PDP to oppose passage of Police Bill in present form: Mehbooba

Excelsior Correspondent
Srinagar, Feb 24: Describing the proposed Police Bill as an attempt to institutionalise the dreaded Ikhwan culture in the State, People’s Democratic Party (PDP) today said it would strongly oppose its passage in the present form.
In a statement issued here today, the party president Mehbooba Mufti said police in the State definitely is in need of drastic reforms but many provisions in this bill are undemocratic and anti people and will take the State back to medieval times when khaki uniform struck terror in the hearts of people.
Mehbooba said J&K has the dubious distinction of having been reduced to a police State outside the democratic system of the country but the proposed Bill would actually covert it to a lawless State. “If this Bill is allowed to pass in its present form we will have an Ikhwani State in which the thanedar and not the democratic institutions or the elected representatives will set the rules of the society”, she said.
“On the one hand the Government is making noises on scrapping the AFSPA and on the other it is proposing to provide similar immunity and unbridled powers to its own police and taking them out of all civilian control and guidance”, she said.
Mehbooba said the proposal to create special security zones (SSZs) and legalisation of Village Defence Committees which could be administered according to the discretion of the police through SPOs is dangerous for any society but for a conflict ridden area it could be a sure prescription for continuing the disturbed conditions and denial of basic rights.
She said police in fact needs to be brought out of the colonial mindset and practices that were followed by feudal forces to stay in power and the objective of any new law should be to make it more accountable to democratic institutions, people friendly and socially oriented. The proposed law unfortunately negates any such purpose.
Mehbooba said this draft legislation has all the criteria of a systematic undermining of democracy: namely, the abdication of authority to security forces by an elected Government, military-style ‘civilizing’ of civilian society by insultingly presuming to teach them how to stand in line, urinate and defecate. It also has ring of an effort to appease the muscular nationalists in Delhi with an argument against AFSPA by morphing it into a “non-military” AFSPA that is supposedly willed by “the people” of our State.
Pointing out that the Bill provided for arrest of a person in case of non-rendering of assistance to a Police Officer, Mehbooba said this Government is unable to look beyond repressive measures to run the State and treats everybody as a criminal. She said, “we are living in an era of democracy and the laws have to conform to the basic principle of respecting every individual’s rights.”
Mehbooba said the Government had deliberately chosen this time for inviting suggestions on the bill when means of communication have been severely restricted. She said the backdrop of Afzal Guru’s hanging should have led the Government to introspect on the effects of having an unjust system which alienated a generation of youth and forced them to take to arms.
Mehbooba said the State police is part of the larger society and share with rest of population a value system that is special to the State. She said it was the same police that helped the healing touch policy of the PDP led coalition but the way the present Government has misused this institution it looks in conflict with the society. “That is a dangerous situation which could be worsened by measures proposed to be introduced through the Police Bill,”she added.