One of the hardest
jobs is to come up with an appropriate name for a thing. When I decided to
start a blog for my mediocre photography I decided to name it ‘Shot At Sights’
but my blog for today had no link to it, it is stands for what actually is
meant for. However it is not ‘Shot At Sight’ but ‘Shoot at sights’.
Often it is the motto for the men in Khaki. I knew a very nice South
Indian family from Mumbai, the daughter was a dear friend of mine but the son was real
pain for the couple. Once he was arrested for his association with the
underworld. Before I returned to Kolkata I tried to give him some advice and requested
him to mend his way for his parents. During that time he narrated how police
often threatened and made them to believe that they would be taken to a dark alley and then to a cold storage.
So, the word ‘Encounter’, mostly
the truth and reality lies with the men who have the loaded gun. It is
unfair to say that all encounters are fabricated but some .. may be…. god
knows.
Encounter
An encounter is a euphemism used in South Asia especially in India
to describe extrajudicial killings in which police or armed forces shoot
down suspected gangsters and terrorists
in gun battles.
Fake Encounter
A fake encounter or
a "staged encounter" happens when the police or armed forces
kill the suspects in custody or when the suspects are unarmed, and then claim
that the victims were killed in a encounter when the police had to shoot in self-defence.
In such cases, the weapons may be planted on or near the dead body to provide a
justification for killing the individual.
Daya Nayak
There are famed
police officials who became famous only being an encounter specialist, Daya
Nayak is one of such. He rose to fame for having eliminated more
than eighty gangsters of the Mumbai underworld as a member of the Mumbai
Encounter Squad, which was created by the Maharashtra Government for
tackling the increasing problems of underworld extortion, gangwars, and
a terrible law and order situation. Before suspended from his duty, during his
tenure, he amassed huge of property. Being an ordinary sub Inspector with Mumbai
Police and an encounter specialist, such prosperity is impossible unless
the fund came through the other world rather underworld.
Bumping in Cold
Blood
In 2006, Pintu Mishra, described by the police
as a small-time criminal, was “bumped” off in Allahabad
because of his terrorists’ links.
In 2007 an 18-year
old boy, Abdul Rehman, was killed in Srinagar by the security forces for being
hand in glove with the Jaish-e-Mohammad.
Sohrabuddin
Sheikh
In the wee hours of
26 November 2005, Sohrabuddin Sheikh was gunned down by the police on
the outskirts of Ahmedabad. The Gujarat Government claimed that he was a member
of the Lashkar-e-Toiba and was on a mission to kill Chief Minister
Narendra Modi.
Batla House
Encounter
Batla House
encounter is still haunting
the government is officially known as Operation Batla House, took place
on 19 September 2008, against suspected Indian Mujahideen (IM) terrorists
in Batla House locality in Jamia Nagar, Delhi, in which two suspected
terrorist, Atif Amin and Mohamed Sajid were killed while two
other suspects Mohd Saif and Zeeshan were arrested, while one
accused Ariz Khan managed to escape. Encounter specialist and Delhi
Police inspector Mohan Chand Sharma, who led the police action was also killed
during the incident.
Ishrat Jahan
The Ishrat Jahan
encounter case refers to the encounter killing of four people claimed to be Lashkar-e-Toiba
(LeT) operatives by the Ahmedabad Police Crime Branch in 2004. The
victims included Ishrat Jahan Raza, a 19-year old college girl from
Mumbai, and three men: Pranesh Pillai , Amjad Ali Rana and Zeeshan
Johar. Multiple judicial inquiries by Indian authorities, in 2009 and 2011,
concluded that the encounter was fake, and the victims were killed in police
custody.
!!!Encounter of the Bloodiest kind!!!
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