‘Widespread’ torture by police in Pakistan condemned by United Nations
A UN committee has
condemned the “widespread practice of torture” in Pakistan by police, the
military and intelligence agencies in a report published on Friday, and called
on Islamabad to implement urgent reforms to the law. “The police engage in
the widespread practice of torture throughout the territory ... with a view to
obtaining confessions from persons in custody,” the UN Committee against Torture wrote in its
first report on the situation in the country, made public after months of
investigation.
“The Committee is
seriously concerned at reports that members of the State party’s military
forces; intelligence forces ... and paramilitary forces ... have been
implicated in a significant number of cases of extra-judicial executions
involving torture and enforced disappearances.” It urged Pakistan to
“incorporate into its legislation a specific definition of torture” that can be
applied without exception, including to the army, which is regularly accused of
abusing its powers.
The UN highlighted
that the Torture, Custodial Death and Custodial Rape Bill, presented several
years ago, has yet to be put to a vote. Pakistan, which
ratified the Convention against Torture in 2010, presented its first report on
the situation in the country this year – four years late. In its findings, the
UN referred to the torture of several Pakistani
bloggers who had criticised extremism and the authorities, leading to
weeks in arbitrary detention. The committee said
Pakistan had failed to launch an investigation into any of these cases, or into
the numbers disappeared or killed in detention.
The National
Commission of Human Rights, an organisation linked to Pakistan’s parliament,
welcomed the report, saying “the publication could help start a conversation
about torture” in the country. A “total” ban on
torture is an “unequivocal prerequisite to effectively fight terrorism”, it
added.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/13/widespread-torture-by-police-in-pakistan-condemned-by-united-nations