Indian doctor Binayak Sen released from prison on bail
26 May 2009
Dr Binayak Sen, who spent two years in an Indian prison as a Prisoner
of Conscience, was released on Tuesday after being granted bail by the
Supreme Court.
Welcoming Dr Sen's release on bail, Amnesty International believes that
the charges against him are baseless and politically motivated. Amnesty
International has repeated its call on the Indian authorities to
immediately drop all the charges against Dr Sen.
Dr Sen, who was held in Raipur prison in the central Indian state of
Chhattisgarh, thanked Amnesty International and other human rights
organizations that have been campaigning for his release. He said he
would continue to defend human rights in Chhattisgarh despite possible
threats to his life from "state and non-state actors".
The 59-year-old is a pioneer of health care to marginalized and
indigenous communities in Chhattisgarh, where the state police and
armed Maoists have been engaged in clashes over the last six years.
He was arrested on 14 May 2007 on politically motivated charges, aimed
at stopping his human rights work, after he met with an imprisoned
leader of a banned Maoist organization.
His earlier meetings with an imprisoned Maoist leader, on which some of
the charges against him were based, had all been facilitated by the
prison authorities.
"Dr Sen's prolonged imprisonment is a glaring example of how the Indian
authorities misuse security legislation to target activists," said
Madhu Malhotra, Deputy Director of Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific
Programme.
"These laws are open to abuse as they contain vague and sweeping
definitions of 'unlawful activities'. Under no circumstances should
work that peacefully defends human rights be termed an 'unlawful
activity'."
Prior to his arrest, Dr Sen had criticized the state authorities for
enacting special security legislation - the Chhattisgarh Special Public
Safety Act, 2005 (CSPSA).
He had also reported on unlawful killings of adivasis (Indigenous
People) by the police and by Salwa Judum, a private militia widely held
to be sponsored by the state authorities to fight the armed Maoists.
The state authorities have so far failed to conduct effective and impartial investigations into these unlawful killings.
Dr Sen was detained without proper charges for seven months, denied
bail, and kept in solitary confinement for three weeks. Many of the
charges against him stem from laws that contravene international
standards. Repeated delays in the conduct of his trial have also
heightened doubts about its fairness. Meanwhile, Dr Sen had asked for
specialist medical treatment for his heart ailment.