By: Adnan Attarwala
Date:
2011-10-03
Place: Pune
Pune students to kick off signature campaign in colleges, hold
seminars and candlelight marches to build support for Manipur Iron Lady's
11-year campaign for repeal of Armed Forces Special Powers
Act.
After their massive show of support for anti-corruption
crusader Anna Hazare during his recent indefinite hunger strike for the Jan
Lokpal bill, students in the city are gearing up for one more big campaign for
another activist known for taking on the government using the Gandhian means of
fasting.
Youth
power: Irom Sharmila has been on a hunger strike for 11
years
Irom Sharmila, known as the Iron Lady of Manipur for being on a
hunger strike for 11 years to press for the repeal of the Armed Forces Special
Powers Act (AFSPA), has so impressed students here that they have set their
minds on building a groundswell of support for her in the city.
Students from
the city at a demonstration in support of anti-corruption
crusader Anna
Hazare during his recent Lokpal bill fast. File pics
Towards this end,
student groups from various colleges in the city along with activists of the
National Alliance for People's Movement (NAPM) and other NGOs have decided to
start a signature campaign. Starting from this week, volunteers will visit
colleges to encourage youth across the city to participate in the movement 'Irom
Sharmila Solidarity Campaign'. Their aim is to collect thousands of signatures
and organise seminars and candlelight marches for the next couple of weeks to
raise awareness on the AFSPA.
"We want to approach as many people and
students from various colleges as we can to encourage them to participate in the
decade- old struggle for the repeal of the AFSPA," said Suhas Kolhekar, member
of NAPM, Pune division.
Kolhekar has also approached Gandhi Bhavan in Kothrud
to allow them to hold seminars. The activists have demanded that the government
make serious efforts to have a meaningful dialogue with Sharmila, who is being
force-fed through her nose by the government.
The activists say the
government should immediately work out and announce a phased, time-bound
demilitarisation plan to withdraw the army and other paramilitary forces from
internal security duties in the Northeastern states and Jammu and Kashmir. They
have also asked the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) to visit Sharmila
and Manipur to give take note of the human rights violation in the region and
take appropriate action.
The nationwide signature campaign started from
October 2, which is Gandhi Jayanti, and will culminate in Delhi on December 10,
Human Rights Day. "We will collect signatures and hand these over to President
Pratibha Patil on December 10. We have also demanded the repeal of other
draconian laws like the UAPA, MCOCA, and CSPSA," said Mukta Shrivastava, an
activist. "We want to resist the increasing curtailment of democratic
spaces."