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'POTO is more draconian than TADA'
By Our Special Correspondent
TIRUPATI, NOV. 24. The South Asian Human Rights Documentation
Centre (SAHRDC), which is the secretariat of the Asia Pacific
Human Rights Network, has, in its ``executive summary'',
submitted to the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) that the
Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance (POTO) is more draconian than
the TADA in many respects.
The most striking difference, according to the report, was that
while the TADA was reviewed every two years, there was no
provision for review of POTO for five years. Further, it was not
confined to any specified territory or situation. The executive
director of the SAHRDC, Mr. Ravi Nair, in an exclusive interview
to this correspondent reeled out a long list of provisions in the
POTO which posed a serious threat to the rights and freedom of
individuals.
For instance, the POTO can be applied even in cases of murder,
robbery or theft that would normally be covered under the IPC.
There were also provisions that threatened the freedom of press
such as punishment for failure of disclosure of information of
material assistance to the prevention, apprehension and
prosecution of an alleged terrorist, it said.
Another provision empowered the government to declare an
organisation as ``terrorist organisation'' without any obligation
to furnish evidence. Significantly, the onus to disprove the
contention rested on the so-called accused. A provision gave
powers to the Centre not only to constitute special courts for
the trial of POTO detenus, but also to ``interfere'' with regard
to the scope of the jurisdiction of the courts.
The special court had the discretion to draw an adverse inference
from the refusal of the accused to give samples of handwriting,
fingerprints, footprints, photographs, blood, saliva, semen, hair
or voice. It denied the benefit of ``presumption of innocence''
clause. The special court can proceed with trial even in the
absence of the accused or his lawyer. It can deny to the accused
his right to appeal or the right to represent. The court can hold
in-camera trails to keep the identities of the witnesses a
secret, the report said.
According to the SAHRDC document, ``The ordinance can easily be
used by the state to silence peaceful political dissent and
target minorities.'' Any anti-terrorist legislation must be
subject to international scrutiny, the Government should ratify
the First Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights and the Convention Against Torture and
withdraw reservations to Articles 20, 21 and 22 of the Convention
Against Torture.
The ordinance must be subject to review by Parliament every year
and must be withdrawn from the statute books if it failed to meet
its objectives, the document maintained.
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