Srinagar: More than six months after a controversial encounter in Srinagar left four persons dead, the Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh high court on Friday, May 27, allowed the family of the third slain man to exhume his body to perform last rites.
Citing extensively from the verdicts of the Supreme Court that the “right to dignity and fair treatment under Article 21 of the Constitution of India is not only available to a living man but also to his body after his death,” the court allowed the family of Aamir Lateef Magray to exhume his body.
“The parents and close relations of the deceased are well within their right to demand the dead body of their dear one to be cremated or buried as per their traditions, religious obligations and religious belief. This right would also include the choice of the relatives to have the dead body cremated or buried at his native place,” the court ruled.
Mohammad Lateef Magray, father of Aamir, had approached the high court in December 30 last year, seeking the mortal remains of his son. In his petition, filed by advocate Deepika Singh Rajawat, Lateef told the court that he had approached “all authorities for handing over the body of his deceased son but nobody listened to him.”
“We are happy with the verdict,” Lateef, Aamir’s father, told The Wire over phone from his residence in Jammu’s Ramban district. “We don’t need any compensation. We only want to bring his body home. My son will not return from the dead but at least his grave will be in front of our eyes so we can offer prayers for him there.”
Aamir, who was making a living by doing menial jobs in Srinagar, was among four persons – including a suspected Pakistani terrorist identified by J&K Police as Haider alias Bilal Bhai – who were gunned down in Hyderpora on the outskirts of Srinagar by security forces on November 15 last year.
Security forces had claimed that Aamir was an active terrorist while the other two slain persons – Mohammad Altaf Bhat, the owner of the building where the shootout took place, and Dr Mudasir Gul who had taken up a portion of the building on rent for his call centre and land brokerage firm – were associates of terrorists.
The J&K Police told the court that a Special Investigations Team which probed the encounter “firmly established” the involvement of the three persons in terrorist activities. However, the families of the three men have denied the claims.
After the encounter, the bodies of all the four persons were buried overnight on November 15 in a remote village in Handwara, some 90 kilometres from Srinagar, even though eyewitness accounts, reported by The Wire, had disputed some of the claims of security forces about the sequence of events that led to the encounter.
Also read: J&K Police Affidavit Shows Army Made Contradictory Claim on Hyderpora ‘Gunfight’ Intelligence
Following intense protests in Kashmir which saw a rare coming together of the civil society, activists and mainstream political parties, the bodies of Altaf and Gul were exhumed on November 18, 2021, and returned to their families.
‘Arbitrarily turned down’
In its ruling, the high court observed that the J&K Police “have not come clear as to why the dead bodies of two of the four killed in the encounter” were exhumed and handed over to their relatives and “why the similar right claimed by the petitioner was denied.”
The J&K Police had told the court that the bodies of Altaf and Gul were handed back to their families because they were only associates of terrorists. “I do not find any logic or sense in distinction so made by the respondents,” the court observed.
“Since the petitioner was a resident of Gool, a remote village in Jammu Province and did not much stay in the Valley and, therefore, his request was arbitrarily turned down. The action of the respondents is not traceable to any procedure established by law which is just, fair and equitable. At least none was brought to the notice of this Court. The decision of the respondents not to allow the petitioner to take away dead body of his son to his native village for last rites was per-se arbitrary and falls foul of Article 14 of the Constitution of India,” the court ruled.
The J&K Police had objected to returning the mortal remains of Aamir to his family due to “apprehension of law and order getting vitiated” but the J&K high court observed in its order that these apprehensions “appear to be illusory.”
“When the respondents (J&K Police) could maintain the law and order situation when the dead bodies of…Altaf and Dr Mudasir were…handed over to their relatives…it is not difficult for the respondents to make necessary arrangements for exhumation of the dead body of Amir Latief Magrey,” the court observed.
Also read: After Outrage, J&K Admin Returns Bodies of Businessmen Killed in Hyderpora Shootout
Lateef, Aamir’s father, told the court that he is “ready to undertake that he will abide by all the terms and conditions that may be imposed by the respondents (J&K Police) with regard to exhumation, transportation and according of burial to the dead body.” The court told the police to “make appropriate arrangements to ensure that law and order situation does not get vitiated.”
He told the court that he has “all along remained associated with Indian Army and other security agencies and were instrumental in elimination of militants in his area.”
The court ruled that the administration can “impose any reasonable terms and conditions in respect of exhumation, transportation and burial of the dead body” to his native village. “Since the dead body of the deceased must be in advance stage of putrefaction, as such, it would be desirable that the respondents act with promptitude and do not waste any further time.”
“However, if the body is highly putrefied and is not in deliverable state or is likely to pose risk to public health and hygiene, the petitioner and his close relatives shall be allowed to perform last rites as per their tradition and religious belief in the Wadder Payeen graveyard itself.”
“In that situation, the State shall pay to the petitioner a compensation of Rs 5 lakhs for deprivation of his right to have the dead body of his son and give him decent burial as per family traditions, religious obligations and faith which the deceased professed when he was alive,” the court ruled.
J&K’s Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha had set up a Special Investigations Team to probe the controversial encounter whose findings have not been publicly revealed so far. A magisterial inquiry was also ordered to investigate the encounter.
“We don’t even know what is in the magisterial report. Our family approached the governor’s office in January for the copies of all the reports like the first FIR, autopsy and ballistic reports. I have been requesting them to give us these reports but they have not responded so far,” said Saima Bhat, niece of Altaf.