February 7, 2013

INDIA: POLICE OFFICERS RUN HUMAN TRAFFICKING CARTEL

[The Kerala state police have been adamant so far that it must be the agency entrusted with the responsibility of immigration control at the Kochi International Airport. This important airport in India, is one of the exceptional places where the state police runs the immigration processes. In most other international terminals in India, the Central Intelligence Bureau (IB) operates the immigration wing. Police officers accused of criminal activities in the international terminal at Kochi airport is not a new phenomenon.]


A number of 28 police officers from the Kerala State police is accused of running a human trafficking cartel in the state. This felonious syndicate run by police officers is linked with international criminal cartels that supply women, children, and men. It is estimated that about 300 victims have been trafficked out of India by this criminal gang. Officers directly linked with human trafficking belong to all ranks, like Superintendent of Police, Deputy Superintendents, Circle Inspectors, Sub Inspectors and constables. This gang has been in operation for at least the past six years and many among them were stationed at the Kochi International Airport, exclusively responsible for immigration clearance of travellers.

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has consistently opined that the single largest impediment to internal security in India is the country's police unless drastic measures are taken to refine the police. The above incident is the latest proof to AHRC's assertion, in the form of confession of one of the police officers charged with the offence, Mr. A. P. Ajeeb.

The Kerala state police have been adamant so far that it must be the agency entrusted with the responsibility of immigration control at the Kochi International Airport. This important airport in India, is one of the exceptional places where the state police runs the immigration processes. In most other international terminals in India, the Central Intelligence Bureau (IB) operates the immigration wing. Police officers accused of criminal activities in the international terminal at Kochi airport is not a new phenomenon.

For instance, there have been cases in the past where police officers stationed in immigration counters at Kochi accused of allowing persons to enter or exit the country without recording it in their travel documents. On each such occasion, even if the matter was reported in the local media, it would soon be internally hushed up and nothing heard any further. Not surprisingly, Deputy Superintendent of Police, Mr. N. V. Somarajan, who investigated the human trafficking case initially, is also part of the criminal syndicate. This too is revealed in Ajeeb's confession.

This case has all the footprints of the decayed policing system in India. It is a practice in India for the police officers to be entrusted with jobs that they are not expected, equipped, or trained to do. One may argue that the police in India is neither equipped nor trained to undertake law-enforcement as required in a fast developing democracy. In fact, such performance is not expected of the police, since the national policing policy, is to forcefully impart the writ of those in power, for which the police is encouraged to use brute force with impunity.

For this, rules are negated, even at the risk of national security, just as it is reported in the Kochi incident. It is nothing less than a sign of anarchy in governance and polices, that today, police is the least accountable and its policies absolutely non-transparent in the country.

An additional symptom of the anarchy is in the practice of the police investigating allegations against the police. With what figment of trust could Indians expect their police, notorious for committing crimes, to be honest and professional in investigating crimes alleged against them? The very concept lacks both honesty and is unprofessional. It is just that both the police and the government fail to admit it. The statement by one of the linchpin in the human trafficking network that operated in Kerala affirms this assumption.

That be so, the additional question that is to be asked is why did them the government, and the then Director General of Police allow the case to be investigated by a relatively low-ranking officer, a Deputy Superintendent of Police? What prevented the state government from requesting for assistance from the central government or of its agencies to undertake an investigation? On the other hand, is it so that both the governments as well as the police are complicit in allowing the police to get away with crimes they commit? The logical answer to these questions should be nothing less than an emphatic yes.

The Kochi human trafficking incident brings forth the following questions:

(i) Persons of questionable backgrounds, unsafe to be entering or leaving India could have passed through the Kochi International Airport with the knowledge of police officers who were stationed at the airport, with no other mandate, but to prevent it. The state government, its police or the central government have no means to know who these people are and when and where they have went, irrespective of whether they travelled into the country or out of it;

(ii) There is no way to trace the victims of human trafficking, since many must have left on fake documents. So far, the government has not attempted to trace the victims. The government is extremely handicapped in this since it has no trustworthy records to depend upon to trace the victims' identities internally, nor can the government request any foreign governments for information since it does not know who came from where and went where;

(iii) The investigations so far have revealed huge sums of money being transferred between accounts of private individuals, police officers of various ranks, and their relatives. Will the government be able to recover this money from the officers? So far, there has been no attempt in this direction;

(iv) Above all, what immediate action has the government done, now that such a serious crime has been unearthed? Would there be actions taken by the government to bring accountability in police actions?;

(v) Are the officers named, their actions specified in the confession statement placed on suspension?;

Unfortunately, in India none of this is possible. This is why it is justified in saying that law enforcement in India is nothing more than uniformed anarchy. No state or its people will remain  secure with such a police force.
India is no exception.
***

[Following the assassination of the monk two persons suspected of the murder, Sujeewa Gunnaratna (29) and Chandima Nuwanratna, were allegedly arrested by the Mount Lavinia police and later their bodies were found on an isolated road at Bandaragama. They had both been shot in the back of the head indicating an execution-style killing. The Chief Magistrate of Kalutera conducted the inquest at the location where their bodies were found and ordered a post mortem inquiry to be conducted by a Judicial Medical Officer. According to the JMO's report the deaths were due to shooting causing serious injuries. ]   

The chief monk of Sunandonanda of Egodauyana, Moratuwa was assassinated by a group of persons on the evening of February 4. According to reports there had been a prolonged dispute over a piece of land that the chief monk claimed he had the title for where a number of families had erected their huts. They claimed to have been living there since the Tsunami of December, 2004.

