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Indian People's Tribunal

The Indian People's Tribunal (IPT), also called the Indian People's Tribunal on Environmental and Human Rights or Independent People's Tribunal, was a People's Tribunal set up by the Human Rights Law Network (HRLN) on 5 June 1993.[1] The IPT is an unofficial body led by retired judges who form a panel that conducts public enquiries into human rights and environmental abuses. It provides an alternative outlet for the victims faced with official obstruction and delays.[2] Since being founded the IPT has conducted numerous investigations into cases of relocation of rural people to make way for dams or parks, eviction of slum dwellers, industrial pollution and communal or state-sponsored violence.

Indian People's Tribunal
Formation5 June 1993; 30 years ago (1993-06-05)
TypeNGO
Location
Region served
India
Parent organisation
Human Rights Law Network
Websitewww.iptindia.org

Foundation edit

The parent body of the Indian People's Tribunal is the Human Rights Law Network, a collective of lawyers and social activists who promote human rights in India and neighbouring countries.[3] The objectives of the IPT when it was founded in 1993 were to "encourage victim communities to fight for their rights ... highlight the imperatives of equity and human dignity in the search for true development ... and highlight the environmental and human rights abuses being perpetuated on communities and individuals by the ruling elite in pursuit of unsustainable 'development' objectives".[4] The IPT was to be a permanent body that would fight the inertia and bureaucracy of the government and the legal system through public-interest litigation and public awareness campaigns.[2]

Activities edit

The IPT acts as a "people's court", an alternative to the formal justice system, conducting investigations on many types of issue and recommending remedial actions. It gives a voice to the people affected.[5] Retired judges head the IPT. They are given direction by a council of experts. Grassroots organisations throughout India provide support. In a typical enquiry a team will visit the site and meet with affected people, then conduct a public hearing where all involved parties are asked to give information.[citation needed] Later, the IPT issues a formal report with findings and recommendations.

Sample investigations and reports edit

Rural evictions and relocations edit

 
Haridwar seen from Chilla Range, Rajaji National Park. The city has growing firewood demand.[6]

In 1994 the IPT investigated the Rajaji National Park, where the authorities wanted to remove the Gujjars who had traditionally lived in the forest. The tribunal met forest officials, scientists, NGO staff and the Gujjars. A former supreme court justice, P.S. Poti, prepared the IPT report, which recommended that the Gujjars be allowed to stay but assisted if they decided to leave. This would require a change to the laws, which specified that no humans could live in a national park.[4] Justice Poti interviewed the many stakeholders, showed the complexity of the issues, and showed that moving the residents out of the forest would not guarantee its survival.[7]

 
The Sardar Sarovar Dam undergoing height increase in 2006

The Sardar Sarovar Dam project on the Narmada River in Gujarat was highly controversial, involving displacement of many people. In 1994 S.M. Daud, a retired justice of the high court of Mumbai, visited the area and wrote a report for the IPT. He described the "indiscriminate arrests, beatings, confinements and prohibitory orders" to which local opponents of the project were being subjected. He said that unless these abuses ceased "the victims may be tempted to take to arms and add to the troubles faced by an already beleaguered nation."[8][9]

In March 1999 the IPT investigated the condition of tribal people who had accepted an offer by the government to relocate eight years ago when a dam had submerged their land in the Narmada River Valley. The people had been promised equal amounts of land at the new site, payment to cover the cost of the move, building materials and infrastructure such as water supplies, schools and so on. The hearing found that none of these promises had been fulfilled.[10] In April 2004 the IPT issued a report in which it recommended to the national and state governments that they cancel the Kudremukh national park project due to the impact on tribal people resident in the region.[11]

In June 2010 the IPT released a report documenting results of an investigation of large-scale dam projects like Sardar Sarovar, Indira Sagar, Omkareshwar and Jobat. The public hearings were headed by Ajit Prakash Shah, former Chief Justice of Delhi. The report described forced displacement of the local people without land-based rehabilitation. It documented "serious non-compliance on the pari-passu implementation of rehabilitation and environmental measures" and other violations of the law.[12]

