Death in custody of activist, a stain on India’s rights record-UN expert

Fri, Jul 16, 2021
By editor
2 MIN READ

Foreign

AN UN-appointed independent rights expert, Mary Lawlor has reacted following the death in custody of a renowned Catholic priest, Rev. Fr. Stan Swamy, who suffered from Parkinson’s disease.

Swamy, who was 84, was jailed in October, 2020 on terrorism charges which UN Special Rapporteur highlighting the work of human rights defenders worldwide, Lawlor, insisted were fabricated.

“The Jesuit priest faced harassment and repeated interrogations in prison and died in custody on July 5, despite requests for his release as his health deteriorated,’’ she said.

In a statement, Lawlor explained that Fr. Swamy had dedicated much of his life to defending the rights of indigenous peoples and the Adivasi minority” and that his death “will forever remain a stain on India’s human rights record”.

Lawlor said that she and other UN independent experts had approached the Indian authorities with their concerns about the case.

According to her, the priest’s illness meant that he had severe tremors in both hands and had great difficulty eating, drinking and washing.

In November, 2020, she said that his requests for a drinking straw and warm winter clothes were denied and that he contracted COVID-19 in prison.

“There is no excuse, ever, for a human rights defender to be smeared as a terrorist, and no reason they should ever die the way Fr. Swamy died, accused and detained, and denied his rights,” the Special Rapporteur said.

Swamy, originary from Jamshedpur Province, Jharkhand State, was the founder of Bagaicha, a social research and training centre in Ranchi, Jharkhand.

He had been working for decades to protect the rights of Adivasi minority indigenous peoples and the Dalit minority, in particular violations involving forced displacement and illegal land acquisitions.

“We know that defenders working on environmental, land or indigenous people’s rights are among the most vulnerable to being targeted,’’ Lawlor said.

According to the UN Rapporteur, Swamy’s case should remind all states that human rights defenders and all those detained without sufficient legal basis should be released.

The UN Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that UN Special Rapporteurs are part of what is known as the Special Procedures of the Human Rights Council and work on a voluntary basis.

They are not UN staff, nor do they receive a salary; they are independent of any government or organisation and serve purely in their individual capacity. (NAN)

– July 16, 2021 @ 08:29 GMT

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