(CPJ/IFEX) – According to CPJ, on 18 July 1998, Assamese editor Ajit Kumar Bhuyan was assaulted by armed men. Bhuyan was threatened, his residence ransacked, and his family terrorized by the incident, which is the latest in a series of arrests and threats made against Bhuyan in recent years. Bhuyan, the editor of the Assamese-language […]
(CPJ/IFEX) – According to CPJ, on 18 July 1998, Assamese editor Ajit Kumar
Bhuyan was assaulted by armed men. Bhuyan was threatened, his residence
ransacked, and his family terrorized by the incident, which is the latest in
a series of arrests and threats made
against Bhuyan in recent years.
Bhuyan, the editor of the Assamese-language weekly newspaper “Natun Samoy”,
was at
home with his family in Guwahati on Saturday, 18 July 1998, at around 8:45
p.m. (local time), when a group of about 20 armed men in civilian clothes
surrounded his residence. They shouted at the family in Hindi to come
outside and threatened to open fire if the order was not obeyed.
Once the occupants left the house with their hands raised, the armed men
forced Bhuyan to accompany them inside the house. They searched and
ransacked the entire three-story building, which also houses the offices of
Bhuyan’s newspaper. According to Bhuyan, nothing was taken from the
residence or the office.
Bhuyan later told reporters that he felt his life was in danger and that he
was being targeted because of his newspaper’s criticism of the Indian Army
in Assam. “I strongly feel that the Army has become a constant threat to the
lives of honest Indian citizens who have been speaking out for the oppressed
masses”, he said.
After the raid, military authorities in Assam faxed a letter to local
newspapers denying responsibility for the incident. “It is likely that some
people may be operating in various places posing as Army personnel and
conducting ‘raids'”, the fax said. Bhuyan was informed privately by local
police officials that they had no prior knowledge of or involvement in the
raid, despite laws that require army units to be accompanied by local police
or magistrates on investigative raids.
Bhuyan believes that those who participated in the attack were soldiers
because they spoke Hindi, which is not the local language, and because he
recognized one of the men as an army captain. Other than the brief denial
sent to the newspapers, no official statements explaining the incident have
been made by police, military, or governmental authorities.
As a well-known journalist in Assam, Bhuyan’s stinging attacks on the Indian
army and local corruption have frequently brought him into conflict with the
government. He was arrested four times in 1997 under various national
security laws. He was arrested the same year for complicity in the
kidnapping and murder of social activist Sanjay Ghosh. In each instance, he
was released and never tried nor convicted of any crime (see IFEX alert of
23 October 1997).
The current attack on Bhuyan has a chilling similarity to events prior to
the 1996 murder of Assamese editor Parag Kumar Das, with whom Bhuyan worked
closely. Before he was killed, Das had been repeatedly charged with crimes
for which he was never tried and his home was raided by military
authorities. His murder remains unsolved (see IFEX alert of 22 May 1996).
CPJ decries the harassment of Bhuyan and fears that without immediate
intervention by higher authorities, Bhuyan may be killed.
Recommended Action
Send appeals to the Prime Minister:
investigation into the raid on Bhuyan’s home and office and to make the
findings of that investigation public
Appeals To
His Excellency Atul Vajpayee
Prime Minister of India
Office of the Prime Minister
South Block
New Delhi 110 011, India
Fax: +91-11-301-6857
Please copy appeals to the source if possible.