Tuesday, March, 20, 2018
  • Nation
  • World
  • States
  • Cities
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Galleries
  • Videos
  • Life Style
  • Specials
  • Opinions
  • All Sections  
    States Tamil Nadu Kerala Karnataka Andhra Pradesh Telangana Odisha
    Cities Chennai DelhiBengaluru Hyderabad Kochi Thiruvananthapuram
    Nation World Business Sport Cricket Football Tennis Other Education Social News
    Entertainment English Hindi Kannada Malayalam Tamil Telugu Review Galleries Videos
    Auto Life style Tech Health Travel Food Books Spirituality
    Opinions Editorials Ask Prabhu Columns Prabhu Chawla T J S George S Gurumurthy Ravi Shankar Shankkar Aiyar Shampa Dhar-Kamath Karamatullah K Ghori
    Today's Paper Edex Indulge Event Xpress Magazine The Sunday Standard E-paper
Home World

Amnesty International calls on Pakistan to end enforced disappearances

By AFP  |   Published: 20th March 2018 02:22 PM  |  

Last Updated: 20th March 2018 02:22 PM  |   A+A A-   |  

0

Share Via Email

Flag image used for representational purposes. (File photo | AP)

ISLAMABAD: Human rights watchdog Amnesty International has called on Pakistan to resolve hundreds of cases of enforced disappearances for which "no one has ever been held accountable".

"Disappearances are a tool of terror... if committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack, they constitute a crime against humanity," a statement issued by the rights watchdog Monday said, calling on Pakistan to "take concrete steps to end impunity".

Pakistan has had a history of enforced disappearances over the past decade, mainly confined in the past to conflict zones near the Afghanistan border or to southwestern Balochistan province, where separatists are battling for independence.

However in recent years a growing number of such abductions have taken place brazenly in major urban centres such as Karachi, Lahore and even the capital Islamabad.

Earlier this year award-winning Pakistani journalist Taha Siddiqui, who criticised the role of the military in Pakistan, managed to escape an attempted abduction in broad daylight on a busy Islamabad highway. He has since left the country.

Reporting critical of security policies controlled by the powerful military is considered a major red flag, with Siddiqui the most high-profile recent example among the many reporters who have been at times detained, beaten and even killed. Security agencies routinely deny being involved.

Last year, five social media activists who had been critical of the military as well as extremism were also disappeared, with their abductions sparking nationwide protests. Four were released within weeks, but the fate of the fifth remains unknown.

Many other people are believed to still be in custody. According to Amnesty, the United Nations has more than 700 such cases pending in Pakistan, while a state commission of inquiry into enforced disappearances lists hundreds of additional cases.

Victims include bloggers, journalists, students, peace activists and other human rights defenders.

Few punishments, Amnesty said, are "as cruel and deliberate.... Families are plunged into a state of anguish, trying to keep the flame of hope alive while fearing the worst. They may be in this limbo for years".

According to the NGO, Pakistan has recently accepted UN recommendations that make enforced disappearances a crime but has refused to ratify an international convention protecting anyone from enforced disappearances.
 

Stay up to date on all the latest World news with The New Indian Express App. Download now
TAGS
Amnesty International Pakistan enforced disappearance

O
P
E
N

More from this section

US President Donald Trump to boost exports of lethal drones to more allies

US won't resume security aid to Pakistan till it allays concerns on safe terror havens

US-South Korea military drills to resume amid diplomatic thaw with North Korea

Latest

CBI moves HC against A Raja, Kanimozhi in 2G case

FIRs against JNU Professor accused of sexual misconduct

ISIS kills 36 Syrian troops in Damascus

Goldman Sachs downgrades India's economic growth

India buys 140 air purifiers after Delhi pollution

French ex-president Sarkozy held in Libya financing probe

Indian Army plane crashes in Jharkhand, pilots safe

Sasikala gets parole to attend husband Natarajan's funeral

Periyar statue vandalised in Pudukottai

Videos
Students block tracks demanding railway jobs in Mumbai, commuters badly hit
12th standard students put currency notes inside answer sheets in UP Board exams
arrow
Gallery
Every year the city of Valencia celebrates the ancient 'Las Fallas' fiesta, a noisy week that is full of fireworks and processions in honor of Saint Joseph, the patron saint of carpentry, that ends in the midnight of March 19, burning many characters and
IN PHOTOS | Spain's Las Fallas festival: A celebration of art and satire with fireworks, puppets, bonfires
A flash agitation by job-seekers over issues pertaining to railway recruitment has culminated in a rail-blockade, police caning and retaliatory stone-throwing leading to a virtual paralysis of the Central Railway suburban train services in Mumbai on Tuesday. (Express Photo Service)
IN PICS | Railway Apprentice Agitation halts Mumbai temporarily
arrow

Trending

FOLLOW US

Copyright - newindianexpress.com 2018

Dinamani | Kannada Prabha | Samakalika Malayalam | Malayalam Vaarika | Indulgexpress | Edex Live | Cinema Express | Event Xpress

Contact Us | About Us | Careers | Privacy Policy | Search | Terms of Use | Advertise With Us

Home | Nation | World | Cities | Business | Columns | Entertainment | Sport | Magazine | The Sunday Standard