Academics, European Union parliamentarians, Nobel laureates and other figures of international prominence have written a letter to the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Chief Justice of India, the chief minister of Maharashtra and other Indian authorities demanding the release of political prisoners arrested in connection with the Bhima Koregaon.
Expressing concern over the incarceration of human rights defenders in prisons in India under “deplorable hygiene conditions” and the absence of appropriate medical care, the letter said that political prisoners were at grave risk of contracting the new and more virulent strain of coronavirus.
The letter, which is addressed to several Indian authorities and copied to the EU Commissioner for Human Rights and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, sought that the temporary administrative order to release prisoners in light of the outbreak of COVID-19 be applied to India’s political prisoners as well.
The signatories to the letter included noted academic and linguist Noam Chomsky, former President of the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention José Antonio Guevara-Bermúdez, Nobel laureates Olga Tokarczuk and Wole Soyinka, Columbia University professor Partha Chatterjee, Brown University professor Ashutosh Varshney, human rights activist Shahidul Alam, former editor-in-chief of The Guardian UK Alan Rusbridger and journalist Naomi Klein.
The letter pointed out that overcrowded prisons with a shortage of water and medical equipment posed a serious health risk to political prisoners – many of whom had already contracted COVID-19 and reported a significant deterioration of their health.
“In a moment of unprecedented national calamity, we ask for decisive action by the government and court to set the BK-16 at liberty to avert further tragedy,” the signatories said and stressed that the political prisoners were facing a “humanitarian emergency”.
“Two of the BK-16 were recently shifted to multi-specialty hospitals after intense advocacy from family members and concerned citizens,” the signatories said and also referred to poet Varavara Rao, who received temporary bail on medical grounds after he was hospitalised for several weeks.
Among those arrested in connection with the case include Sudhir Dhawale, a writer and Mumbai-based Dalit rights activist, Mahesh Raut, a young activist from Gadchiroli who worked on displacement, Shoma Sen, who had been head of the English literature department at Nagpur University, advocates Arun Ferreira and Sudha Bharadwaj, writer Varavara Rao, activist Vernon Gonsalves, prisoners’ rights activist Rona Wilson, Surendra Gadling, a UAPA expert and lawyer from Nagpur, Father Stan Swamy, Delhi University professor Hany Babu, scholar and activist Anand Teltumbde, civil liberties activist Gautam Navlakha, and members of the cultural group, Kabir Kala Manch: Sagar Gorkhe, Ramesh Ghaichor and Jyoti Jagtap.
The entire statement has been reproduced below.
❈ ❈ ❈
10 June 2021
We urge the immediate release of human rights defenders in India into safe conditions
Accounting for almost a third of deaths from Covid-19 worldwide, the situation in India is grave. We are alarmed that a number of human rights defenders who are currently awaiting trial in Indian jails have developed serious health issues in jail owing to over-congestion and neglect, absence of appropriate medical care, and deplorable hygiene conditions. These political prisoners are now at great risk of contracting the virulent strain of the virus — which some have already contracted — and will have no access to prompt medical care that is necessary to save lives. We therefore urgently seek that the temporary administrative order to release prisoners due to the pandemic be applied to political prisoners in India. We strongly believe that by turning a blind eye to the toll exacted by Covid on those it holds in its custody, the government is in violation of its constitutional duty to safeguard the life of these citizens.
Among the thousands in India arrested for “political offences” is a group known as the Bhima-Koregaon (BK)-16: four academics, three lawyers, two independent journalists, a union organizer and social activist, a poet, three performing artists, and a Jesuit priest. A majority of them are senior citizens, some of whom have comorbidities that render them particularly vulnerable. All are human rights defenders with a record of writing, speaking and organizing for the rights of workers, minorities, Dalits, and Adivasis through peaceful and constitutional means. As the deadly second wave of Covid rages, with an equally serious third wave anticipated, the overcrowded prisons face severe water shortage and lack the medical equipment and personnel necessary to fight Covid. At least six of the arrested have contracted Covid-19, others have reported various acute infections and a rapid deterioration of health. Two of the BK-16 were recently shifted to multi-specialty hospitals after intense advocacy from family members and concerned citizens. Last year, one of the 16, an 80-year old poet, received temporary bail on medical grounds after weeks of hospitalization, at a moment when it was feared that he may die in custody.
In a moment of unprecedented national calamity, we ask for decisive action by the government and court to set the BK-16 at liberty to avert further tragedy. When the prison is unable to provide for the health and safety of the prisoners, the family has a right to offer such care as they deem necessary. None of the prisoners is deemed a flight risk. We acknowledge that while the Bombay High Court allowed three of the 16 arrested to be transferred to private hospitals, there is a humanitarian emergency facing all these political prisoners, whose lives are in grave danger from Covid-19.
With this letter, we call on the Indian authorities to take urgent and prompt action:
Release the BK-16 from overcrowded and unsafe prisons immediately.
Allow them to be cared for by their kin.
Show compassion and responsibility in order to avoid catastrophic consequences.
Ensure them their constitutional right to live and die in dignity.
