Apprehensions of NIA raid endangering families of disappeared persons, says APDP

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On Wednesday, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) conducted raids on several locations in Srinagar, including the offices of Greater Kashmir, a local human rights watch J-K Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS) and Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons (APDP).
The raid at the Srinagar office of APDP lasted for nearly seven hours. The agency also carried out raids on the residences of a journalist working with an international publication, Parvaiz Bukhari, and the co-ordinator of JKCCS, Khurram Parvez.

The APDP has for years provided support to families of disappeared persons in Kashmir, collects their testimonies, raises awareness about the issue, and engages in advocacy work.

In a statement, APDP founder Praveena Ahangar has strongly denied any such associations, and said the group has been targeted in the past too for its work bringing out human rights abuses in Kashmir.

The documents the NIA has seized, Ms. Ahangar claimed in the statement, contain sensitive information about victims and their families, and their testimonies. “There is a grave apprehension that the same may be accessed by other agencies, and/or lead to adverse consequences and reprisal against victims and families who have testified and are pursuing justice,” the statement notes.

The APDP statement has also laid out its sources of funding, and said that it does not receive any foreign funds.

Read the full text of Ahangar’s statement below:

On 28th October 2020 from about 8:30 A.M to 3:30 P.M, a team of officers from the NIA, CID and JK Police, accompanied by CRPF officers conducted a raid in the office of Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons (APDP) in Hyderpora, Srinagar. Parveena Ahangar and Saima were taken from home to the APDP office by the team and security personnel. Parveena Ahangar, Sabia and Saima were present in the office during the raid. All information and material sought by the raiding team was provided to them. The team examined all documents relating to APDP’s work. They subsequently seized several documents and some electronic devices. Praveena Ahanagar’s mobile phones were also seized.

Serious Concern over misuse of sensitive information, including names and addresses of victims present in documents seized from APDP and apprehension of reprisal against victims of human rights violations:

APDP is an organisation of and for family members of victims of enforced disappearances.

Through the years APDP has documented and recorded testimonies of victims and victim- families who have been subjected to human rights violations by security forces in Kashmir. More than 1000 testimonies of enforced disappearances, about 400 testimonies of pellet gun injuries, about 300-400 testimonies of arbitrary detention and torture and some cases of sexual violence have been documented by APDP and have been submitted to various United Nations special procedures, and Human Rights Organisations. As recently as September 2020, almost 40 testimonies of arbitrary detention and torture that took place in 2019-2020 were submitted to the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention and the Special Rapporteur on Torture.

The documents and devices seized by the NIA team contain details of the names, identities and incidents of human rights abuses by security personnel. There is a grave apprehension that the same may be accessed by other agencies, and/or lead to adverse consequences and reprisal against victims and families who have testified and are pursuing justice.

About APDP

APDP comprises of family members of victims of enforced disappearances. ​Parveena started the “Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons” in 1994 to provide support and access to justice to victim families of enforced disappearances. Ever since, APDP, in addition to providing support to victim families, also works on awareness and advocacy seeking investigation into the approximately 10,000 cases of enforced and involuntary disappearances in Kashmir. ​Through their advocacy APDP has been demanding that the State ratify the ​International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance​, and demanding codification of the crime of enforced disappearances. Interventions of the APDP have found resonance in the recommendations made at the Universal Periodic Review. In 2017 Parveena Ahangar was a recipient of the Rafto prize for human rights defenders.

Source of Funds

From 2009 to 2019 APDP received grants from the ​United Nations ​Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture​, which were utilised for salaries of staff, to provide for needs of victims families depending on their needs, to families whose children have been disappeared, to meet the expenses of providing psychological counselling to victim families, to organise workshops on legal awareness, for documentation and submission of complaints of human rights violations etc. All these activities fall within the scope of the UN grant.

Accounts of expenditure and receipts are detailed in the utilisation report submitted to the United Nations each year and receipts and records are available for other miscellaneous expenses.

The APDP has not received any funds from foreign organisations. ​Section 2(j)(ii) of the FCR Act defines “foreign source” to exclude the United Nations. Funds received through the UN grant to APDP is hence not “foreign funding”.

APDP has not utilised its funding or any other resources for any illegal purpose.

Targeting of APDP

APDP is well known, for its stellar humanitarian and human rights work with victims of enforced disappearances, torture and human rights abuses.

In 2012, APDP hosted Christof Heyns, the UN Special Rapporteur on ​extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, and Margaret Sekaggya the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Right Defenders. In 2016 APDP collated testimonies of persons who have been injured and killed due to use of pellet guns, on the basis of which it made ​submissions to the Universal Periodic Review and later brought out a ​report​. In 2020, APDP submitted almost 40 testimonies of arbitrary detention and torture to the United Nations.

APDP neither receives foreign funding, nor engages in any illegal activities. The raid conducted by the NIA has no basis, and only exposes the State’s desperation to deter APDP from pursuing justice for hundreds of victims of human rights violations committed by State actors in Kashmir.

APDP led by Praveena Ahangar remains resolute to carry on its work with victims of human rights abuses in Kashmir.

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