabad's human rights activist Achyut Yagnik of
                 SETU said, though he was not anti-dam, "there was
little
                 reason for the police to restrain those seeking cross
                 Gujarat borders as none of the pro-dam activists had
                 planned any counter-agitation of the type organised by
                 Ms Urmila Patel in Ferkuva."

                 "Preventive detention could have had some meaning if
                 such a counter-agitation would have taken place,"
Yagnik
                 added. NBA leader Medha Patkar, once associated with
                 SETU, broke from the organisation as it refused to take

                 an anti-dam perspective even while defending the
                 displaced.

----- End of forwarded message from owner-dam-l@sandelman.ottawa.on.ca -----