Region

Police Brutality

The tendency of the Pakistani police to resort to violence can be attributed to an authoritarian police culture and the lingering effects of security operations that encourage excessive use of force to control terrorism.

By Wajahat Ali Malik | June 2021

Illegal confinement, torture, custodial death and rape by police and other law enforcement agencies is a common practice in Pakistan. These abuses are accepted as an inevitable part of law enforcement and perpetrators are granted immunity through a combination of socio-cultural acceptance mechanisms, lack of accountability of the police force, widespread powers of arrest and detention, procedural loopholes, ineffective safeguards, and the failure to criminalize torture, custodial death and rape by public officials.

Pakistan has ratified the UN Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (UNCAT) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), both of which forbid illegal confinement, torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment. The two treaties obligate the country to take effective measures for prevention of such abuses.

Article 156(d) of the Police Order 2002 provides penalties against any police officer who inflicts ‘violence or torture’ upon any person in his custody. However, the statute only penalizes acts by police officers and does not extend to other public officials. It contains no definition of torture, and fails to satisfy Pakistan’s obligations under UNCAT. In addition, it is only applicable in Punjab.

The implementation of the Police Order 2002 remains ineffective, because there is not a single precedent where any police official was held accountable for committing illegal confinement, torture, custodial death or rape, whereas such cases are reported on a daily basis. For example, in March 2021, a case of custodial torture and death of a 14 years old child ‘Shahzaib’ was reported in Peshawar. Shahzaib was a grade-7 student and was found dead in the lock-up of the West Cantonment police station after he was arrested following a clash with shopkeepers and for pointing a gun at them.

Police took the plea that the victim had committed suicide, but the victim’s father said his son was tortured to death by police. Similarly, in August 2019, the case of Salahuddin Ayubi is another example, where the victim died in the custody of police. Salahuddin was arrested after a video of him – allegedly stealing from an automated teller machine in Faisalabad – went viral on the social media. Salahuddin died in the custody of the Rahim Yar Khan police. Salahuddin’s family claimed that he was suffering from a mental condition and died from custodial torture. Later, a forensic medical report of the incident proved that Salahuddin was tortured.

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The writer is an advocate of the high court based in Islamabad and a human rights lawyer. He can be reached at Twitter: @Adv_WajahatAli or at adv.wajahat.ali@gmail.com

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