Slum evictions edit

 
Dharavi Slum in Mumbai

The IPT has asserted that all citizens have the right to have a place to live, and on this basis has campaigned against slum clearances.[13] In August 1995 Justice Hosbet Suresh, a retired judge of the Bombay high court, issued a report titled Forced Evictions – An Indian People's Tribunal Enquiry into the Brutal Demolitions of Pavement and Slum Dwellers' Homes.[14] Early in 1999 the Indore authorities began a vigorous slum clearance drive, removing slum dwellers from legal pattas they had been given by the state government. Judge K. Sukumaran of the IPT visited the rehabilitation sites and prepared a report on his findings.[15]

A 2005 report titled Bulldozing Right documented the fact that many of the Mumbai abuses documented in 1995 continued ten years later.[16] Between November 2004 and February 2005 over 300,000 people were evicted from "illegal land" and their dwellings destroyed. In the past these people had received electricity and other services from government agencies, and had repeatedly paid off the police. The 2005 IPT report said of the impact on children that many suffered "post-demolition trauma" and could drop out of the school system altogether.[17]

Industry and pollution edit

 
Cooling towers of RGPPL power plant near Dabhol

In April 1998 the IPT issued a report on Enron in India, documenting police action and criminal proceedings against opponents of the Dabhol Power Station.[18] In 1999 the IPT issued a report titled Who Bears the Cost? Industrial and Toxic Pollution in the Golden Corridor of Gujarat. The "golden corridor" is the 400 kilometres (250 mi) industrial corridor along the western coast of Gujarat.[19] Among other findings, a 2001 enquiry into the Bandra Worli Sea Link Project noted that motorways and flyovers benefit the 9% of families who owned cars. Others suffer from increasing pollution.[20]

The SIPCOT chemical industry estate in Cuddalore, Tamil Nadu, was investigated in November 2002 by an IPT team headed by J. Kanakaraj, a retired Madras high court justice. The team reported "a noticeable stench of chemicals in the air". Their report was published in July 2003. It found that "Villages like Kudikadu, Thaikal, Eachangadu and Sonnanchavadi lie in a virtual 'gas chamber' surrounded on three sides by chemical factories and bounded on the fourth by the river".[21] In a 2008 report the retired secretary for water resources in the national government claimed "reason to believe that in 2000–01 the World Bank worked actively to sabotage the Report of the World Commission on Dams".[22]

The IPT held a three-day session in September 2011 on a proposed nuclear power plant and mines in Jaitapur. The local administration resisted the hearings, refusing to allow the IPT to enter the affected villages and arresting local leaders. However, the high court gave permission for the hearings to proceed. At the hearing local people talked about the issues they were facing, and people came from other states to talk about how they had been affected by similar projects.[23] The tribunal found that the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report was inadequate and recommended preparation of a fresh and complete EIA. Work should be stopped while this was being done.[24]

Violence edit

 
Angana Chatterji received threats for her work on the tribunal

In June 2005 the IPT set up a tribunal in Orissa on the communal situation led by K.K. Usha, a former Chief Justice of the high court of Kerala and the first woman to serve in this role.[25][26] It was convened by Angana P. Chatterji, an academic based in San Francisco, and Mihir Desai, an advocate of the high court of Mumbai.[25] Activists from the Sangh Parivar disrupted the hearing in Bhubaneswar.[citation needed] In a letter to the National Human Rights Commission of India, Chatterji said threats were faxed from the state office of the Vishva Hindu Parishad. The fax said the tribunal was a group of "leftists, fellow travellers and Hindu baiters". It went on "The inclusion of an NRI[fn 1] well-known for anti-Hindu activities in the US suggests foreign funds from sources bent on destabilising the country".[27] Chatterji alleged that Hindu nationalist activists threatened to rape tribunal members and to parade them naked in the streets.[28][29] K.K. Usha and fellow tribunal member R.A. Mehta, a former Acting Chief Justice of the High Court of Gujarat, called the incident "shocking, outrageous and highly deplorable".[30]

The tribunal conducted its investigation for almost twenty months and released its report in October 2006. It describes massive mobilisation of the Sangh Parivar, a Hindutva group, against Muslims and Christians, often justifying their actions on the basis of fabricated threats from the minorities. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh had been promoting Hindu supremacy using force and coercion.[25] According to Dr. Chatterji, "Forcible conversions to dominant Hinduism, social and economic boycotts, tonsuring, physical intimidation and violence, arson, and even murder are the weapons that Sangh Parivar cadre wields to intimidate and target disenfranchised groups and religious minorities such as Adivasis, Dalits, Christians, and Muslims". The report recommended that the national and state governments treat communalism in Orissa as an emergency requiring immediate attention.[25] Later Subash Chouhan, a Bajrang Dal leader, said his group and the Vishva Hindu Parishad would stop Chatterji from conducting further research.[31]

