Monday, August 15, 2011

INDIA: THREE MEN FACE IMMINENT EXECUTION

வணக்கம் 
பேரறிவாளன் உள்ளிட்ட மூவருக்கு மரண தண்டனை நிறைவேற்றப்படும் சூழல் ஏற்பட்டுள்ள நிலையில் சர்வதேச மனித உரிமை அமைப்பான ஆம்னஸ்டி இன்டர்நேஷனல் அமைப்பைத் தொடர்புகொண்டு இதில் தலையிடுமாறு கேட்டிருந்தேன். அவர்கள் இதுதொடர்பில் சற்றுமுன் வெளியிட்டிருக்கும் அறிக்கை இத்துடன் உள்ளது.அந்த அமைப்பின் தென் ஆசியப் பிரிவிலிருந்து இது எனக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டிருக்கிறது. சந்தனக் கடத்தல் வீரப்பனின் கூட்டாளிகள் என நான்குபேர் கர்நாடக நீதிமன்றத்தால் மரண தண்டனை வழங்கப்பட்டு அவர்களது கருணை மனுக்கள் இப்போது குடியரசுத் தலைவரிடம் உள்ளன. அவையும் கூடிய விரைவில் தள்ளுபடி செய்யப்படும் எனத் தெரிகிறது. அவை மட்டுமின்றி குடியரசுத் தலைவரிடம் உள்ள அனைத்து மனுக்களுமே தள்ளுபடி செய்யப்படலாம். அதனால் இந்த ஆண்டு பலர் தூக்கிலிடப்படலாம். கடந்த ஏழு ஆண்டுகளாக நிறுத்தி வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்த மரண தண்டனைகள் மீண்டும் நிறைவேற்றப்படுவது இந்திய ஜனநாயகத்துக்குப் பெருமை சேர்ப்பது ஆகாது. 
மரண தண்டனைக்கு எதிரான நமது பிரச்சாரத்தை நாம் இன்னும் விரிவாக எடுத்துச் செல்லவேண்டும். டெல்லியிலும் இதற்காக கூட்டங்கள் நடத்தப்படவேண்டும். தமிழ்த் திரைத் துறையினர் இதற்காக குரல் கொடுக்க முன்வந்தால் நல்லது. 


URGENT ACTION
india: three men face imminent execution
Two Sri Lankans and an Indian national convicted for the assassination of India’s former Prime Minister, Rajiv Gandhi, are facing imminent execution in Vellore prison in Tamil Nadu, India. This follows the rejection of their mercy petitions by the President of India. If carried out, these would be the first executions in India since 2004.
Murugan and Santhan, both 41, and Arivu alias Perarivalan, 37, were sentenced to death in January 1998 by a Special Anti-Terrorist Court on grounds of involvement in the assassination of India’s former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi. Their sentence was confirmed by the Supreme Court of India in May 1999. According to information received by Amnesty International and reports in the Indian media, their mercy petitions were rejected by the President in August 2011, following the advice of the Government of India.

The three men were amongst 26 people sentenced to death by a special court at the Poonamallee jail complex in Tamil Nadu, under the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 (TADA) – a law that contained provisions that were incompatible with international standards for fair trial. On appeal, a three-judge Supreme Court bench confirmed the death sentences of Murugan, Santhan, Perarivalan and a woman, Nalini, while acquitting 19 persons of the murder charges and commuting the death sentences of three others. In April 2000, the Governor of Tamil Nadu commuted Nalini’s sentence to life imprisonment, but rejected the mercy petitions of the three men. A mercy petition for the three men was sent to the Government of India in April 2000 and eventually only decided upon at the beginning of August 2011.

Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases as the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. The eleven-year delay in announcing the verdict of the mercy petition and the resultant stay on death row may further amount to cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. The Supreme Court of India has itself commuted death sentences in a number of cases due to prolonged delay in deciding mercy petitions.

Please write immediately in English or your own language:
n  Urge that the death sentence of Murugan, Santhan and Perarivalan be commuted;
n  Acknowledge the seriousness of the crime, i.e. assassination of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, but raise concern that their stay on death row, since the mercy petition was kept pending for eleven years, may further amount to cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment;
n  Reiterate the call of the UN General Assembly to establish a moratorium on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty, and pointing out that India’s decision to resume executions after a seven-year gap goes against regional and global trends towards abolition of the death penalty.

PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 26 SEPTEMBER 2011:


Prime Minister of India
Dr. Manmohan Singh
South Block
Raisina Hill
New Delhi 110 001
Fax: +91 11 23019545
23016857
Email: (via form)
http://pmindia.nic.in/feedback.htm
Salutation: Dear Prime Minister



President of India
President Pratibha Patil
Rashtrapati Bhavan
New Delhi 110 004
Fax: +91 11 23017290, 
23017824
Email: (via form)
http://helpline.rb.nic.in/GrievanceNew.aspx
Salutation: Dear President




And copies to:
Minister of Home Affairs
P Chidambaram
104, North Block,
Central Secretariat
New Delhi 110001
Fax: + 91 11 23094221
Email: hm@nic.in




Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country. Please insert local diplomatic addresses below:
name       address 1               address 2               address 3               address 4               fax: fax number      email: email address             salutation: salutation

Please check with your section office if sending appeals after the above date.


URGENT ACTION
india: three men face imminent execution

ADditional Information

This is the third set of mercy petitions to be rejected since June 2011. No executions have taken place in India since 2004. The move to resume executions after a seven-year hiatus would put the country against the regional and global trend towards abolition of the death penalty.

UN bodies and mechanisms have repeatedly called upon Member States to establish a moratorium on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty, most recently through the adoption of a third UN General Assembly resolution on the matter in December 2010. In a general comment on Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which India is a State Party, the UN Human Rights Committee stated that Article 6 "refers generally to abolition [of the death penalty] in terms which strongly suggest... that abolition is desirable. The Committee concludes that all measures of abolition should be considered as progress in the enjoyment of the right to life... ". 

Other national and regional bodies have also recognized that prolonged detention on death row can amount to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. This is in addition to international law and standards which make clear that prisoners under sentence of death have the right throughout the process to make maximum use of the judicial and clemency processes available, including by petitioning international bodies.

Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases, regardless of the nature of the crime, the characteristics of the offender, or the method of execution.

Name: Murugan, Santhan and Arivu alias Perarivalan
Gender m/f:






UA: 246/11 Index: ASA 20/040/2011 Date: 15 August 2011

3 comments:

  1. Showing mercy to them can be a cruelty to the victims of the terrorism
    Jai Hind

    ReplyDelete
  2. I advocate death sentence to criminals; but I strongly feel Perarivalan is not a criminal. He is just a scapegoat, arrested on false charges. Just because he was a staunch supporter of Tamil Eelam, several false charges were foisted against him. He should be saved. His life is priceless and invaluable. A death sentence cannot be given to an innocent

    ReplyDelete
  3. Mr:Rajarajan, then tell us who the culprits are? These persons are the only 3 among the 26 persons originally sentenced to death.I wonder why Govt of India delayed the court-order implementation that much.
    Jai Hind

    ReplyDelete