My Days in Prison

My Days in Prison

Product ID: 15583

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Author: Iftikhar Gilani
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 148
ISBN/UPC (if available): 0143031554

Description

A shocking story of trial, temerity and triumph.

On 9 June 2002, at 4.30 a.m., Iftikhar Gilani, a journalist with Kashmir Times, was roused from sleep by loud knocks at the door. Groggily he opened it to find a posse of policemen, some armed, carrying an authorization to search his house. Within minutes, they were turning his small flat inside out. Little did Gilani realize then that by the end of the day he would be in police custody. His supposed crime: providing information to Pakistan’s ISI (Inter Services Intelligence) on the deployment of armed forces in Jammu and Kashmir. The punishment: fourteen years in jail. My Days in Prison is Iftikhar Gilani’s chilling account of the nightmare that followed.

Overnight Gilani was turned from a career journalist to a confirmed spy. He was thrown into Tihar Jail and vilified in news reports. With his journalistic objectivity intact, Gilani narrates the horrors he was subjected to-he was confined to the high-security ward, beaten till he bled, made to clean filthy toilets with his shirt and then forced to wear the same shirt again.

Eventually, in January 2003, the government withdrew the case in the wake of vociferous protests by civil rights activists and media personalities, and Gilani was a free man again. But his story demonstrates how important it is to uphold the rule of law and how easily an irresponsible few can misuse the draconian laws to their own ends. Most of all, he points out that, while he could prove his innocence, the right to justice and personal liberty cannot be compromised in a democracy. As Gilani convincingly shows, this was not his fight alone.

REVIEW

Iftikhar Gilani’s harrowing experience reveals in a flash the deep-rooted prejudice against Kashmir and Kashmiris among the so-called elite in Delhi, persons running institutions which are supposed to be fair, and reveals also the deep commitment to human rights in many sections of Indian society in academia as well as in the media.
-A G Noorani, lawyer and columnist

Contents

FOREWORD

ONE
Freedom Restored

TWO
They Had Come for Me

THREE
Smoke and Mirrors

FOUR
Life in Tihar

FIVE
Twists and Turns

SIX
The Role of the Media

SEVEN
The Law and Its Misuse