The HRLN and ANHAD conducted a Tribunal in Srinagar on 20–21 February 2010 that investigated human rights violations in the Kashmir Valley. Justice H. Suresh, a former Judge of the Bombay High Court, headed the jury. A comprehensive report of the findings was released in New Delhi on 8 September 2010. The report documented excessive militarisation, with one soldier for every twenty people. It found that the soldiers receive no punishment for acts of violence they commit against innocent people.[citation needed] The report said "in Kashmir, arbitrary arrests, detention, torture and custodial deaths, rape and midnight raids into homes and disappearances have become routine". The report recommended withdrawal of the draconian laws, a drastic reduction in the number of troops and institution of legal processes by which justice could be done.[citation needed]

Members edit

Some notable people who have served on the tribunals:

  • Angana P. Chatterji (born November 1966), anthropologist and left-wing activist
  • Siraj Mehfuz Daud (1 January 1931 – 10 May 2010), former judge in the high court of Bombay
  • Mihir Desai, advocate in the high court of Bombay and the Supreme Court of India
  • Colin Gonsalves, senior advocate of the Supreme Court of India
  • V. R. Krishna Iyer (born 1 November 1915), former judge in the Supreme Court of India
  • J. Kanakaraj (born 1936), former judge of the high court of Madras
  • R. A. Mehta (born 1936), former judge of the high court of Gujarat
  • Sudhir Pattnaik, editor of the Oriya magazine Samadrushi, a political fortnightly
  • Padmanabhan Subramanian Poti (2 February 1923 – February 1998), former Chief Justice of the high courts of Kerala and Gujarat
  • Ram Puniyani (born 25 August 1945), professor in biomedical engineering
  • Rajinder Sachar (born 22 December 1923), former chief justice of high court of Delhi
  • P. B. Sawant (born 30 June 1930), former judge of the Supreme Court of India
  • K. Sukumaran, former judge in the high courts of Kerala and Bombay
  • Hosbet Suresh (born 20 July 1929), former judge of the high court of Bombay
  • K. K. Usha (born 3 July 1939), former chief justice of the high court of Kerala

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ NRI: Non-Resident Indian, referring to the fact that Chatterji is based in the United States
Citations
Sources
  • Ahmed, Sara (2005). Flowing Upstream: Empowering Women Through Water Management Initiatives in India. Foundation Books. ISBN 8175962623.
  • Alier, Juan Martínez (2002). The Environmentalism of the Poor: A Study of Ecological Conflicts and Valuation. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 1840649097.
  • Baruah, Bipasha (2010). Women and Property in Urban India. UBC Press. ISBN 978-0774819275.
  • Byrne, John; Glover, Leigh; Martinez, Cecilia (2002). Environmental Justice: Discourses in International Political Economy. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0765807513.
  • Chatterji, Angana; Desai, Mihir (2006). . Radiance Viewsweekly. Archived from the original on 30 July 2012. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  • Cullet, Philippe (2007). The Sardar Sarovar Dam Project: Selected Documents. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-0754649106.
  • Das, Prafulla (15 June 2005). . The Hindu. Archived from the original on 18 September 2006. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  • Daud, S.M. (1994). "The fate of the Gujarat Oustees" (PDF). Indian People's Tribunal. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  • "Indian People's Tribunal's Report on Jaitapur". DiaNuke.org. 25 September 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  • "Indian People's Tribunal flays Jaitapur nod". DNA. 26 September 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  • . Equal in Rights. Archived from the original on 21 February 2012. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
  • Documentation Update: April 2005 to March 2006. Equitable Tourism Options (EQUATIONS).
  • Ganguly, Meenakshi (13 July 2005). "Does RSS have any moral standards?". The Asian Age. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  • "Human Rights Law Network". Human Rights Law Network. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
  • The Enron Corporation: Corporate Complicity in Human Rights Violations. Human Rights Watch. 1999. ISBN 1564321975.
  • "Indian / Independent People's Tribunal". IPT. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
  • . Kerala Women. Archived from the original on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
  • Kumar, Praveen (2011). Communal Crimes and National Integration: A Socio-Legal Study. Readworthy Publications. ISBN 978-9350180402.
  • Kumar, Ram Narayan (2003). Reduced to Ashes: The Insurgency and Human Rights in Punjab : Final Report, Volume 1. Sikh Students Federation. ISBN 9993353574.
  • Lewis, Michael L. (2003). Inventing Global Ecology: Tracking the Biodiversity Ideal in India, 1947–1997. Ohio University Press. ISBN 0821415417.
  • Mahadevia, Darshini (2008). Inside the Transforming Urban Asia: Processes, Policies, and Public Actions. Concept Publishing Company. ISBN 978-8180695742.
  • Narula, Smita (1999). Broken People: Caste Violence Against India's "untouchables". Human Rights Watch. ISBN 1564322289.
  • Rampal, Anita (2007). "Ducked or Bulldozed? Education of Deprived Urban Children in India". International Handbook of Urban Education. Springer. ISBN 978-1402051982.
  • Saberwal, Vasant K. (2003). Battles Over Nature: Science and the Politics of Conservation. Orient Blackswan. ISBN 8178240483.
  • Scudder, Thayer (2010). Global Threats, Global Futures: Living With Declining Living Standards. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 978-1848448476.
  • Shrivastava, A.k. (2007). Environment Trafficking. APH Publishing. ISBN 978-8131300305.
  • Singh, Binti (2012). A Rights Based Approach to Slum Rehabilitation and Housing: A Study in Mumbai. GRIN Verlag. ISBN 978-3656114079.
  • Singh, Mahim Pratap (25 June 2010). "Indian People's Tribunal releases report on Narmada Projects". The Hindu. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
  • Sundaraam, Viji (30 June 2005). "'We will rape you, then parade you naked'". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 3 January 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  • Williams, Mark; Pocha, Jehangir (23 June 2005). "S.F. professor fears Hindu retaliation". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 19 April 2012.

