- Papa II
Papa II was an
interrogation centre in theIndia n state ofJammu and Kashmir [cite book |author=Wirsing, Robert |title=India, Pakistan, and the Kashmir dispute: on regional conflict and its resolution |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York |year=1994 |pages= |isbn=0-312-17562-0 |oclc= |doi= |accessdate=] . It operated from the start of theKashmir insurgency in 1989 until it was shut down in 1996. Operated by theBorder Security Force (BSF),cite web
url=http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/kashmir/1996/India-09.htm
title=Behind the Kashmir Conflict
author=
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date=October 1998
format=
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publisher=Human Rights Watch
pages=
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archivedate=
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accessdate=] it was reportedly "the most infamous torture center in Kashmir".cite journal|title=Style Over Substance|journal=Columbia Journalism Review |date=May/June 2007|first=Basharat|last=Peer|coauthors=|volume=|issue=|pages=|id= |url=http://www.cjr.org/dispatch/style_over_substance_1.php?page=2|format=|accessdate=2008-04-21 ]Background
Every security force operating in Kashmir had its own interrogation centres in the state which included temporary detention centres at BSF,
Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and army camps.cite book
author=
title= The Human Rights Crisis in Kashmir: A Pattern of Impunity
publisher= Human Rights Watch
location=
year= 1993
pages= p85
isbn= 1564321045
oclc=
doi=] Detainees were first interrogated by the detaining security force for a period of time which ranged from several hours to several weeks. During this time no person was allowed to meet the detainee and the detainee was not produced before the court. Detainees suspected of being militants were handed over to Counter-Intelligence Kashmir (CIK) and are interrogated at Joint Interrogation Centres (JICs) where detention sometimes lasted for months. Papa II was one of several such centres in Kashmir.Lawyers in Kashmir told Asia Watch in 1993 that they had filed approximately 15,000 petitions since 1990 calling the state authorities to reveal the situation of the detainees and the charges against them, but the authorities had not responded.
Operation of Papa II
The building, of colonial origin, was initially a government guest house to accommodate visiting bureaucrats, in "serene surroundings" - the exclusive Gupkar Roadcite web
url=http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/mag/2005/06/19/stories/2005061900250100.htm
title=Crossfire zone
author=Ranjit Hoskote
authorlink=
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date=2005/06/19
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publisher=The Hindu
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accessdate=] on the banks of theDal Lake inSrinagar . On occupation by theparamilitary Border Security Force in 1989, it was named Papa II "in an attempt to keep the compound’s new purpose nominally confidential". cite journal|title=Kashmir’s tortured past and present|journal=Himal |date=September 2007|first=Arshad|last=Hamid|coauthors=|volume=|issue=|pages=|id= |url=http://www.himalmag.com/2007/september/kashmir_tortured.htm|format=|accessdate=2008-04-21 ]A May 1996 report by
Human Rights Watch detailed allegations of abuse and torture at Papa II. [cite web |url=http://hrw.org/reports/1996/India2.htm#P410_104590
title=INDIA'S SECRET ARMY IN KASHMIR : New Patterns of Abuse Emerge in the Conflict
last=Gossman | first=Patricia | publisher=Human Rights Watch
month=May | year=1996 | accessdate=2008-04-21 ] According to William Dalrymple, Papa II was a centre into which...large numbers of local people, as well as the occasional captured foreign jihadi, would "disappear." Their bodies would later be found, if at all, floating down rivers, bruised, covered in cigarette burns, missing fingers or even whole limbs.cite web
url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/21310#fnr1
title=Kashmir: The Scarred and the Beautiful
author=William Dalrymple
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date=1 May 2008
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publisher=TheNew York Review of Books
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accessdate=]A method of interrogation by which bodies of suspects were placed under heavy rollers caused at least 250 deaths through acute
renal failure at one Srinagar hospital alone, according toPankaj Mishra .cite web
url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/13813
title=Death in Kashmir - The New York Review of Books
author=Pankaj Mishra
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date=21 September 2000
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publisher=TheNew York Review of Books
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accessdate=] Others died through application of electric shocks, and particularly through "immersing the prisoners’ heads in water during interrogation." One commonly observed consequence of the use of torture through electrodes attached to the detainee's genitals is that released detainees find themselves either unable to consummate or sometimes even participate in normal sexual relationships. It is unknown how many deaths occurred at Papa II, the most intensive centre of its kind: on the tenth of every month, the relatives of some of the disappeared stage a public protest near the building, demanding information on their kin from the authorities; they claim about 10,000 have gone missing during the years of militancy. The Government of India contests that figure. [Amnesty International , "Analysis of the Government of India's response to Amnesty International's report on torture and deaths in custody in Jammu and Kashmir", 1995.]hut down
Following "D.K. Basu vs West Bengal" in December 1996, in which judgmentJudgement dated December 18, 1996, in W.P. (Crl.) No. 539 of 1986 W.P. (Crl.) No. 592 of 1987 Ashok K. Johri Vs State of U.P. A copy of the judgment can be found at cite web
url=http://www.alrc.net/doc/mainfile.php/cl_india/143/
title=SHRI D.K. BASU v State of West Bengal
accessdate=2008-04-21 |author=Supreme Court of India | date=2002-10-03
publisher=Asian Legal Resource Center] theSupreme Court of India laid out restrictions on detention without trial in an attempt to curb custodial violence Citation| first=Jinee| last=Lokaneeta| coauthors=| contribution=Torture in Postcolonial India: A Liberal Paradox?| title=Evil, Law and the State: Issues in State Power and Violence| editor-first=| editor-last=| coeditors=| publisher=| place=Salzburg, Austria| pages=| date=March 2008| year=2008| id= | contribution-url=| format=| accessdate=2008-04-21 ] , and the election of the left-leaning United Front government at the Centre, most interrogation centres, including Papa II, were shut down.Since then it has been used as a residence by senior state politicians, including the state finance minister. Currently it is the official residence of
Mehbooba Mufti , who leads the People's Democratic Party, though her occupation of it is contested by those who would prefer it to be a memorial to the ones who disappeared.References
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