SAVE DEMOCRACY REPEAL AFSPA campaign group is organising a Peaceful March on
2nd October, 2011(Sunday) from 11.30pm to 3pm and signature campaign till
5pm. It is organized to support Irom Sharmila's 11 years fast and 53 years
people's struggle against the undemocratic policy, AFSPA. Since this a
campaign of a truly democratic kind i.e. of, for and by the people we expect
your participation in all aspects of the campaigning process...

we are posting the tentative budget details for the upcoming 2nd October
program...we have tried to minimize costs without losing out on the bare
minimum arrangements required for carrying out the campaign conveniently for
all attending...please read and we would request your help in any way you
deem fit and convenient...

a contribution of even the smallest amount will go a long way for us and
help us tremendously...please consider.... We are getting contributions from
the people from 2 rs to onwards.

In the campaign, We have distributed more than 6000 pamphlets, 4000 printed
Act of The Armed Forces Special Powers Act, 1958.

Massive campaing is going in three Universities in Delhi, Jamia, JNU and DU.

Film screening program and discussion and play on AFSPA has been doing
extensively in the Universities as part of the campain to creat awarness
about the Act.

Some of the colleges we have been able to organise are, South Asian
University ( dated : 13/sep/2011), Laxmibai College( 14/9/2011), Students of
Guru Gobing Singh College of Commerce ( 15/9/2011), KMC Hostel(
22/9/2011),Hindu College( 24/9/11), Delhi college of Arts, south campus(
26/9/11) and JNU campuses.

For an expected crowd of around 1000:
Bus: 32,000 /= (@ 4000)
Sound: 2000/=
Banner: 3000 (@ 1000)
Pamphlet: 7,000/=
Poster: 4500/= (@500)
Mobilization process: 3000/=
Printed act: 3000/=
Placard: 2000/= (@500)
TOTAL: 56,500/=
Total collection till date: 9570/=
AMOUNT REQUIRED: 46,930/=

To transfer any contribution, please note the account nos.:
Sidra Anis,SBI, JNU branch, account no.:30856472965,
Suhela Kapoor, Axis Bank, Gurgaon, account no.:056010100497107
Seram Rojesh Kumar, State Bank Of India,DU Branch, account no : 030237855794

With regards
Sd/
Seram Rojesh
Beejurekha Samom
Suhela Kapoor

JUST PEACE FOUNDATION Irom Sharmila Logo



India claims to be the world's largest democracy. But the question remains,
in what sense is democracy defined. What does this sacrosanct word
'democracy' mean? Modern society abides by the democratic values of liberty
and equality. Infused with such democratic principles, India adopted the
state of a democratic republic in 1950. However, the struggle for democracy
has not reached its destination even today. Parts of the country are
fighting against India's self-inflicted demon…a cancer gnawing slowly at the
fabric of our very existence. There are economic inequalities,
socio-political exclusions, decades of militarization in certain
territories, etc. Such lingering issues force us to question and scrutinize
the nature of India's democracy critically.

One of the Black Laws in modern history of democratic India is the Armed
Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), 1958, a scar on DEMOCRACY. The Act is
'extraordinary' which empowers armed forces with total impunity. It is a
re-invention of the Armed Forces Special Powers Ordinance disseminated by
the British in 1942 (at the time of World War II) against the nationalist
'Quit India' Movement. Unlike any other extreme measures that have been
imposed in India, it allows for direct military intervention in the
'internal' affairs of a state.

The Act empow¬ers a Com¬missioned or even a Non-Com¬missioned Officer (a
jawan basically) of the Armed Forces to ar¬rest without warrant and to
shoot-to-kill on the basis of mere suspicion and no persecution can be
ini¬tiated. For more than five decades this Act has been operating in the
North East Region and since 1990 in Jammu and Kashmir. Under this Act,
several forms of human rights violations have been witnessed over the years,
such as incidences of mass massacres, sodomy, involuntary disappearance,
torture, rape or sexual harassment, illegal detention, unknown graves, etc.
As a result of these atrocities, there has been a widespread protest of
various kinds against this Act.

The AFSPA was presented as an instrument "in aid of civil power" (Section 3
of the Act) to "suppress" the "people who are racially different and
suspecting the loyalty of the people to the country, India. It was said to
be a "temporary measure". But it has completed five decades. It is targeting
the whole population in the disturbed area and not particularly the so
called insurgents or militants. In fact the numbers of insurgencies have
been increasing day by day after the imposition of this act.

