Monday, April 29, 2013

Manipur’s plight moves UN official

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130429/jsp/northeast/story_16837837.jsp#.UX6HcbX7DI4

Rashida Manjoo meets rights activists
Imphal, April 28: The plight of Manipur’s residents moved Rashida Manjoo, the UN special rapporteur on violence against women, to tears today and spurred her to assure people that her experiences here would find place in her report to the UN Human Rights Commission (UNHCR).
Manjoo, who arrived here yesterday, reportedly wept openly today when Thangjam Manorama’s mother, Thangjam Khumanlei, presented her daughter’s case and broke down, while pleading with the official that she should ensure justice and get the Assam Rifles personnel who shot her daughter dead after allegedly raping her in July 2004 punished.
Her visit has also raised hopes among human rights groups in the Northeast that the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act would be repealed.
“The visit and her report to the UNHCR will give more strength to the international cry against the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act,” Laifungbam Debabrata Roy, convener of Civil Society Coalition on Human Rights in Manipur and the UN, said after meeting the official today.
The civil society coalition hosted the visit, the first by an UN official with a human rights mandate.
Manjoo is visiting the state as part of her tour to examine violence against women in India, its causes and consequences. She met chief secretary D.S. Poonia, director-general of police Yumnam Joykumar Singh and members of the Manipur Women’s Commission on her arrival yesterday.
This morning, she held a consultative meeting with members of rights and citizens’ groups at a hotel here. Jarjum Ete, secretary of the National Alliance of Women and former chairperson of the Arunachal Pradesh State Women’s Commission, moderated the meeting, which saw participation by around 200 delegates from the Northeast and Bengal.
Roy said 40 separate depositions on crimes against women in the region were made during the four-hour meeting.
Though Manjoo tried to meet rights crusader Irom Sharmila, the state government did not give her permission. Sharmila, however, presented her case before Manjoo in a written representation sent through her elder brother, Irom Singhajit. Welcoming the UN official’s visit to the state, Sharmila hoped that it would yield “positive” results. She termed herself “a simple justice lover” and the army act a “draconian law” and said lawlessness ruled Manipur and its people were suffering because of this. Her voice, too, had been “suppressed” by the government.
Babloo Loitongbam, a member of the civil society coalition, presented Sharmila’s case, stating that the Centre had been ignoring the recommendations of various commissions to repeal the army act.
Roy said it was during this interaction that Manjoo met Manorama’s mother and shared her agony.
In her closing remark, Manjoo assured the gathering that her report would be based on facts and that the facts and her opinions on the happenings in the region would not be changed or reshaped by any influence. “The visit will definitely have an impact on the issue of the army act, as India will have to respond to the UNHCR report,” Roy said.

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