Police in India’s North-Eastern state of Nagaland disclosed that 30 soldiers are facing charges for the killing of six tribal people who were mistaken for armed rebels during an anti-insurgency operation last year (2021).
Nagaland Police Chief, TJ Longkumer, said on Sunday, June 12, 2022, that the soldiers resorted to “disproportionate firing” during the operation that killed the six tribal men. The Police Chief disclosed to reporters in the state capital, Dimapur, that “Investigations revealed that the operation team had not followed the standard operating procedure and the rules of engagement”.
The police investigation was launched after 13 members of Nagaland’s predominant Konyak tribe, and a member of the security forces was killed in two separate incidents in December 2021, which started when soldiers mistook a group of local workers for armed rebels entering Indian territory from neighbouring Myanmar.
How it Happened
The bloodshed began when six labourers returning from work in a truck were mistakenly killed by soldiers during an ambush in the state’s Mon district. Seven other tribal people were then gunned down when local villagers, who became angered after the discovery of the bullet-riddled bodies of the six men in an army truck, clashed with the soldiers.
A charge-sheet has been filed to prosecute the 30 accused members of the military involved in the killings, the police chief said, adding that the “sanction for prosecution is still awaited” from the court. As it stands, no spokesperson for the Indian Army is immediately available for comment. However, a Defence Ministry official in New Delhi intimated that the case is before India’s courts which will make the final decision on prosecution.
Chemwang Konyak, whose son was one of those killed, said the police bringing charges against the soldiers proved the army “were at fault”, according to one of the local media outlets. “But now the big question is will they be punished?” Chemwang Konyak asked.
“We are anguished and in agony. Will we get justice? We urge upon the government to allow this case trial to take place quickly so that we get justice.”
Chemwang Konyak, a man whose son was one of those killed
India’s Disturbed Areas
Thousands of military personnel are deployed in India’s North-East, a remote region which is home to a complex web of tribal groups and many rebel groups and separatist movements, which have accused New Delhi of plundering the region’s natural resources and doing little to improve the lives of the local population.
India’s Supreme Court in 2017, ordered an investigation into 1,528 cases of alleged extrajudicial killings between 2000 and 2012 by police and security forces in Nagaland’s neighbouring state, Manipur, which is also under the Armed Forces Powers Act (AFSPA). The AFSPA gives the armed forces sweeping powers to search and arrest, and to open fire if they deem it necessary in “disturbed areas”. As such, the allocation of “disturbed areas” status under the AFSPA has existed in parts of seven North-Eastern states for many years.
Starting in 2015, the federal government removed AFSPA entirely from the states of Tripura and Meghalaya, and partially from Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Nagaland, and Manipur. However, despite the removal, the act is still in force in Mon district where the six were killed in December 2021.
Since the killings, protests have intensified in the North-East, calling for the complete revocation of AFSPA, which has loomed large over the region since 1958 and gives many areas the feeling of occupied territory, locals disclosed.
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