EDITORIAL
COVER STORY
- A Precious Gift to Humanity
INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY
- The Other Side of the Kingdom
- Convention Now!
AFAD FEDEFAM
Together Now!
- Tying the Future with the Past
- Getting Back on Track
INTERNATIONAL LOBBY
- Still Fighting
- In Memory of the Disappeared
- The Power
of One
PHOTO ESSAY
- Protect All Persons From Enforced Disappearances
NEWS FEATURES
- Building on Nilo’s Legacy
- Filipinos Fight Against Disappearances
- Justice Suspended
- The Munir Murder
- Another Case of Impunity
STATEMENTS
/REPRINTS
- FEDEFAM Statement...
- An Open Statement to the GRP and NDFP Panels ...
- Parvez Imroz’ Award...
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances Against
Involuntary |
STATEMENTS |
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Prix International des droits de l’homme
Ludovic-Trarieux 2006
Ludovic-Trarieux International Human Rights Prize 2006
Premio Internacional de Derechos Humanos Ludovic Trarieux 2006
Internationalen Ludovic-Trarieux-Menschenrechtspreis 2006
Prêmio Internacional de Direitos Humanos Ludovic Trarieux 2006
Premio Internazionale per i Diritti Umani Ludovic Trarieux 2006
Ludovic Trarieux Internationale Mensenrechtenprijs 2006
"The award given by lawyers to a lawyer "
Parvez IMROZ
Ludovic-Trarieux International Human Rights Prize 2006
The European lawyers members of the Jury of the "LUDOVIC-TRARIEUX
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS PRIZE » meeting in Brussels Court’s House, on
Friday 2 June 2006 awarded the eleventh « Ludovic-Trarieux » Prize,
created in 1984 (first prize winner Nelson Mandela then in jail) and
awarded every year to a lawyer, regardless of nationality or Bar, who, by
his work, will have illustrated his activity or his suffering, the defence
of human rights, of defence rights, the supremacy of law, the struggle
against racism and intolerance in any form and given jointly by the HUMAN
RIGHTS INSTITUTES OF THE BAR Of BORDEAUX, BRUSSELS, PARIS and the EUROPEAN
BAR HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTE ( IDHAE), awarded the Prize 2006 to Parvez
Imroz, a human rights lawyer and a civil rights activist in Srinagar, the
capital of Jammu and Kashmir, who, since the end of the eighties, has
initiated and led campaigns for human rights in a context of grave
violations, including killings, tortures and rapes, or forced
"disappearances" with impunity
Parvez Imroz is founder and President of the Jammu and
Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS) that works to build local
alliances between Kashmiri civil society groups.
The following was the list of the Jury for 2006 : :
Bâtonnier Bertrand Favreau, Président, Bâtonnier John Bigwood (Bruxelles),
Bâtonnier Henri Ader (Paris), President Woijciech Hermelinski ( National
Polish Bar Council Warsaw), Bâtonnier Manuel Ducasse (Bordeaux), President
Mario Lana (Roma), President Lucy Winskell (Law Society of England and
Wales - London), Präsident Bernd Haüsler (Rechtsanwaltskammer Berlin),
Bâtonnier Robert De Baerdemaeker (Brussels), Bâtonnier Georges-Albert Dal
(Brussels), Christophe. Pettiti IDHBP (Paris), Julia Bateman (London),
Brigitte Azema Peyret, (Bordeaux), Hélêne Szuberla, (Bordeaux), Nicole
Dehry, IDHBP (Paris), Isabelle Huet, IDHBP (Paris), Marie-France Guet,
IDHBP (Paris), Reginald de Beco (Brussels), Raymond Blet, (Bordeaux),
Philippe Froin, (Bordeaux), Frédéric Krenc (Brussels)
The Prize will be presented in October 2006 in France.
