NEPAL: A child is in danger after he is tortured by the family of a policeman; his lawyers are threatened

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION - URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME

Urgent Appeal Case: AHRC-UAC-104-2010
ISSUES: Child rights, Human rights defenders, Torture,

Dear friends, 

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) is extremely concerned for the safety and health of a young boy, after he was badly tortured by the family of a police inspector. The 14 year old boy worked as a domestic helper in the house of Police Inspector Chet Bahadur Pathak in Kathmandu, and was violently interrogated and brutally assaulted by his employers. After his rescue by local people we are told that the lawyers of several organizations who helped him were threatened, and that Maoist-affiliated persons have influenced the handing of the boy to his aunt, who returned him to the house of his abusers. The condition of the boy is currently unknown. 

CASE NARRATIVE

According to the information we have received from the Advocacy Forum, an NGO, Ghan Shyam Mahato, 14, had been working as a domestic helper in the house of Police Inspector Chet Bahadur Pathak in Kathmandu Metropolitan-6, Tenzing chowk, Kapan, Kathmandu district since 30 September 2009. A few days after his arrival, his employers reportedly started scolding and beating him for small mistakes. It is reported that he has never received any salary for his work. 

It is alleged that on 2 June 2010, Inspector Pathak’s wife Ms. Sushila Pathak, 42, her married daughter Ms. Pramila Pathak, 22, son Mr. Pramod Pathak, 20, and brother-in-law Mindhoj Karki, 30, accused the boy of having stolen NRS 60,000 from them and assaulted systematically, interrogation-style, him from 9am to 1.30pm to make him confess to the theft. The child denied the accusations. 

We are told that at first Pramod Pathak reportedly punched and kicked the victim while questioning him about the location of the stolen money; then Ms. Shusila Pathak and Ms. Pramila Pathak systematically burned him with hot iron rods. We are told that Ms. Shushila Pathak also involved her brother Mr Mindhoj Karki, after which the boy was held by his hands and legs, and the soles of his feet were cut with blades, before sour-mixed salt was poured on his wounds. 

At this point persons living in the same house were alerted by the screams of the boy and went to inquire. 

The boy eventually managed to run away and found shelter in a nearby stationery shop where he told the shopkeeper about the torture. However the Inspector’s son Pramod arrived took the boy back to his house and detained him there. We are told that he was gagged with a scarf. Nevertheless, local people eventually managed to enter the house and take him to Kanti Bal Hospital, Kathmandu. He was admitted, and placed under the care of CIWIS, an organisation working in the child sector. 

On 3 June 2010, some local people filed a case at the Metropolitan Police Circle (MPC), Boudha, under Public Offence Act 2027 on behalf of the victim. The next day, eight organisations working in the human rights and the children sectors – after pressuring the Chief District Officer – jointly filed an FIR at the Metropolitan Police Circle, Boudha, under an Attempt to Murder charge. 

At first, three of the perpetrators, Ms. Sushila Pathak, Ms. Pramila Pathak and Mr. Pramod Pathak, were remanded for five days by the District Administration Office. When the charge was amended to Attempt to Murder, the case was subsequently transferred to the district court. On 1st July Mr. Pramod Pathak and Ms. Pramila Pathak were released on Rs. 8.000 bail and Ms. Sushila Pathak was sent to jail on trial. An arrest warrant is pending against Mindhoj Karki who is absconding. 

However worryingly, the lawyers representing the victim claim to have been threatened several times by the families of the perpetrators, who have links with the Maoists. On 5 July, CIWIS representative Mr. Pradeep Dongol, one of the lawyers who took part in the boy’s rescue and who filed the FIR, was manhandled by persons known to the perpetrators. Deepak Karki, Mindhoj Karki’s brother, warned the lawyers that they would destroy their organisation if his relatives were sentenced to jail. 

We are further informed that the Maoists-affiliated lawyers and supporters further intervened in the case, claiming that they were acting on behalf of civil society, to demand that the boy should be handed over to his aunt. The perpetrators’ side further tried to settle the case by offering Rs. 3 lakhs as compensation. 

On 3rd June, 2010 the Chief District Officer (CDO) wrote a formal letter to CIWIS asking them to take care of the boy. However, on 5th July, the boy was presented again before the CDO who ordered that he be handed over to his aunt. The aunt then informed the CDO of her decision to leave the boy in the house where he had been tortured. Although the boy refused to return there, she was allowed to leave with him, and on 6 July 2010 he was returned to Mindhoj Karki, the absconded perpetrator’s residence. His location and whereabouts are now unknown. 

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: 

Threats and intimidation against individuals and lawyers taking up issues of human rights violations are common in Nepal. The Advocacy Forum website indicates that within one year, the organisation has reported 19 incidents relating to the security of its staff alone. 

