ISLAMABAD: Mushaal Hussein Mullick, wife of prominent Kashmiri leader, Yasin Malik, strongly urged the international community to play its role to stop human rights abuses in Indian-administered Kashmir and mount pressure on New Delhi to ensure basic rights of political prisoners.
Adding to the anger and angst of thousands of people under security lock-down, India on Monday scrapped Article 370 to abolish the special status granted to the disputed territory under its constitution and put the former chief ministers under house arrest — a common practice in the valley where a large majority opposes Indian rule.
Talking to Arab News, Malik said that although her husband had renounced armed struggle for freedom and advocated a political solution that granted the Kashmiri people their right to self-determination, he was kept in inhuman conditions by Indian authorities who arrested him in February this year and subjected him to torture.
“My husband has been kept in a narrow death cell at Tihar Jail where he is brutally tortured by Indian forces,” she said, adding that it was almost that the authorities wanted to “kill him” under custody.
“Yasin is not allowed to sleep since he is kept in floodlights all the time,” she said while adding that he was also refused his medicine though he was a heart patient and regularly required prescribed tablets and pills.
“He had his last contact in jail with his lawyer four days ago. I hope to know more about him on his next court hearing which is scheduled on 7th August,” she added.
Islamabad based human rights lawyer, Barrister Afzal Hussain, told Arab News that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by United Nations back in 1948, prohibited torture of political prisoners.
“The torture and treatment of Yasin Malik in prison is sheer violation of the article 3 (right to life, liberty and security of a person) and article 5 (against torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment) of Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” he said.
“He should be provided all basic necessities of life,” added Hussain.
Mushaal Hussein Mullick, the wife of renowned Kashmiri leader Yasin Malik. (Photo courtesy: Mushaal Hussein Mullick/social media)
Malik’s health and well-being became a matter of concern after rumors of his death in Indian prison recently spread on social media like wildfire. However, he is not the only Kashmiri leader detained by Indian authorities who also put two former chief ministers of Jammu and Kashmir, Omar Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti, under house arrest.
All of this happened against the backdrop of rising tensions in Kashmir where New Delhi recently deployed additional security personnel and asked tourists and pilgrims to vacate the region.
“India already has more than half a million troops in Jammu and Kashmir,” Gowhar Geelani, a senior Srinagar-based journalist, told Arab News. “But it has added 38 additional companies of the Central Armed Police Force and the Indian Army.”
He informed that official reports suggested an increase of 40,000 troops, though unofficial estimates put the troop buildup number “at about 180,000.”
“It is unprecedented that Amarnath Yatra was canceled,” Geelani continued, referring to the Hindu pilgrimage to one of the shrines in Jammu and Kashmir. “The authorities also asked tourists to leave immediately. Schools and colleges were vacated and paramilitary troops started taking control of the area. These government orders are scary and causing deep anxiety among the local population.”
The internationally recognized disputed region of Jammu and Kashmir remained in a state of lockdown on Monday as Indian authorities suspended Internet and cellphone services in the area, cutting it off from the rest of the world.
Reacting to the situation in Indian-administered Kashmir, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said there was a threat of genocide and ethnic cleansing in the valley. He also urged the United Nations, Organization of Islamic Cooperation and international rights groups not to stay silent on the issue.