Biography :
Parvez Imroz is a human rights lawyer and a civil
rights activist in Srinagar, the capital of Jammu and Kashmir. He
graduated in Science from Srinagar in the year 1972 and then got his LLB
degree at the Law College Aligarh Muslim University in 1975. Imroz joined
the J&K High Court as a lawyer in 1978. Since the end of the eighties, he
has initiated and led campaigns for human rights in a context of grave
violations, including killings, tortures and rapes, or forced
"disappearances" with impunity. He is founder and President of the Jammu
and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS) that works to build local
alliances between Kashmiri civil society groups.
In response to the large volume of parents at the Jammu
and Kashmir High court who were filing or pursuing habeas corpus
petitions, Imroz founded in 1994 the Association of Parents of Disappeared
Persons (APDP), which brings together hundreds of Kashmiri families whose
members have been the victims of Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances (EID).
The APDP is a campaigning organization that seeks truth and justice on
this human rights issue in Kashmir. The APDP is not a human rights group
but an association of those suffering by the State’s tactics and they are
campaigning for knowing the whereabouts of their missing relatives. Any
person related to a victim of a disappearance could be a member of the
association. The association has no political affiliations or political
positions; it is an independent group seeking justice and information from
the state.
Parvez Imroz has lost four colleagues in seven years at
the hands of the security forces. Imroz senior partner, H N Wanchoo, was
assassinated in the early 1990s, and on April, 12, 1995, Parvez Imroz was
shot when he was driving home after visiting a friend some eight
kilometres away from Srinagar. Two men armed with automatic weapons
signalled him to stop. Imroz sped up, and as he passed beyond them, he was
hit in the upper left back. He lost control of the car and stopped in
front of a mosque. Someone came out of the mosque and drove Imroz to the
SMHS hospital. Fragments of AK-56 bullets were found in Imroz’s upper
back, and his left lung was damaged. After six days, Imroz was transferred
to a hospital in Delhi, where he remained for fifteen days. When he
returned to Srinagar, several militants of Hezb-ul Mujahedin apologized
for shooting him, claiming that it was a case of mistaken identity. He was
tempted to quit.
One year later, on March 8, 1996, Imroz had tea with
another High Court lawyer specialising in human rights, Jalil Andrabi.
Thirty minutes later, Andrabi and his wife were stopped by a unit of the
35 Rashtriya Rifles (35RR), an Indian paramilitary force.
On July 18, 2001, Imroz realized his dream, in Srinagar,
he laid the foundation stone of a monument built by the APDP, in memory of
Kashmiri men who have gone missing in the past 12 years of violence. In
less than eight-hours, Indian police razed the foundation.
Parvez Imroz did not resign and founded the Public
Commission on Human Rights (PCHR) that works extensively on the
documentation of human rights violations and the dissemination of the
information through its monthly dossier "The Informative Missive."
The PCHR also provides
free legal assistance to the victims of human rights violations. The PCHR
has published a comprehensive report on Human Rights situation in Kashmir,
which includes the time period of last 16 years. Besides documentation,
the commission is providing free legal assistance to the victims of human
rights violations. Thousands of victims have been benefited from the
PCHR’s free legal assistance.
Recently, in April 2003, Imroz organized a worldwide
hunger strike, coordinated in different cities across the world, pressing
for an end to disappearances, prosecution of perpetrators, and appointment
of a commission to probe into all enforced disappearances. During the
hunger strike, the APDP received the letters of solidarity from the civil
society groups from India and abroad.
In March 2004, the Association of Disappeared Persons
organised a protest in Srinagar. Violent protest demonstrations followed
alleged police high- handedness and over a dozen people, mostly women,
were injured. Witnesses said that police targeted women in a procession by
the APDP heading towards the office of the United Nations who were
demanding for the fate of their relatives who had gone missing in police
custody during the last 13 years. Soon after the procession started from
the APDP office, police used force to disperse it. Over a dozen women and
the APDP patron, Parvez Imroz, were injured. Later police arrested 10
women and Parvez Imroz and they remained in custody for 7 hours.
On April 30, 2005, Imroz came out with a statement that
he is receiving death threats from an unidentified man he called a
government-sponsored gunman who came to his house at Kralpora area and
that the Indian army and the Jammu and Kashmir government are conspiring
to kill him.
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The
Voice |
Vol. VI No.1 November 2006
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