Saumen Guha

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Saumen Guha
Born29 April 1958
NationalityIndian
Occupation(s)author, film maker & artist

Saumen Guha is a political activist turned human rights campaigner and author who is most famous for pursuing the case of his sister Archana Guha who was tortured by the police. They tortured her in order to extract information on her brother's whereabouts, alleging that he was a Naxalite.[1][2] After a lengthy historic legal battle the main perpetrator was declared guilty. A PUCL 'Journalism for Human Rights' award-winning article by Subhas Chandra Ganguly on this protracted legal battle was published in Frontier magazine in 1996,[3] and his acceptance speech also described the case in detail.[4]

In 1998 he petitioned the Indian Supreme Court to halt the country's nuclear testing programme.[5]

Saumen Guha is also credited with introducing Super 8 mm film format in West Bengal and Eastern India which played a huge role in the Eastern Indian Super 8 Independent film movement during the 1980s.[6]

Works[edit]

A collection of Saumen Guha's selected writings on interface between science and society in Bengali has been published as an open access e-book, 'Science, Society and Man'.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Archana case: The longest legal battle". The Times of India. 1 October 2001.
  2. ^ Amnesty International Newsletter January 1997
  3. ^ "The Forgotten Decade: Archana Guha case" (PDF).
  4. ^ "Speech accepting the 16th Annual PUCL award on 'Journalism for Human Rights'" (PDF).
  5. ^ Banerjee, Partha S. (29 June 1998). "Terrible implications from those nuclear tests". New Straits Times. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  6. ^ "Super-8 mm movement in West Bengal". Activist Canvas. 10 February 2010.
  7. ^ "Science, Society and Man". 5 January 2014.