[Reader-list] REALEASE SONI SORI AND LINGARAM KODPI

Asit Das asit1917 at gmail.com
Sat Aug 10 00:59:27 CDT 2013


*AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Press Release
7 August 2013*

*Release Prisoners of Conscience Soni Sori and Lingaram Kodopi*

Authorities in the state of Chhattisgarh must drop all charges against
Adivasi activists Soni Sori and Lingaram Kodopi, and release them
immediately and unconditionally, Amnesty International India said today.

The organization considers Soni Sori and Lingaram Kodopi to be Prisoners of
Conscience, who have been arrested on false charges solely because they
criticized human rights violations by security forces in Chhattisgarh.

Soni Sori has been in detention since October 2011 and Lingaram Kodopi
since September 2011. Soni Sori’s husband, Anil Futane, died on 2 August
2013. But she was denied temporary release on bail to perform his last
rites.

“Soni Sori and Lingaram Kodopi’s continued detention is a matter of shame
for India,” said Shashikumar Velath, Director of Programmes at Amnesty
International India. “Their cases show just how far authorities in
Chhattisgarh can go to silence their critics.”

“The government of Chhattisgarh needs to stop filing politically motivated
charges against Adivasis, and start listening to what they have to say.”

Soni Sori has been acquitted in five cases filed against her, and has been
granted bail in another case. Lingaram Kodopi has been acquitted in one of
two cases filed against him.

One of the pending cases against both involves charges that they had acted
as couriers and transferred funds of 1.5 million Indian rupees (US
$246,000) from a corporate mining firm, Essar, to armed Maoists as
“protection money” in September 2011, to ensure its operations could be
carried out unhindered.

On 7 July 2013, the Chhattisgarh High Court denied bail to Soni Sori and
Lingaram Kodopi on the grounds of the “nature of allegation, quality of
evidence and the seriousness of the offence.”

A general manager at an Essar steel plant and a contractor for Essar who
were also arrested in the case and face the same charges were released on
bail in January 2012 and February 2012 respectively.

Soni Sori has alleged that she was tortured while she was in police custody
on 8 and 9 October 2011. In letters written to India’s Supreme Court, she
said that police officials had stripped and sexually assaulted her and
given her electric shocks.

By the time of her appearance in court on 10 October 2011, Soni Sori was
unable to walk. On 29 October, a government hospital examined her under
court order, and reported that two stones had been inserted in her vagina
and one in her rectum, and that she had annular tears in her spine.

A senior police official who Soni Sori said had ordered and supervised her
torture was conferred a gallantry award by the President of India in
January 2012.

“Instead of continuing to keep these Prisoners of Conscience in detention,
authorities in Chhattisgarh must drop all charges, release them, and
investigate all allegations of torture promptly and independently,” said
Shashikumar Velath.

*Background Information*

Since 2005, Chhattisgarh has witnessed an escalation of violence between
government forces and the armed Maoists who claim to be fighting on behalf
of Adivasis against India’s established political order. The confrontation
has seen routine killings, taking of hostages and other attacks against the
civilian population. More than 30,000 Adivasis remain forcibly displaced.

Soni Sori, a 36 year old school-teacher and her nephew Lingaram Kodopi, a
26-year old journalist, were critical of human rights violations committed
both by security forces and armed Maoists in Chhattisgarh.

In April 2010, at a public hearing in Delhi, Lingaram Kodopi detailed
violations committed by security forces against Adivasis in Chhattisgarh,
following which the state police announced that he was the prime suspect in
an armed Maoist attack on a local Congress party leader’s residence.

In March 2011, Lingaram Kodopi also highlighted the killing of three
Adivasis by security forces during a confrontation in three villages.
During the attack, two persons went missing and at least five women were
sexually assaulted. Lingaram Kodopi was eventually arrested in September
2011 on false charges of aiding armed Maoists. Soni Sori’s huband, Anil
Futane, was arrested in 2011 for allegedly planning and executing an attack
on a local Congress party leader. He was acquitted on 1 May 2013, after
spending three years in jail, during which time he was allegedly tortured.
He died on 2 August 2013.

Soni Sori has been acquitted in five cases against her, and Lingaram Kodopi
in one of the two cases against him.

In 2012, Sori was acquitted in two cases in which she was accused of
attacking a police station in Kuakonda and blowing up a government office
in Kuakonda in 2010.

In February 2013, a trial court acquitted her of being involved in an
attack on a police team near an Essar plant in Kirandul, and of being part
of a Maoist armed group team which attempted to blow up trucks belonging to
Essar.

In early May 2013, a trial court acquitted Soni Sori, Lingaram Kodopi and
15 other persons accused of conspiring and participating in the attack
against a local Congress party leader at Nakulnar in Chhattisgarh in July
2010.

In late May, another court granted Soni Sori bail in a case in which police
claim she had participated in the torching of vehicles in Nerli Ghat in
September 2010.

A number of social and political activists and human rights defenders in
Chhattisgarh have faced false charges and imprisonment for highlighting the
human rights situation in the state. Among them are Binayak Sen of the
People’s Union for Civil Liberties, and Kartam Joga, an Adivasi leader of
the Communist Party of India, both declared as Prisoners of Conscience by
Amnesty International.

Binayak Sen spent more than two years in prison and was released on bail by
India’s Supreme Court in April 2011 after he was convicted of sedition and
sentenced to life imprisonment by a lower court. Kartam Joga was acquitted
of all charges and released in January 2013 after spending over two years
in prison.

*Public document*
****************************************
*For media queries: Aruna Chandrasekhar, +91-9886198482

For more information please call Amnesty International India in Bangalore
at (080) 49388000 or email Amnesty International India at
contact at amnesty.org.in.*


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