No habeas corpus
Apprehending people and then denying any knowledge about them has in recent decades become an established practice for governments across Southasia, especially during counter-insurgency operations. Indeed, with the 25th annual International Day of the Disappeared taking place on 30 August, the situation looks almost as bad as anytime over the past quarter-century, with disappearances taking place on a regular basis in several parts of the region. Moreover, there is hardly any accountability, and impunity remains rampant essentially everywhere.
In Sri Lanka, more than 30,000 people (most likely the largest number per capita in Southasia) are thought to have disappeared over the past two decades. In India's Punjab, thousands of secret cremations of individuals killed in police custody throughout the 1980s have been uncovered in just a single district. Numerous others are known to have disappeared in Punjab, as well as in Kashmir, Andhra Pradesh, the Northeast and, most recently, in Chhattisgarh. Since the peak of the insurgency in Kashmir in 1989, some 7000 people have been disappeared at the hands of Indian security forces, according to local activists.