The absence of a mechanism designed to protect the victims reporting their case, their relatives, their lawyers or their witnesses, coupled with the general climate of impunity which continues to prevail in the country allows threats and harassment of human rights defenders to perpetuate. Regular interference of political parties within the course of justice since the end of the conflict adds to those elements to create a situation in which the independence of lawyers is regularly encroached upon and which further exposes them within the process of their work. In April 2009, for instance, the Young Communist League cadres in Surkhet district physically interrupted a court hearing demanding rigorous punishment of a suspect and locked-up his lawyer, Mr. Nanda Ram Bhandari, in his chamber. There was great concern when the police refused to register any case against those who had hampered the trial. 

The 1990 Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers remind in their article 16(a) that ‘governments shall ensure that lawyers are able to perform all of their professional functions without intimidation, hindrance, harassment or improper interference’ and in their article 17 that ‘where the security of lawyers is threatened as a result of discharging their functions, they shall be adequately safeguarded by the authorities’. It is therefore a governmental obligation to create an environment favourable to the independent exercise of the legal profession. 

This case makes it very clear that the intervention of a third party within the course of justice negatively impacts the rights of the victim, on one hand leading the CDO to take a decision in clear contradiction to the victim’s interest (his being handed over to his aunt) and on the other hand through the intimidation of his lawyers hampering his rights to a legal remedy, entrenched in the article 2.3 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. 

SUGGESTED ACTION: 

Please join us in writing to the authorities listed below to ask for the protection of the child and the human rights lawyers defending his case and for the sanctioning of the perpetrators. 

Please be informed that the AHRC is writing a separate letter to the Special Rapporteur on Human Rights defenders.

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

SAMPLE LETTER

Dear __________, 

NEPAL: A child is in danger after he is tortured by the family of a policeman; his lawyers are threatened 

Name of victim:
Ghan Shyam Mahato, 14, son of late Shival Mr. Ram Mahato and late Ms. Pako Mahato, a permanent resident of Khajurgachi VDC-8, Jhapa district 
Names of alleged perpetrators: 
1. Ms. Sushila Pathak, 42, wife of Inspector Chief Bahadur Pathak, resident of Kathmandu Metropolitan-6, Tenzing chowk, Kapan, Kathmandu district 
2. Ms. Pramila Pathak, 22, daughter of Ms. Sushila Pathak 
3. Mr. Pramod Pathak, 20, son of Ms. Sushila Pathak 
4. Mindhoj Karki, 30, brother of Ms. Sushila Pathak 

Date of incident: 2 June 2010 
Place of incident: Inspector Chief Bahadur Pathak’s house, Kathmandu Metropolitan-6, Tenzing chowk, Kapan, Kathmandu district 

I am writing to voice my deep concern regarding the case of Ghan Shyam Mahato, a 14 year old domestic helper who had been working in Police Inspector Chet Bahadur Pathak’s house since 30 September 2009. According to the information I have received from the Asian Human Rights Commission, a few days after his arrival, his employers reportedly started scolding and beating him for small mistakes. It is reported that he was never paid for his work. 

I am informed that on 2 June 2010, Inspector Pathak’s wife Ms. Sushila Pathak, 42, her married daughter Ms. Pramila Pathak, 22, son Mr. Pramod Pathak, 20, and brother-in-law Mindhoj Karki, 30, accused the boy of having stolen NRS 60,000 from them and allegedly brutally abused him from 9am to 1.30pm to make him confess to the theft. The child denied the accusations. 

I am further told that at first Pramod Pathak reportedly punched and kicked the victim while questioning him about the location of the stolen money; then Ms. Shusila Pathak and Ms. Pramila Pathak systematically burned him with hot iron rods. Ms. Shushila Pathak also reportedly involved her brother Mr Mindhoj Karki, after which the boy was held by his hands and legs, and the soles of his feet were cut with blades, before sour-mixed salt was poured on his wounds. 

At this point persons living in the same house were alerted by the screams of the boy and went to inquire. 

The boy eventually managed to run away and found shelter in a nearby stationery shop where he told the shopkeeper about the torture. However the Inspector’s son Pramod arrived took the boy back to his house and detained him there, where he was reportedly gagged with a scarf. Nevertheless, local people eventually managed to enter the house and take him to Kanti Bal Hospital, Kathmandu. He was admitted, and placed under the care of CIWIS, an organisation working in the child sector. 

I am further informed that on 3 June 2010, some local people filed a case at Metropolitan Police Circle (MPC), Boudha under Public Offence Act 2027 on behalf of the victim. The next day, eight organisations working in the human rights and the children sectors, after pressuring the Chief District Officer jointly filed an FIR at the Metropolitan Police Circle, Boudha, under the Attempt to Murder charge. 

At first, three of the perpetrators, Ms. Sushila Pathak, Ms. Pramila Pathak and Mr. Pramod Pathak, were remanded for five days by the District Administration Office. When the charge was amended under Attempt to Murder, the case was subsequently transferred to the district court. On 1st July Mr. Pramod Pathak and Ms. Pramila Pathak were released on Rs 8.000 bail and Ms. Sushila Pathak was sent to jail on trial. An arrest warrant is pending against Mindhoj Karki who is absconding. 

