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![]() Topic: toms shoes sale which greatly expand police powerPosted: May 05 2013 at 4:04pm |
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courthouses where magistrates often ignored their complaints, said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director for Human Rights Watch, in a statement.The report quotes accounts of abuse by detainees in connection with the Ahmedabad bombings, which killed almost 60 people. A lawyer who spoke to the rights group said he could see abrasions on suspects he visited after their arrests.However the response of the government was very different after the Nov. 26 attacks the same year that saw gunmen storm several sites in Mumbai. The attackers were later linked to Pakistan. In the immediate aftermath of the three-day attacks, authorities didn t engage in mass detentions and also appealed publicly for calm in a concerted effort to protect Muslim communities from a backlash.Ms. Tayler said that confessions obtained through police brutality were not only unlawful but counterproductive. If police are concocting evidence or forcing suspects to confess to their version of events in order to solve a crime, there s a serious risk the real perpetrators are going free, she said, adding that in addition you risk feeding into the narrative of militant groups that you don t care about Muslims. In the case of bombings at a graveyard in Malegaon town in Maharashtra in 2006 that killed almost 40 Muslims, Ms. Tayler pointed to the fact that nine Muslim suspects have been held without bail for several years in connection with the attacks. Last year a Hindu suspect allegedly confessed to the attack, although his lawyer says this was under duress, according to a BBC report. They ve been in jail since 2006 for a crime they may or may not have committed, she said. The Indian investigators need to make up their minds and solve this crime. The organization is calling for several reforms. While some of these reforms have long been called for by Indian activists and government officials alike—including measures to guarantee the police is not subject to political pressure and to increase police numbers—many seem unlikely to happen anytime soon. But others,toms shoes sale, like enacting measures already passed by Parliament, seem more doable. Human Rights Watch wants the president to sign an amendment to criminal procedure that was passed by Parliament last year. The amendment would require police to state in writing their reason for doing so each time they make warrant-less arrests, which the organization hopes would cut down detentions made without any real evidence. It is not clear why the amendment has not yet been signed into law. They re also unhappy with measures passed in the wake of the Mumbai terror attacks, which greatly expand police powers, including allowing them to hold terror suspects for up to six months without being charged.The record under previous laws with sweeping powers isn t very good either,cheaptomsshoessalei.com. Under the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities Prevention Act, in force for a decade from 1985, 67,000 people were detained. Of those,toms shoes, 8,000 were eventually put on trial, leading to 725 evictions, according to a People s Tribunal Report on security legisla
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