Indian
police torture, says US cable
Saturday December 18, 2010 05:32:30 PM,
IANS
|
New Delhi: Indian security agencies torture
prisoners to extract information, partly because forensic science
is weak in the country, says a leaked US embassy diplomatic cable.
India is weak in forensic science and has few trained police
officers who can handle such data, said the April 2006 cable
leaked by WikiLeaks.
The rest of the information is obtained through confessions,
mainly by threats or torture, it said.
"Forensics is weak in India - only two DNA labs service the entire
country," it pointed out.
"Few police officers outside major cities are trained in
safeguarding and exploiting electronic data although this capacity
is expanding under indigenous cyber-security training and
cooperative training with US government agencies," says the cable
posted in The Guardian newspaper.
It says "as a consequence, terrorism investigations and court
cases tend to rely upon confessions, many of which are obtained
under duress if not beatings, threats, or, in some cases,
torture".
These factors, along with a "creaky and corrupt judiciary",
contribute to cases lingering in the courts for years.
The leaked embassy cable, however, says that India was a
"voracious consumer" of the US State Department's Anti-Terrorism
Assistance (ATA) training.
India has "digested 42 courses involving 900 Indian security
officials and accepting some $10 million in equipment transfers
since 1995".
But the "sheer size of India's police, paramilitary, and other
security agencies at the state and federal levels guarantees that
an abundance of first responders and investigators will be behind
the training curve".
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