Menu Expand
Jallad

Jallad

Tasneem Khalil

(2015)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

Extrajudicial execution, enforced disappearance and torture – these are the tools used by death squads across South Asia. Across the region, human rights abuses are perpetrated behind the closed doors by the 'jallad', or hangmen, of secret detention facilities, while death squads roam the streets with impunity.

By using first-hand experience and newly discovered sources, Tasneem Khalil connects these abuses to a disturbing fact - that Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka are national security states connected to an international system of state terror, patronised by sponsors like the United States, the United Kingdom, China and Israel.

Looking at infamous 'enforcers' such as The Rapid Action Battalion of Bangladesh, the 'encounter specialists' of India, army units of Nepal, the Frontier Corps of Pakistan and 'the men in white vans' of Sri Lanka, Khalil reveals a huge system of specialists in violence deployed by the state in campaigns of state terror, a bloody logic of domination and repression that lies at the very core of statecraft in South Asia.
'An important message to states to ensure accountability and respect human rights'
Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia Director, Human Rights Watch
'Not only demands a deeper study of state terror in both South Asia and the world at large, but it also demands justice for all the victims thereof—past, present, and, unfortunately, future'
Marx & Philosophy Review of Books
'A powerful and frightening document that traces how political independence mutated into a celebration of the growing power of the military'
Jeremy Seabrook, writer and researcher; author of 'The Refuge and the Fortress: Britain and the Flight from Tyranny'.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Cover Cover
Contents vii
Acknowledgements viii
1. Introduction: After the Colony 1
2. Bangladesh: Men in Black 17
3. India: Brutal Encounters 31
4. Nepal: The Royal Army 46
5. Pakistan: Agents of the State 61
6. Sri Lanka: White Vans 76
7. State Terror in Post-Colonial South Asia 91
8. Specialists on Violence 102
9. International System of State Terror 113
10. A Note from the Torture Chamber 123
Notes 129
Index 159