Complaints relating to the dispute had been lodged earlier at the Moratuwa Police Station by both parties and the inquiries were ongoing. Both parties were supporters of the government. It appears that they were both relied on strong men in the employment of their respective patrons in the government. The hut dwellers had complained to various organisations stating that they feared that the chief monk was attempts to evict them.

Following the assassination of the monk two persons suspected of the murder, Sujeewa Gunnaratna (29) and Chandima Nuwanratna, were allegedly arrested by the Mount Lavinia police and later their bodies were found on an isolated road at Bandaragama. They had both been shot in the back of the head indicating an execution-style killing. The Chief Magistrate of Kalutera conducted the inquest at the location where their bodies were found and ordered a post mortem inquiry to be conducted by a Judicial Medical Officer. According to the JMO's report the deaths were due to shooting causing serious injuries.

Following their deaths their relatives complained that there were difficulties in burying the two as the Kalutera Pradeshiya Sabha (the town council) refused to grant permission for the burial at the Attawilawatte graveyard. According to reports the police had to intervene to find a suitable place by legal means in which to bury the bodies.

Later, seven persons including a Pradeshiya Sabha vice president were arrested as suspects of this monk's murder and were produced in court.

These incidents raise several issues of serious concern in relation to the function of policing in Sri Lanka. First of all the dispute between the chief monk and the hut dwellers had been a long one and it should have been the duty of the police to intervene in order to settle it in such a way as to ensure peace between the two parties. It appears that the police, as usual, were hamstrung by the political influence different parties and failed to provide protection to the individuals. If such protection was provided the brutal assassination of the chief monk might have been avoided.

Following the assassination two persons were arrested and, as mentioned above, they were killed in an execution style shooting. The killing of persons after arrest, not a new phenomenon in Sri Lanka, has been reported in recent months in several places such as Galle after a horrifying murder where four persons were found dead with similar execution-style injuries. It was also reported that, in fact, the four persons had no connection to the killing in question. At Kahawatte where there had been a large number of mysterious killings, three of the persons who were arrested on suspicion of some of the killings were disposed of after they had obtained bail from court in a similar manner.

It appears that such killings of arrested persons happens particularly where incidents causing public scandal and fear take place and the law enforcement authorities have to create the impression that they are doing something to deal with such crimes. The public dissatisfaction with the police and criticism about their inaction has now led to this kind of dramatic execution, perhaps with the view to prevent the public reacting to such crimes by taking the law into their own hands.

The weakening of the policing system due to political influence has created situations where violence results in the creation of shocking crimes and the breakdown of the police investigative system has placed the police in the situation where they have to deal with severe public dissatisfaction over such events. To appease the public they resort to such execution-style killings.

The basic function of a government is to provide security to the people. When it proves incapable of doing so disputes among people lead to violent clashes and as a result society is gripped with insecurity. In Sri Lanka the failure of the government to maintain the rule of law has now created this bewildering social specter.

During the colonial times a basic legal apparatus was created and that legal apparatus provided basic security to the people with the ability of the law enforcement agencies to control crime. What the British did in constructing such a legal framework was to put into effect certain theoretical premises arrived at through the lessons learned from their past experiences. Already in 1651 Thomas Hobbes writing his highly acclaimed book, Leviathan explained the reason for the origin of government on the basis of the peoples need for self preservation which is achieved through the transfer of power to a government to ensure the protection of all. From then on a basic theoretical construct developed about the state's role in protection and how societies can collapse into anarchy when the states fails to carry out this role.

It is the signs of anarchy that are witnessed in Sri Lanka today as a result of the government's abandonment of the maintenance of the basic public institutions which are necessary for social stability. In 2001 the Sri Lankan Parliament unanimously recognised that such a situation of social instability was developing in Sri Lanka due to the operation of the 1978 Constitution. The parliament proposed the 17th Amendment to the Constitution whereby several measures were proposed to at least, partially deal with this problem. The government of Mahinda Rajapaksa, through the 18th Amendment abandoned these measures and did not create any alternative to strengthen the basic public institutions such as the police.

This basic disregard for the maintenance of the public institutions that sustain the law and thereby create social stability was again manifest by the way in which the Chief Justice, Shirani Bandaranayke was removed and a new CJ was appointed. The entire operation was done with shocking disregard for the established legal premises.
The result of all this is the multiple forms of insecurity as manifested in the murder of the chief monk and the execution style assassination of the two men. The rapid plunge into a situation of anarchy is manifested through many such incidents that take place routinely in Sri Lanka.