indian, people, tribunal, also, called, environmental, human, rights, independent, people, tribunal, people, tribunal, human, rights, network, hrln, june, 1993, unofficial, body, retired, judges, form, panel, that, conducts, public, enquiries, into, human, rig. The Indian People s Tribunal IPT also called the Indian People s Tribunal on Environmental and Human Rights or Independent People s Tribunal was a People s Tribunal set up by the Human Rights Law Network HRLN on 5 June 1993 1 The IPT is an unofficial body led by retired judges who form a panel that conducts public enquiries into human rights and environmental abuses It provides an alternative outlet for the victims faced with official obstruction and delays 2 Since being founded the IPT has conducted numerous investigations into cases of relocation of rural people to make way for dams or parks eviction of slum dwellers industrial pollution and communal or state sponsored violence Indian People s TribunalFormation5 June 1993 30 years ago 1993 06 05 TypeNGOLocationMumbai New DelhiRegion servedIndiaParent organisationHuman Rights Law NetworkWebsitewww wbr iptindia wbr org Contents 1 Foundation 2 Activities 3 Sample investigations and reports 3 1 Rural evictions and relocations 3 2 Slum evictions 3 3 Industry and pollution 3 4 Violence 4 Members 5 ReferencesFoundation editThe parent body of the Indian People s Tribunal is the Human Rights Law Network a collective of lawyers and social activists who promote human rights in India and neighbouring countries 3 The objectives of the IPT when it was founded in 1993 were to encourage victim communities to fight for their rights highlight the imperatives of equity and human dignity in the search for true development and highlight the environmental and human rights abuses being perpetuated on communities and individuals by the ruling elite in pursuit of unsustainable development objectives 4 The IPT was to be a permanent body that would fight the inertia and bureaucracy of the government and the legal system through public interest litigation and public awareness campaigns 2 Activities editThe IPT acts as a people s court an alternative to the formal justice system conducting investigations on many types of issue and recommending remedial actions It gives a voice to the people affected 5 Retired judges head the IPT They are given direction by a council of experts Grassroots organisations throughout India provide support In a typical enquiry a team will visit the site and meet with affected people then conduct a public hearing where all involved parties are asked to give information citation needed Later the IPT issues a formal report with findings and recommendations Sample investigations and reports editRural evictions and relocations edit nbsp Haridwar seen from Chilla Range Rajaji National Park The city has growing firewood demand 6 In 1994 the IPT investigated the Rajaji National Park where the authorities wanted to remove the Gujjars who had traditionally lived in the forest The tribunal met forest officials scientists NGO staff and the Gujjars A former supreme court justice P S Poti prepared the IPT report which recommended that the Gujjars be allowed to stay but assisted if they decided to leave This would require a change to the laws which specified that no humans could live in a national park 4 Justice Poti interviewed the many stakeholders showed the complexity of the issues and showed that moving the residents out of the forest would not guarantee its survival 7 nbsp The Sardar Sarovar Dam undergoing height increase in 2006 The Sardar Sarovar Dam project on the Narmada River in Gujarat was highly controversial involving displacement of many people In 1994 S M Daud a retired justice of the high court of Mumbai visited the area and wrote a report for the IPT He described the indiscriminate arrests beatings confinements and prohibitory orders to which local opponents of the project were being subjected He said that unless these abuses ceased the victims may be tempted to take to arms and add to the troubles faced by an already beleaguered nation 8 9 In March 1999 the IPT investigated the condition of tribal people who had accepted an offer by the government to relocate eight years ago when a dam had submerged their land in the Narmada River Valley The people had been promised