The 28-year-old man, Rizwan Asad, died in police custody late on Monday, his family confirmed on Tuesday. The young teacher was a chemistry graduate who taught at a private school, his family said. Protesters threw stones at police in several parts of the region following news of the young man’s death, with shops shutting in parts of the main city of Srinagar. Police responded with tear gas. The government also shut down the Islamic University in Awantipora where Asad was a guest lecturer.
Rizwan, an Awantipora resident in the Pulwama district, south Kashmir, was reportedly arrested last week by National Investigative Agency of India as part of a crackdown on socio-political and religious organisation Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) Kashmir, which was banned in February.
He had been arrested as part of a “terror case investigation”, a police spokesman said. Inquiries were being carried out into the cause of his death, the spokesman added.
“This morning we came to know that my brother has been killed,” Rizwan’s brother, Zulkarnain Asad, told media after reports of custodial death emerged.
“My brother has been killed in police custody in cold blood,” he said.
Zulkarnain was sceptical that any investigation would reveal the truth.
“We want an investigation of it but we know nothing is going to happen,” the brother told Reuters. “We’ve all seen investigations for the last 20 years.” Asad and his father were both associated with the Jamaat-i-Islami group, Zulkarnain said. “It [being associated with Jamaat-i-Islami] is not a crime.”
Since his arrest, Asad had been kept at the dreaded anti-insurgency Special Operations Group (SOG) headquarter of the police, called Cargo, in the capital Srinagar city of Jammu and Kashmir.
Police officials also confirmed Asad’s death, however, they were reluctant to comment on how he died in custody.
“We have requested for magisterial inquiry under 176 CrPc (Criminal Procedure Code) to initiate a thorough probe to ascertain the actual cause of death,” SP Pani, inspector general of police in Kashmir, told local media. Police have not yet filed a murder case into Asad’s death, though. Last year, Asad was imprisoned under the Public Safety Act, which allows any person to be imprisoned for up to two years without a trial. The court, however, ordered him to be set free.
“After his release, he had again resumed his life. He was teaching, doing his own things, he was not part of any militant outfit. He was completely innocent,” Zulkarnain said.
“There have been several thousand custodial killings and custodial disappearances by Indian forces in Kashmir. None of them have received any justice; it is because of the complete lack of accountability and total lawlessness that Rizwan could be killed in custody last night,” Khurram Parvez, a top Kashmiri human rights activist, told Anadolu Agency. Several prominent political figures in Kashmir condemned the death of the man.
Published in Daily Times, March 20th 2019.
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