Global calls are intensified to keep modi responsible for human rights violations

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi caters to a demonstration in Madhubani in Eastern State Bihar, India, April 24, 2025. – Reuters

A petition has been launched in the United States to bring Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and two of his close employees to justice for their “involvement in human rights violations in India”.

“We, related to global citizens, require urgent responsibility and international action against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Minister of Home Minister Amit Shah and national security adviser Ajit Doval for their active role in enabling and escalating serious human rights violations throughout India,” the document reads.

The petition was moved by American-Pakistanis, and it has erected “state-sponsored violence against peaceful protesters, systematic targeting of religious and ethnic minorities, censorship and criminalization of dissensing voices, abuse of authoritarian laws such as UAPA and the sedition to crush democratic freedoms and neglect of public security” as some of the most important human rights.

The petries have called on the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), global human rights organizations and democratic governments around the world to launch independent investigations of rights violations committed under the current Indian regime, and to apply diplomatic and financial pressure to end the state’s repression and restore democratic norms in India.

The time of this petition is critical as it was launched the same day that Pakistan called on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to note the serious situation in Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).

In a political statement under the Security Council’s information on the implementation of the decision 2474, Ambassador Asim ITIKHAR Ahmad, a permanent representative of Pakistan to the UN, highlighted the situation with lack of cashmere in the hands of the Indian occupation forces.

Asim Iftikhar, who represented Pakistan, said India had used the pretext of the recent terrorist incident to end more than 2,000 people to further suppress Kashmiris’ struggle for their legitimate right to self -determination.

“Missing people are not just numbers. They are fathers who never returned home, mothers separated from their children, young boys who disappeared at night at night, and daughters whose fates are sealed in silence. Their absence is a wound that never heals, leaving families trapped in an endless cycle of hope and despair,

ASIM IFTIKHAR also said, “From the studies held so far, it has been revealed that these victims first disappear by Indian Occupation forces and then be tortured to death or briefly performed.”

He reminded the members that the High Commissioner Office for Human Rights (Ohchr) in his two reports from 2018 and 2019 at Kashmir had recommended to “secure independent, impartial and credible investigations of all unmarked graves” in IIOJK.

The permanent representative demanded that any missing person be outlined, family connections are restored and the fundamental rights of those lost in the chaos of conflicts.

He emphasized that the question of missing persons is a symptom of unresolved conflicts that need to be resolved.

International organizations have also questioned Human Rights Record for the Modi government.

According to Human Rights Watch, “Indian authorities continued to limit free expression, peaceful assembly and other rights in Jammu and Kashmir. Reports of out -of -law killing from security forces continued throughout the year.”

Human Rights Watch (HRW) maintained that Modi regime is sustained with its policies to discriminate and stigmatize religious and other minorities, which has led to rising events with joint violence in many parts of India.

“Claims of torture and extracurricular murder persuaded, with the National Human Rights Commission, which recorded 126 deaths in police custody, 1,673 deaths in judicial custody and 55 alleged out -of -law murder in the first nine months of 2023,” HRW said in a statement.

And in a recent report, Amnesty International pointed out: “National economic and investigative agencies became weapons against civil society, human rights defenders, activists, journalists and critics and further shrinking bourgeois spaces.

Authorities continued to illegally break down properties that belonged to religious minorities as a means of drafting outdoor punishment. “

Experts say it is strange that despite all these accusations of HRW and AI, no action is taken against the oppressive Indian regime.

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