Padma Shri Awardee Jitender Singh Shunty Appointed as Member of Punjab Human Rights Commission
Humanitarian Crusader Jitender Shunty Performed Dignified Last Rites for Over 70,000 Unclaimed Bodies
Jitender Shunty Recognised for Lifesaving Ambulance Services, Disaster-Relief Operations and Record-Breaking Blood Donations
Chandigarh, November 20, 2025: The Punjab Government has appointed Padma Shri awardee Jitender Singh Shunty, founder of the Shaheed Bhagat Singh Sewa Dal, as the new member of the Punjab Human Rights Commission.
Widely respected for his humanitarian work, Shunty is known for performing the last rites of unclaimed dead bodies with dignity and compassion. In 2021, he was honoured with the Padma Shri by the President of India for his remarkable social service. He is also known for donating blood over a hundred times and has been featured in the acclaimed documentary “Angels for the Dead.”
For more than 25 years, Shunty has been recognized internationally as a pioneer in protecting the human rights of dead bodies, a crucial yet often overlooked part of the “Right to Life.” Through his NGO, he has provided funeral services, corpse vans, refrigerated mobile morgues, cremations, and immersion of ashes in the Ganga for abandoned and underprivileged individuals. He has facilitated the dignified last rites of over 70,000 people, including more than 4,200 COVID-19 victims.
Jirender Shunty has also been a defender of patients’ rights, offering free ambulance services, rescue operations, and emergency aid. He has intervened in multiple cases where private hospitals illegally detained patients or bodies due to unpaid bills. As a member of the National Human Rights Commission’s Core Group of Human Rights Defenders, he worked to ensure free last rites for unclaimed bodies across India and proposed the creation of a counter-terrorism human rights response unit.
At numerous disaster sites, including the Gujarat earthquake, the 2004 tsunami, Nepal earthquake, Chennai and Kerala floods, Jitender Shunty led frontline humanitarian operations, providing medical care, rescue services, WASH facilities, and dignified management of the deceased.
A world-record blood donor with 106 donations, Shunty has organized over 200 blood donation camps and has been celebrated nationally and internationally for his lifelong service to humanity. His appointment marks a significant step for Punjab in strengthening a compassionate and rights-focused human rights framework.
City Air News 