equal amounts of land at the new site payment to cover the cost of the move building materials and infrastructure such as water supplies schools and so on The hearing found that none of these promises had been fulfilled 10 In April 2004 the IPT issued a report in which it recommended to the national and state governments that they cancel the Kudremukh national park project due to the impact on tribal people resident in the region 11 In June 2010 the IPT released a report documenting results of an investigation of large scale dam projects like Sardar Sarovar Indira Sagar Omkareshwar and Jobat The public hearings were headed by Ajit Prakash Shah former Chief Justice of Delhi The report described forced displacement of the local people without land based rehabilitation It documented serious non compliance on the pari passu implementation of rehabilitation and environmental measures and other violations of the law 12 Slum evictions edit nbsp Dharavi Slum in Mumbai The IPT has asserted that all citizens have the right to have a place to live and on this basis has campaigned against slum clearances 13 In August 1995 Justice Hosbet Suresh a retired judge of the Bombay high court issued a report titled Forced Evictions An Indian People s Tribunal Enquiry into the Brutal Demolitions of Pavement and Slum Dwellers Homes 14 Early in 1999 the Indore authorities began a vigorous slum clearance drive removing slum dwellers from legal pattas they had been given by the state government Judge K Sukumaran of the IPT visited the rehabilitation sites and prepared a report on his findings 15 A 2005 report titled Bulldozing Right documented the fact that many of the Mumbai abuses documented in 1995 continued ten years later 16 Between November 2004 and February 2005 over 300 000 people were evicted from illegal land and their dwellings destroyed In the past these people had received electricity and other services from government agencies and had repeatedly paid off the police The 2005 IPT report said of the impact on children that many suffered post demolition trauma and could drop out of the school system altogether 17 Industry and pollution edit nbsp Cooling towers of RGPPL power plant near Dabhol In April 1998 the IPT issued a report on Enron in India documenting police action and criminal proceedings against opponents of the Dabhol Power Station 18 In 1999 the IPT issued a report titled Who Bears the Cost Industrial and Toxic Pollution in the Golden Corridor of Gujarat The golden corridor is the 400 kilometres 250 mi industrial corridor along the western coast of Gujarat 19 Among other findings a 2001 enquiry into the Bandra Worli Sea Link Project noted that motorways and flyovers benefit the 9 of families who owned cars Others suffer from increasing pollution 20 The SIPCOT chemical industry estate in Cuddalore Tamil Nadu was investigated in November 2002 by an IPT team headed by J Kanakaraj a retired Madras high court justice The team reported a noticeable stench of chemicals in the air Their report was published in July 2003 It found that Villages like Kudikadu Thaikal Eachangadu and Sonnanchavadi lie in a virtual gas chamber surrounded on three sides by chemical factories and bounded on the fourth by the river 21 In a 2008 report the retired secretary for water resources in the national government claimed reason to believe that in 2000 01 the World Bank worked actively to sabotage the Report of the World Commission on Dams 22 The IPT held a three day session in September 2011 on a proposed nuclear power plant and mines in Jaitapur The local administration resisted the hearings refusing to allow the IPT to enter the affected villages and arresting local leaders However the high court gave permission for the hearings to proceed At the hearing local people talked about the issues they were facing and people came from other states to talk about how they had been affected by similar projects 23 The tribunal found that the Environmental Impact Assessment EIA report was inadequate and recommended preparation of a fresh and complete EIA Work should be stopped while this was being done 24 Violence edit nbsp Angana Chatterji received threats for her work on the tribunal In June 2005 the IPT set up a tribunal in Orissa on the communal situation led by K K Usha a former Chief Justice of the high court