Prominent Pakistani human rights lawyer held after anti-army speech gets bail

Police officials presents arrested lawyer and human rights activist Imaan Mazari-Hazir, center, before a court in Islamabad, Pakistan on August 20, 2023. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 23 August 2023
Follow

Prominent Pakistani human rights lawyer held after anti-army speech gets bail

  • Police complaint says Mazari-Hazir arrested for violating agreement with local administration on location for rally held on Friday
  • The case has put a sharp spotlight on what rights groups call a growing crackdown on politicians and rights activists in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Prominent human rights lawyer Imaan Zainab Mazari-Hazir had gotten bail, her lawyer said on Wednesday in a case that has put a sharp spotlight on what rights groups have called a growing crackdown on politicians and rights activists in Pakistan.

Islamabad police on Sunday arrested Mazari-Hazir, and Ali Wazir, co-founder of the Pashtun ethnic rights movement, the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM), two days after they addressed a rally organized by the group.

The police complaint on Wazir and Mazari-Hazir’s arrest said they and other leaders of the PTM had violated an agreement with the local administration and marched ahead from an area designated for Friday’s PTM rally at Tarnol Chowk on GT Road. However, rights groups widely said their arrests were connected to speeches at the rally in which they criticized the Pakistani military over enforced abductions, which the army denies being involved in. In videos widely circulated on social media, the human rights lawyer urged action against serving military officials involved in such acts, calling them “traitors.”

“Happy to announce that @ImaanZHazir has been granted bail by the Hon’able Magistrate,” the mazari family lawyer Ahsan J. Pirzada wrote on Twitter, adding that Wazir had not gotten bail but instead sent on judicial remand.

“Mr. Ali is also entitled to apply for post-arrest bail. No reason for his bail denial exist, hence, he might get it tomorrow.”

Mazari-Hazir’s mother Shireen Mazari is a former human rights lawyer and an ex-member of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party of former Prime Minister Imran Khan. The PTI has faced intense state action since May when Khan was briefly arrested in a graft case, unleashing nationwide protests in which his supporters ransacked and damaged military and other properties. Khan was released on bail then but is currently in jail in another corruption case and has been disqualified from running for elections.

Wazir, who co-founded the PTM which campaigns against alleged extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances of Pashtuns and other ethnic minorities, was brought to court on Monday with his face covered by a cloth. Wazir served as a legislator in Pakistan’s National Assembly from August 2018 to August 2023.

Mazari-Hazir and Wazir’s arrests come at a time when rights groups have raised concerns over what they call a growing number of arbitrary arrests and forced disappearances of activists in Pakistan.

The country’s most prominent human rights group, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, has said the latest arrests pointed “to a larger, more worrying pattern of state-sanctioned violence against people exercising their right to freedom of expression and assembly.”


Pakistan telecom regulator urges restraint on social media amid regional tensions

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan telecom regulator urges restraint on social media amid regional tensions

  • PTA warns against sharing unverified content, says legal action may follow ‘fake news’
  • Advisory comes as Pakistan strikes targets in Afghanistan and Iran faces US, Israeli attacks

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s telecom regulator on Saturday urged citizens to avoid sharing “unverified or inflammatory” content online, warning that legal action could be taken against those spreading misinformation amid what it described as a “sensitive national situation.”

The advisory from the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) comes as Islamabad says it is targeting militant positions inside Afghanistan following a recent flareup between the two neighbors, while Iran is under attack by the United States and Israel in an escalating regional conflict that has heightened security concerns across South and West Asia.

“In view of the prevailing sensitive national situation, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) urges all citizens to be responsible while using social media and digital platforms,” the regulator said in a statement posted on X.

The PTA advised citizens “not to share, disseminate, forward, or upload any unverified, inflammatory, or misleading information/content that may directly or indirectly harm the national interest, public order, or state institutions.”

It said people should instead rely on authentic information based on official sources and refrain from spreading rumors and “fake news.”

“Sharing any fake news/information is liable to legal action in accordance with applicable laws,” the authority said, calling on citizens to act with “caution, maturity, and a strong sense of national responsibility” to help maintain stability and public confidence.

Pakistan in recent years has witnessed increasingly stringent implementation of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA), a cybercrime law that has drawn criticism from rights groups, with journalists and activists arrested and prosecuted under its provisions.