Signatories
- José Antonio Guevara-Bermúdez, Former President of the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
- Olga Tokarczuk, Polish writer, Nobel Prize for Literature 2018
- Wole Soyinka, Nigerian writer, Nobel Prize for Literature 1986
- Margrete Auken, Member of the European Parliament
- Idoia Villanueva, Member of the European Parliament
- Alviina Alametsä, Member of the European Parliament
- Lord Harries of Pentregarth, Member of the House of Lords, UK
- Caroline Lucas, Member of Parliament, UK
- Apsana Begum, Member of Parliament, UK
- Clive Lewis, Member of Parliament, UK
- Mick Barry, TD, Member of the Irish Parliament
- Michel Brandt, Member of the German Bundestag
- Eva-Maria Schreiber, Member of the German Bundestag
- Heike Hänsel, Member of the German Bundestag and Vice-President of Left Parliamentary Group, Germany
- Christine Buchholz, Member of the German Bundestag and deputy member of the Committee on Human Rights and Humanitarian Aid
- Mattea Meyer, Member of the Swiss Parliament
- Cédric Wermuth, Member of the Swiss Parliament
- Fabian Molina, Member of the Swiss Parliament
- Tamara Funiciello, Member of the Swiss Parliament
- Pierre Yves-Maillard, Member of Swiss Parliament, President of the Swiss Trade Union Federation
- Katharina Prelicz-Huber, Member of Swiss Parliament, President of the Swiss trade union VPOD-SSP
- (Rt Revd Dr) Rowan Williams FBA, Former Archbishop of Canterbury, Former Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge
- Revd Ted Penton, SJ, Secretary of Justice and Ecology, Jesuit Conference of Canada and the United States
- Vania Alleva, President of the Swiss trade union Unia
- Noam Chomsky, Institute Professor and Professor of Linguistics Emeritus, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA
- Homi K. Bhabha, Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of the Humanities, Harvard University, USA
- James Silk, Binger Clinical Professor of Human Rights, Yale Law School, USA
- Gyan Prakash, Dayton-Stockton Professor of History, Princeton University, USA
- Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor, Department of Comparative Literature, University of California at Berkeley, USA
- Signe Kjelstrup, Principle Investigator, Center of Excellence, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway
- Arjun Appadurai, Paulette Goddard Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication, New York University, USA
- Faisal Devji, Professor of Indian History, University of Oxford, UK
- Talal Asad, Distinguished Professor, City University of New York, USA
- Gyanendra Pandey, Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor, and Director, Interdisciplinary Workshop on Colonial and Postcolonial Studies, Emory University, USA
- Victor Wallis, Professor, Berklee College of Music, USA
- Michael Morris, Chavkin-Chang Professor of Leadership Management, Columbia University, USA
- Ashutosh Varshney, Sol Goldman Professor of International Studies and the Social Sciences, Brown University, USA
- Ash Amin, Professor of Geography, University of Cambridge, UK
- Partha Chatterjee, Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University, USA
- Akeel Bilgrami, Sidney Morgenbesser Professor of Philosophy, Professor, Committee on Global Thought, Columbia University, USA
- Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University, USA
- Maryse Condé, French-Guadeloupean novelist and laureate, Professor Emerita, Columbia University, USA
- Paula M. L. Moya, Danily C. and Laura Louise Bell Professor of the Humanities, Stanford University, USA
- Ueli Maeder, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, Former Dean at the University of Basel, Germany
- Joshua Castellino, Executive Director, Minority Rights International and Professor of Law, Middlesex University, London
- Wolfgang Kaleck, Lawyer and Author, Berlin, Germany
- Alan Rusbridger, Former Editor-in-Chief, the Guardian UK and board member, Committee to Protect Journalists
- Naomi Klein, Journalist, Author, Filmmaker, Activist, and Gloria Steinem Chair in Media, Culture, and Feminist Studies, Rutgers University, USA
- Vince Warren, Lawyer, New York, USA
- Jennifer Robinson, Barrister, UK
- Alejandra Anchieta, Founder and Executive Director, ProDESC, Mexico
- Sarah Ahmed, British-Australian Writer and Independent Scholar
- Srećko Horvat, Philosopher and Council Member, Progressive International
- Ilija Trojanow, Bulgarian-German Writer
- Amit Chaudhuri, Novelist, Essayist, and Musician
- Shahidul Alam, Photographer, Writer, Curator and Human Rights Activist
- Ahdaf Soueif, Novelist, Political and Cultural Commentator
Endorsing organizations
- InSAF India (International Solidarity for Academic Freedom in India)
- India Civil Watch International (ICWI)
- Sikh Council UK
- PEN Canada
- English PEN
- PEN International
- American Sociological Association
- Hindus for Human Rights
- Global Secular Hindu Forum
- Solifonds Switzerland
To:
The Hon’ble Chief Justice of India,
Justice N.V. Ramana,
Supreme Court of India,
Tilak Marg, New Delhi 110001
The Hon’ble Chief Justice,
Justice Dipankar Datta,
105 Bombay High Court,
(P.W.D.) Building, Fort, Mumbai 400032
The Hon’ble Justice A.A.Sayed,
Member of the High Power Committee,
105 Bombay High Court,
(P.W.D.) Building, Fort, Mumbai 400032
The Hon’ble Prime Minister of India,
Mr Narendra Modi,
Prime Minister Office,
South Block, Raisina Hill, New Delhi 110011
The Hon’ble Home Minister of India,
Mr Amit Shah,
Ministry of Home Affairs,
North Block, Raisina Hill, New Delhi 100011
The Hon’ble Chief Minister of Maharashtra,
Mr Uddhav Thackeray,
Maharashtra CM Office,
Government of Maharashtra,
6th Floor, Mantralaya, Nariman Point, Mumbai 400032
The Hon’ble Home Minister of Maharashtra,
Mr Dilip Dattaray Walse-Patil,
Mantralaya, Nariman Point, Mumbai 400032
Mr Anand Limaye,
Additional Chief Secretary, Home (Appeal and Security),
Member of the High Power Committee,
Home Department, Mantralaya, Nariman Point, Mumbai 400032
Shri Sunil Ramanand,
Additional Director General of Police (Prisons),
Member of the High Power Committee,
OId Central Building, 2nd Floor, Pune-1
(Courtesy: The Wire.)