The UP police claim that it has seized over ₹146 crore from ‘gangsters’ in the state in a matter of 11 months deserves closer scrutiny as allegations mount of arbitrariness in seizing properties
ON THE EVENING of November 7, 2017, Ishraq Shaikh, a local realtor in a village in Azamgarh district, UP, had just come home after work and was getting started to play a game of carrom with his nephews. It was around 6.30 and the game had just begun when two men walked up — one held a pistol and the other an AK-47 — and held a gun to his head and asked, “Who is Ishraq?” He got up and introduced himself. “We want you to turn over the Pakistani you are harbouring,” they said.
The two intruders, claiming to be members of the Special Operations Group of the UP police, were suddenly joined by several others. “They bound my hands, those of my children, my wife and mother,” he recalled. The police, according to Ishraq, ransacked his house, took his cellphones (five), ₹25,000, his wife’s jewellery and ₹41,000 from his mother. This was not the end of the officers’ avarice. In search of more, they broke through all the trunks in the house. They took everything back to the police station, including his nephews.
The arrest was registered as an encounter and his land, money and other assets seized. Three months later, the 28-year-old was released from prison. According to the Gangster Act of 1986, properties and assets can be seized only if they have been gotten through illegal income. Also, such property has to be released within three months if documents of legal acquisition can be shown. While the 40-odd ‘gangsters’ who have been killed in encounters will not claim their property, there are many others who have been discharged and who are still battling to regain control over their physical assets.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 2018-Ausgabe von Hardnews.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 2018-Ausgabe von Hardnews.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
The Making Of A Hard State
By ratcheting up nationalistic sentiments to a fever pitch, the BJP is trying to reap political dividends.
The Business Of Encounters
The UP police claim that it has seized over ₹146 crore from ‘gangsters’ in the state in a matter of 11 months deserves closer scrutiny as allegations mount of arbitrariness in seizing properties
Cases 1000, 2000, 3000, 4000: What Is Happening To Netanyahu
Everything you need to know about the cases against Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu
India's Botched-up Id Project
The SC verdict in the ongoing case to ascertain the constitutional validity of Aadhaar will have far-reaching consequences
A 'Softer' Islam, For A Moderate Modi
DESPITE BEING UNDERRATED and under editorialised by the Indian media, there is nothing that anyone can really take away from the importance of the event organised by the Indian Islamic and Cultural Centre (IICC) to provide a forum for the visiting King of Jordan, His Majesty, King Abdullah II, to expound his views on the moderate nature of Islam and the imperative to fight radical Islam.
Net Neutrality and an Open Internet
In recent years, the campaign to maintain citizen's right to the Internet - and protect them from practices that would benefit only a few - has become firece and noisy.
Referendum on Cash Ban
If early polling is anything to go by, then the assembly elections across five states could mean an all or nothing scenario for the BJP
changing the demonetisation narrative like a chameleon changes colours
no matter what the spin around the note ban, it is clear the move was a politically expedient decision rather than a principled policy move.
Come and See The Blood In The Streets
Incidents of violence targetting the minorities have become routine in the last 16 months. Prime Minister Modis government has done little to shun the belief that the culprits dont enjoy its patronage.
The Gates of Memory: Two Hundred Years Of Silence
People take part in a ceremony at the monument "The Gates of Memory"near the village of Trostenets.