Human Rights
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Human Rights Watch Index No.: ISBN 1-56432-032-4. August 1, 1991
Violence between separatist Sikh militants and government forces in
Punjab has escalated to unprecedented levels, claiming thousands of
civilian lives. Since 1984, the security forces have adopted
increasingly brutal methods to stem the militant movement, resulting in
widespread human rights violations. Countless civilians and suspected
militants have been summarily executed in staged “encounter” killings or
have “disappeared” while in police custody; thousands have been detained
without trial and subjected to torture. The evidence Asia Watch gathered
indicates that these abuses are not random but have been carried out as
a matter of state policy. At the same time, Sikh militants have pursued
their campaign for a separate state through acts of violence against
Hindu and Sikh civilians. The killings include assassinations of civil
servants, political candidates, and journalists. Militant groups have
also engaged in indiscriminate attacks designed to cause extensive
civilian casualties and some operate as criminal gangs, profiting by
extortion and arms smuggling.
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