I am concerned to hear that the lawyers representing the victim have been threatened several times by the perpetrators who claim links to the Maoists. On 5 July, CIWIS representative Mr. Pradeep Dongol, one of the lawyers who took part in the boy’s rescue and who filed the FIR, was manhandled by persons known to the alleged perpetrators. Deepak Karki, Mindhoj Karki’s brother, reportedly warned the lawyers that he would destroy their organisation if his relatives were sentenced to jail. 

I am further informed that the Maoists affiliated lawyers and supporters intervened in the case, claiming that they were acting on behalf of the civil society, to demand that the boy should be handed over to his aunt. The perpetrators’ side further tried to settle the case by offering 3 lakhs rupees as compensation. 

I know that although on 3rd June 2010 the Chief District Officer (CDO) had written a formal letter to CIWIS asking them to take care of the boy, on 5th July, the boy was presented again before the CDO who ordered to hand him over to his aunt. Nevertheless, the aunt informed the CDO of her decision to leave the boy in the house where he has been tortured. As the boy refused to return there, she took him with her instead of leaving him in the child center. On 6 July 2010 the boy was kept in Mindhoj Karki, the absconded perpetrator’s residence. Now his whereabouts are not known. 

I therefore urge you to immediately intervene in this case by making sure that the safety of Ghan Shyam Mahato is secured, that the issue of his custody should be settled according to the child’s best interest and that his opinion is given priority in that process. I also hope this case will draw the government’s attention to the daily violations of the rights of the children employed as domestic workers in the country. 
Moreover, adequate protection must be guaranteed to the victim and his lawyers during the course of the trial to ensure that his right to legal remedy is respected. 

I am aware that threats against human rights defenders and lawyers are serious obstacles to the realisation of human rights in Nepal. I would like to point out that lawyers, witnesses, or victims reporting their cases are further exposed by the absence of a mechanism designed to protect them. In this case, the pressure of third parties within the course of justice has already led the CDO to take a decision which negatively affected the interest of the victim by resulting in having him staying at one of the house of one of the alleged perpetrators. Moreover offering a compensation to settle the case and intimidating the lawyers directly hampers the right to a legal remedy of the victim, entrenched in the article 2 of the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights. 

I know that according to the article 16(a) of the 1990 Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers ‘governments shall ensure that lawyers are able to perform all of their professional functions without intimidation, hindrance, harassment or improper interference’ and in their article 17 that ‘where the security of lawyers is threatened as a result of discharging their functions, they shall be adequately safeguarded by the authorities’ and that it is therefore a governmental obligation to create an environment favourable to the independent exercise of the legal profession. 

I am looking forward to your intervention in this matter. 

Yours sincerely, 

—————- 

PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO: 

1.Mr. Ramesh Chand Thakuri 
Inspector General of Police 
Police Head Quarters, Naxal 
Kathmandu 
NEPAL 
Fax: +977 1 4415593 
Tel: +977 1 4412432 (Secretary to IGP) 
E-mail: info@nepalpolice.gov.np, phqigs@nepalpolice.gov.np 

2. Dr. Bharat Bahadur Karki 
Attorney General 
Office of Attorney General 
Ramshahpath, Kathmandu 
NEPAL 
Fax: +977 1 4262582 
Tel: +977 1 4262506 
Email: attorney@mos.com.np 

3. Mr. Kedar Nath Upadhaya 
Chairperson 
National Human Rights Commission 
Pulchowk, Lalitpur 
NEPAL 
Fax: +977 1 55 47973 
Tel: +977 1 5010015 
E-mail: complaints@nhrcnepal.org or nhrc@nhrcnepal.org 

4. Mr. Sarbendra Khanal 
Superintendent of Police 
Police HR Cell 
Nepal Police, Kathmandu 
NEPAL 
Fax: +977 1 4415593 
Tel: +977 1 4411618 
E-mail: hrcell@nepalpolice.gov.np 

5. Mr. Bhim Rawal, 
Home Minister, 
Ministry of Home Affairs, 
Singha Darbar, 
Kathmandu, 
NEPAL 
Fax: +977 1 42 11 232 
Tel: +977 1 4211211 / 4211264 

6.Mr. Sarva Dev Prasad Ojha 
Minister for Women, Children and Social Welfare 
Singha Durbar, Kathmandu 
NEPAL 
Fax: +977 1 4241516 
Tel: +977 1 4241728/4241551 
E-mail: info@mowcsw.gov.np 

Thank you. 

Urgent Appeals Programme 
Asian Human Rights Commission (ua@ahrc.asia) 

Document Type : Urgent Appeal Case
Document ID : AHRC-UAC-104-2010
Countries : Nepal,
Issues : Child rights, Human rights defenders, Torture,