of Kerala and the first woman to serve in this role 25 26 It was convened by Angana P Chatterji an academic based in San Francisco and Mihir Desai an advocate of the high court of Mumbai 25 Activists from the Sangh Parivar disrupted the hearing in Bhubaneswar citation needed In a letter to the National Human Rights Commission of India Chatterji said threats were faxed from the state office of the Vishva Hindu Parishad The fax said the tribunal was a group of leftists fellow travellers and Hindu baiters It went on The inclusion of an NRI fn 1 well known for anti Hindu activities in the US suggests foreign funds from sources bent on destabilising the country 27 Chatterji alleged that Hindu nationalist activists threatened to rape tribunal members and to parade them naked in the streets 28 29 K K Usha and fellow tribunal member R A Mehta a former Acting Chief Justice of the High Court of Gujarat called the incident shocking outrageous and highly deplorable 30 The tribunal conducted its investigation for almost twenty months and released its report in October 2006 It describes massive mobilisation of the Sangh Parivar a Hindutva group against Muslims and Christians often justifying their actions on the basis of fabricated threats from the minorities The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh had been promoting Hindu supremacy using force and coercion 25 According to Dr Chatterji Forcible conversions to dominant Hinduism social and economic boycotts tonsuring physical intimidation and violence arson and even murder are the weapons that Sangh Parivar cadre wields to intimidate and target disenfranchised groups and religious minorities such as Adivasis Dalits Christians and Muslims The report recommended that the national and state governments treat communalism in Orissa as an emergency requiring immediate attention 25 Later Subash Chouhan a Bajrang Dal leader said his group and the Vishva Hindu Parishad would stop Chatterji from conducting further research 31 The HRLN and ANHAD conducted a Tribunal in Srinagar on 20 21 February 2010 that investigated human rights violations in the Kashmir Valley Justice H Suresh a former Judge of the Bombay High Court headed the jury A comprehensive report of the findings was released in New Delhi on 8 September 2010 The report documented excessive militarisation with one soldier for every twenty people It found that the soldiers receive no punishment for acts of violence they commit against innocent people citation needed The report said in Kashmir arbitrary arrests detention torture and custodial deaths rape and midnight raids into homes and disappearances have become routine The report recommended withdrawal of the draconian laws a drastic reduction in the number of troops and institution of legal processes by which justice could be done citation needed Members editSome notable people who have served on the tribunals Angana P Chatterji born November 1966 anthropologist and left wing activist Siraj Mehfuz Daud 1 January 1931 10 May 2010 former judge in the high court of Bombay Mihir Desai advocate in the high court of Bombay and the Supreme Court of India Colin Gonsalves senior advocate of the Supreme Court of India V R Krishna Iyer born 1 November 1915 former judge in the Supreme Court of India J Kanakaraj born 1936 former judge of the high court of Madras R A Mehta born 1936 former judge of the high court of Gujarat Sudhir Pattnaik editor of the Oriya magazine Samadrushi a political fortnightly Padmanabhan Subramanian Poti 2 February 1923 February 1998 former Chief Justice of the high courts of Kerala and Gujarat Ram Puniyani born 25 August 1945 professor in biomedical engineering Rajinder Sachar born 22 December 1923 former chief justice of high court of Delhi P B Sawant born 30 June 1930 former judge of the Supreme Court of India K Sukumaran former judge in the high courts of Kerala and Bombay Hosbet Suresh born 20 July 1929 former judge of the high court of Bombay K K Usha born 3 July 1939 former chief justice of the high court of KeralaReferences editNotes NRI Non Resident Indian referring to the fact that Chatterji is based in the United States Citations IPT About a b Kumar 2003 Human Rights Law Network a b Lewis 2003 p 10 Equal in Rights Saberwal 2003 pp 220 Saberwal 2003 pp 219 220 Byrne Glover amp Martinez 2002 p 88 Daud 