NEPAL: A woman torture victim is at risk of further ill-treatment and torture in Morang district

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION - URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME

Urgent Appeal Case: AHRC-UAC-205-2008
ISSUES: Torture,

Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) calls for your urgent intervention to support a 38-year old torture victim Ms. Sumitra Khawas. According to the information received from the Advocacy Forum, she was arrested by the Area Police Office (APO) of Belbari in Morang district police on 9 September 2008 and allegedly tortured while in custody. There is suspicion that the police illegally arrested the victim. The AHRC is gravely concerned that she is at risk of facing further torture and ill-treatment by the police during the further interrogations. Your immediate intervention would ensure the victim’s safety.

CASE DETAILS: (Based on the victim’s testimony)

Ms. Sumitra Khawas, aged 38. Is a permanent resident of Pacham of Haraicha Village Development Committee (VDC) – 8, Morang district and works for an NGO named Paribartan Nepal based in Ithari of Sunsari district. At around 00:30am on 9 September 2008, she was arrested by the police from the Area Police Office (APO) of Haraicha in Morang district on suspicion of having killed her husband Mr. Dilip Khawas. The Haraicha APO then handed her over to the APO of Belbari for interrogation at around 11am in the morning.

According to Sumitra, three policemen in civilian clothes accused her of murdering her husband. They were: Police Inspector Mr. Tanka Prasad Bhattarai, an unidentified head police constable and a police woman whose caste belongs to Khadka. When she denied the accusation, the police inspector got furious and started beating her with a bamboo stick and punched her with his fists. Despite the beating, Sumitra maintained her innocence. The police inspector then ordered the police woman to undress her and forced her to lie on the floor. Then the police woman and the head police constable began to beat her on her on her back and buttocks with a ‘tire belt’. The police inspector also punched her faced and stamped on her thighs and feet. He also used abusive language and pressurized her to admit the murder of her husband. The more she rejected the accusation, the more the police assaulted her.

When they failed to extract a confession from her, the police inspector threatened Sumitra with torture with electricity and put a lizard inside her clothes and body. The torture continued for about two hours. The police finally stop assaulting her, while saying, “We will beat you again tomorrow if you do not confess”.

In the afternoon of September 11, the Belbari area police produced Sumitra before the Morang district court. The police then appealed for the remand of the victim for further interrogation, which was granted by the court. At around 5pm, the lawyers of the Advocacy Forum attended the court and saw Sumitra. They realised that she had been tortured. The lawyers then requested the police to interview her and collected her testimony regarding her torture by the police. During the interview, the lawyers observed multiple abrasions on her back neck and buttocks. She also sustained scratches on the right fore hand. She told the lawyer that the police broke the glasses on her hands while torturing her.

Details of Sumitra’s injuries observed by the lawyers are as follows:
 
– Swelling and multiple contusions in her back (just beneath the back neck)
– Swelling and multiple contusions in both the buttocks
– Swelling of her right eye. The eye was reddish and the lower eyelid bluish discoloration
– Minor scratches on the right fore hand
– Swelling of vein (nasa) observed in both the fore hands

During the interview, the lawyers also found that the APO of Belbari has no separate women detention facility. They also found that Sumitra did not possess both the arrest and detention letters, which made them to suspect that her arrest was illegal.

After the interview, the lawyers strongly insisted the police to provide medical treatment to Sumitra. At around 6:20pm, she was finally taken to Belbari Samudahik Swastha Sewa of Belbari VDC-2 in Morang district. The medical officer then gave her some medicine.

Currently Sumitra is still being detained at the APO of Balbari. The AHRC is gravely concerned that she is at risk of being subjected to further torture and intimidation by the police during the interrogation.

SUGGESTED ACTION:
Please immediately write to the relevant authorities listed below and express your serious concern about this case.

Please be informed that the AHRC has also written separate letter to the UN Special Rapporteur on the Question of Torture calling for urgent intervention in this case.

To support this case, please click here: SEND APPEAL LETTER

SAMPLE LETTER

Dear ___________,

NEPAL: A woman torture victim is at risk of further ill-treatment and torture in Morang district

Name of victim: Ms. Sumitra Khawas, aged 38, works at one NGO named Paribartan Nepal based in Ithari of Sunsari district, Nepal
Address of victim: Permanent resident of Pacham of Haraicha Village Development Committee (VDC)-8, Morang district, Nepal
Alleged perpetrators:
1. Police Inspector Mr. Tanka Prasad Bhattarai
2. One unidentified head police constable 
3. One female police personnel, belong to Khadka caste
All the three are attached to the Area Police Office (APO) of Belbari, Morang district, Nepal.
Date of torture: 9 September 2008 
Place of torture: APO of Belbari 
Currently detained at: APO of Belbari

I am urgently writing to draw your immediate intervention to ensure the safety of Ms. Sumitra Khawas. 