For the AFSPA to come into force, all that is required is that a territory
(a state of the Indian Union, a centrally administered territory, or any
part thereof) be described as 'disturbed'. Subsequent amendments to the Act
have expanded the scope of the AFSPA to its application in any location,
anywhere in India. This has led to its being invoked in Punjab in the 1980s,
and in Kashmir, where it has been in operation from the early 1990s till
today. Under the AFSPA, once an area is declared as "disturbed", the
personnel of the armed forces simultaneously acquire powers to use "force as
may be necessary", based on their "opinion" and "suspicion", to effect
"arrest without warrant" or "fire upon or otherwise use force, even to
causing death" (Section 4).

The tragic part, however, is that in case of Northeast India, even though
the 1997 Supreme Court Judgment categorically insisted that the "disturbed
condition" is not due to "armed rebellion" wherein the Act has been enforced
or that the said "condition" does not constitute a threat to the "security
of the nation", the military and the political class continue to maintain
otherwise. Then, what is this AFSPA for? This act is a form of war on
people.

The military character of the Act is reflected in more ways than one. To
begin with, the AFSPA allows the "use of armed forces" defined as "military
forces, the air forces operating as land forces" and "any other armed
forces" of 'the Union' (Section 3) in within the nation, in domestic space.
Section 2 (c) of the Act also clearly shows the close affinity between the
AFSPA and those laws governing the military, such as the Army Act (1950). It
reads, "…all other words and expressions used herein but not defined in the
Air Force Act, 1950, or the Army Act 1950, shall have the meaning
respectively assigned to them in those Acts".

The nature of these powers conferred upon the armed forces is quite in tune
with the military paradigm and the business of war. For instance, unlike the
assumption of innocence of an 'accused' or 'suspect' (until he or she is
proved guilty) in normal criminal law, a significant measure that protects a
citizen, the hostile intention of the inhabitants of the space that is
rendered 'disturbed' by the simple fact of the declaration of the AFSPA is
taken for granted by the military personnel.

Thus, the 'opinion' and 'suspicion' of the commanding officer of a military
formation (commissioned, junior commissioned or even non-commissioned
officer for that matter in the military) serves as the basis for exercising
the powers to "fire upon or otherwise use force", which he thinks is
'necessary' within a few second in a "mere suspicion".

These powers can also be exercised for acts that "likely to be made" or even
"about to (be) commit (ted)" (Section 4).Acts committed under the realm of
this unstated declaration of war cannot be challenged by those who bear the
brunt of the AFSPA. This becomes clear when we read in Section 6: "No
prosecution, suit or other legal proceeding shall be instituted, except with
the previous sanction of the Central Government in respect of anything done
or purported to be done in exercise of the powers conferred by this Act"

We now, the present day youth have come together inspired by our motto "Save
Democracy Repeal AFSPA"…a group that endeavors to carry forward the
tradition of struggle begun by many for instating democracy in these
affected states, to appease the turbulent situation, to rational out with
the democratic institution established by our representatives in the
parliament to ensure repealment of the Act and to release Irom Sharmila, who
has been a major contender in the struggle against AFSPA.

This young woman witnessed the massacre of 10 innocent people by jawans of
the army and decided that was it…she set out on way of struggle never heard
of before, which turned out to be the world's longest hunger strike...since
2000, an 11 years long fast. Being held prisoner of the state and force-fed
though a nasal tube Sharmila is a symbol of a relentless yet peaceful
protest against a cruel law that denigrates humans to a state below even
animal.

It's time to take action, to help her take her first sip of water and savor
the goodness of food…to help put into place a system where every human being
has the right to live, a life with dignity and freedom, free from any threat
to his/her personal space…where fairness towards all is bolstered…where we
look up to all the people and say NO to WAR on PEOPLE…Save DEMOCRACY…REPEAL
AFSPA (a scar on Democracy).

Let's Join – The Peaceful March on 2nd October 2011, 11.30 am to 3pm and
signature campaign till 5pm at Jantar Mantar.
Email : savedemocracy.repealaf...@gmail.com;
Organized by SAVE DEMOCRACY: REPEAL AFSPA (Group)



SAVE DEMOCRACY REPEAL AFSPA

Let's Join the PEACEFUL MARCH for Save Democracy Repeal AFSPA
on 2nd October, 2011 (Sunday)
at Jantar Mantar,
from 11.30pm to 3pm
and signature campaign till 5pm.

It is organized to support Irom Sharmila's 11 years fast and 53 years
people's struggle against the undemocratic policy, AFSPA

Organized by,
SAVE DEMOCRACY REPEAL AFSPA(Group)
Email : savedemocracy(dot)repealafspa(at)gmail(dot)com

-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
*
*
*The UID project i**s going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists

of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.*
*
*
*http://saynotoaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/*
*http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1*<
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1>

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