1994 p 28 Cullet 2007 pp 372ff Equitable Tourism Options 2006 p 90 Singh 2010 Baruah 2010 p 108 Narula 1999 p 127 Singh 2012 p 71 Mahadevia 2008 p 553 Rampal 2007 p 295 Human Rights Watch 1999 p 59 Ahmed 2005 p 57 Alier 2002 p 155 Shrivastava 2007 pp 181 182 Scudder 2010 p 230 DiaNuke Jaitapur DNA Jaitapur a b c d Chatterji amp Desai 2006 Kerala Women Sundaraam 2005 Kumar 2011 p 112 Williams amp Pocha 2005 Das 2005 Ganguly 2005 Sources Ahmed Sara 2005 Flowing Upstream Empowering Women Through Water Management Initiatives in India Foundation Books ISBN 8175962623 Alier Juan Martinez 2002 The Environmentalism of the Poor A Study of Ecological Conflicts and Valuation Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 1840649097 Baruah Bipasha 2010 Women and Property in Urban India UBC Press ISBN 978 0774819275 Byrne John Glover Leigh Martinez Cecilia 2002 Environmental Justice Discourses in International Political Economy Transaction Publishers ISBN 0765807513 Chatterji Angana Desai Mihir 2006 IPTCO In depth Report on Communalism in Orissa Radiance Viewsweekly Archived from the original on 30 July 2012 Retrieved 19 April 2012 Cullet Philippe 2007 The Sardar Sarovar Dam Project Selected Documents Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0754649106 Das Prafulla 15 June 2005 Sangh Parivar activists disrupt tribunal hearing The Hindu Archived from the original on 18 September 2006 Retrieved 19 April 2012 Daud S M 1994 The fate of the Gujarat Oustees PDF Indian People s Tribunal Retrieved 19 May 2012 Indian People s Tribunal s Report on Jaitapur DiaNuke org 25 September 2011 Retrieved 19 April 2012 Indian People s Tribunal flays Jaitapur nod DNA 26 September 2011 Retrieved 19 April 2012 Good practices in upstream human rights based strategies Equal in Rights Archived from the original on 21 February 2012 Retrieved 17 April 2012 Documentation Update April 2005 to March 2006 Equitable Tourism Options EQUATIONS Ganguly Meenakshi 13 July 2005 Does RSS have any moral standards The Asian Age Retrieved 19 April 2012 Human Rights Law Network Human Rights Law Network Retrieved 17 April 2012 The Enron Corporation Corporate Complicity in Human Rights Violations Human Rights Watch 1999 ISBN 1564321975 Indian Independent People s Tribunal IPT Retrieved 17 April 2012 Chief Justice KK Usha Kerala Women Archived from the original on 5 March 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2012 Kumar Praveen 2011 Communal Crimes and National Integration A Socio Legal Study Readworthy Publications ISBN 978 9350180402 Kumar Ram Narayan 2003 Reduced to Ashes The Insurgency and Human Rights in Punjab Final Report Volume 1 Sikh Students Federation ISBN 9993353574 Lewis Michael L 2003 Inventing Global Ecology Tracking the Biodiversity Ideal in India 1947 1997 Ohio University Press ISBN 0821415417 Mahadevia Darshini 2008 Inside the Transforming Urban Asia Processes Policies and Public Actions Concept Publishing Company ISBN 978 8180695742 Narula Smita 1999 Broken People Caste Violence Against India s untouchables Human Rights Watch ISBN 1564322289 Rampal Anita 2007 Ducked or Bulldozed Education of Deprived Urban Children in India International Handbook of Urban Education Springer ISBN 978 1402051982 Saberwal Vasant K 2003 Battles Over Nature Science and the Politics of Conservation Orient Blackswan ISBN 8178240483 Scudder Thayer 2010 Global Threats Global Futures Living With Declining Living Standards Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 978 1848448476 Shrivastava A k 2007 Environment Trafficking APH Publishing ISBN 978 8131300305 Singh Binti 2012 A Rights Based Approach to Slum Rehabilitation and Housing A Study in Mumbai GRIN Verlag ISBN 978 3656114079 Singh Mahim Pratap 25 June 2010 Indian People s Tribunal releases report on Narmada Projects The Hindu Retrieved 17 April 2012 Sundaraam Viji 30 June 2005 We will rape you then parade you naked The Times of India Archived from the original on 3 January 2013 Retrieved 19 April 2012 Williams Mark Pocha Jehangir 23 June 2005 S F professor fears Hindu retaliation San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 19 April 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indian People 27s Tribunal amp oldid 1167908532, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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