According to the information I have received, she was allegedly subjected to severe torture by the police at the Area Police Office (APO) of Belbari in Morang district, after she was arrested on suspicion of killing her husband Mr. Dilip Khawas on 9 September 2008. The policemen who allegedly implicated torture on the victim are the police inspector Mr. Tanka Prasad Bhattarai, one unidentified head police constable and one police woman whose caste belongs to Khadka.

After the Morang district court granted the remand of the victim for further interrogation on September 11, she is still being detained at the APO of Balbari where she had been allegedly tortured by the police. I am gravely concerned that the victim is at risk of being subjected to further torture and intimidation by the police. I therefore urge you to take immediate action to ensure the victim’s safety. The victim should be urgently transferred to other police station, for example Morang district police office, to ensure her safety.

I am also concerned about the brutal manner of torture and threats the police implicated on the victim. The police officers allegedly used torture as the sole method of interrogation for about two hours to extract forced confession from the victim, while failing to present any concrete and sufficient evidence against her.

I am informed that the police inspector mentioned above assaulted the victim with a bamboo stick and punched her with his fists, when she denied of accusation. The inspector also ordered the police woman to undress the victim and they along with another head police constable assaulted the victim with a ‘tire belt’. The inspector also punched her faced and stamped on her thighs and feet. The victim reported that when the police failed to extract forced confession from her, the police inspector threatened her to give electric shock on her.

The following injuries were objected by the human rights lawyers who interviewed the victim within the district court premises on September 11.

– Swelling and multiple contusions in her back (just beneath the back neck)
– Swelling and multiple contusions in both the buttocks
– Swelling of her right eye. The eye was reddish and the lower eyelid bluish discoloration
– Minor scratches on the right fore hand (The victim says that the police broke the glasses on her hands while torturing her) 
– Swelling of vein (nasa) observed in both the fore hands

I am also informed that the victim was taken to to Belbari Samudahik Swastha Sewa of Belbari VDC-2 in Morang district for medical treatment at around 6:20pm on September 11, only after the lawyers repeatedly demanded it to the police. I am further informed that the APO of Belbari has no separate women detention facility.

I am also concerned that the victim might be illegally arrested by the police. I am informed that the victim did not possess both the arrest and detention letters, when she was interviewed by the lawyers at the court premises.

In light of above, I urge you to ensure that a proper investigation is promptly made into this alleged torture incident and bring the perpetrators to justice as soon as possible when the allegation is found true. I also request that the three police officers allegedly responsible for the victim’s torture are to be suspended while the investigation is ongoing, in order to prevent any further threats or intimidation towards the victim. I further recommend the government of Nepal to enact a law criminalizing torture a crime.

Yours sincerely,

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PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:

1. Mr. Om Bikram Rana
Inspector General of Police
Police Head Quarters, Naxal
Kathmandu
NEPAL
Tel: +977 1 4412432 (Secretary to IGP)
Fax: +977 1 4415593 
E-mail: ranaob@nepalpolice.gov.np or info@nepalpolice.gov.np

2. Mr. Raghav Lal Vaidya
Attorney General 
Office of Attorney General
Ramshahpath
Kathmandu 
NEPAL
Fax: +977 1 4262582 
E-mail: attorney@mos.com.np

3. Ms. Pampa Bhusal
Minister for Women, Children and Social Welfare
Singha Durbar
Kathmandu
NEPAL
Fax: +977 1 4241516
E-mail: mowcsw@ntc.net.np

4. Ms. Nainkala Thapa
Chairperson
National Women’s Commission
Bhadrakali Plaza
Kathmandu
NEPAL
Fax: +977 1 4256783
E-mail: nwc@htp.com.np

5. Mr. Bamdev Gautam
Minister of Home Affairs
Ministry of Home Affairs
Singha Darbar, Kathmandu
NEPAL
Tel: +977 1 4211261, 4211212, 4211274, 4211249 or 4211224
Fax: +977 1 4211264 or 4211232
E-mail: homegon@wlink.com.np

6. Mr. Dev Gurung
Minister of Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs
Ministry of Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs 
Singha Durbar, Kathmandu
NEPAL
Tel: +977 1 4223727, 4224633 or 4220672
Fax: +977 1 4220684
E-mail: molaw@wlink.com.np

7. Mr. Kedar Nath Upadhaya
Chairperson 
National Human Rights Commission 
Pulchowck, Lalitpur
NEPAL
Fax: +977 1 55 47973
E-mail: complaints@nhrcnepal.org or nhrc@nhrcnepal.org

8. SSP Mr. Binod Singh 
Police HR Cell 
Human Rights Cell 
Nepal Police
Kathmandu 
NEPAL
Fax: +977 1 4415593
E-mail: hrcell@nepalpolice.gov.np

9. Mr. Richard Bennet
Representative 
The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in Nepal (OHCHR)
Museum Road, Chhauni, 
G.P.O. Box 24555, 
Kathmandu
NEPAL
Fax: +977 1 4670712 or 4670713

Thank you.

Urgent Appeals Programme
Asian Human Rights Commission (ua@ahrchk.org) 

Document Type : Urgent Appeal Case
Document ID : AHRC-UAC-205-2008
Countries : Nepal,
Issues : Torture,