Home
Ministry hampering NHRC work, says Report
By
Akshaya Mukul
Times
News Network
THE
TIMES OF INDIA, 26 October 2001
New
Delhi: After eight years of operation the inherent weaknesses of the National
Human Rights Commission (NHRC) and its originating legislation are becoming
increasingly evident, says the South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre
(SAHRDC) and its report “Judgement Reserved: The Case of the NHRC”,
Finalized last
Month
and submitted to the commission, the report is highly critical of the home
ministry for “displaying intransigence…with regard to recommendations
submitted by the NHRC.”
According
to SAHRDC’s Ravi Nair, “The report is constructive. We only hope the
commission’s annual reports serve as the only source of information on its
functioning, “they tend to be severely deficient.” For example, the 1997-98
reports provided descriptions of only 24 of the 40,000 plus cases pending for
consideration during the year.
“Most
descriptions in the report were extremely brief, vague and incomplete,” it
adds. In fact, the 1998-99 annual
report of the commission is the last report to be placed before Parliament.
The
SAHRDC report notes that the Central government is willing to grant the
commission the independence, which the Paris Principle of 1991 deemed imperative
for effective governance. “This is demonstrated by the futile efforts of the NHRC to
push through amendments to the Protection of Human Rights Act (PHRA) 1993,” it
says.