Police release chairman of Pakistan’s leading rights body after brief detention

The file image shows Chairman Human Rights Commission of Pakistan Asad Iqbal (second from right) attending an event in Islamabad, Pakistan on April 29, 2022. (@HRCP87/X)
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Updated 25 July 2024
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Police release chairman of Pakistan’s leading rights body after brief detention

  • Chairman Human Rights Commission of Pakistan Asad Iqbal Butt says police questioned him about his ties to Baloch rights movement
  • Pakistani state has denied allegations by rights activists and politicians it is involved in enforced disappearances of people in Balochistan 

KARACHI: The chairperson of a leading rights body in Pakistan said he was detained by police in Karachi on Thursday who questioned him for raising his voice for the people of oppressed communities, particularly those from Balochistan. 

Asad Iqbal Butt, the chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) told Arab News police officials arrived at his house around noon on Thursday and took him to meet the Station House Officer (SHO) at Karachi’s Gulberg Police Station. 

Butt said the deputy superintendent of police (DSP) at the Gulberg station asked him whether he frequently visited Quetta to organize the Baloch rights movement. 

“I explained that the movement organizes itself and we support them when they face injustice, as we do for oppressed people of any ethnicity,” Butt said. 

Enforced disappearances is an enduring issue in Pakistan where relatives, politicians, and rights activists say many people who have gone missing, especially in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, have been abducted by Pakistani security forces on the pretext of fighting militancy.

The Pakistani state denies involvement in enforced disappearances. 

Butt said the police official accused him of having ties to the Baloch people. The HRCP chief said he responded to the DSP by telling him that he had ties to “oppressed people of every ethnicity, region, and religion.”

“I believe I was taken to police station because HRCP issued a strong statement on the Bannu issue,” Butt said, referring to last week’s shooting at a peace rally in Bannu that triggered a stampede, killing at least two and injuring 20 others. 

He said another reason for his detention could be that the HRCP is trying to prevent people from Karachi’s Lyari area, who wanted to attend an upcoming protest rally for “missing persons” in southwestern Gwadar city, from being detained by police. 

“They feared I would speak out, and HRCP’s support carries weight when it speaks,” he said. 

Karachi police officials did not respond to a request for a comment. 


At OIC meeting, Pakistan reiterates condemnation of Israeli recognition of Somaliland

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At OIC meeting, Pakistan reiterates condemnation of Israeli recognition of Somaliland

  • Islamabad warns move threatens Somalia’s sovereignty and regional stability
  • Pakistan reiterates support for Palestinian statehood and rejects displacement

ISLAMABAD: The foreign office on Thursday reiterated Pakistan’s rejection of Israel’s recognition of Somaliland, a self-declared breakaway region of Somalia, calling the move illegal and warning it could destabilize the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea region.

Somaliland declared independence from Somalia in 1991 but is not recognized by the United Nations or the African Union. Israel’s recent steps to recognize the territory, along with visits by Israeli officials, have drawn criticism from Somalia and several Muslim-majority countries, which say the move violates Somalia’s territorial integrity and risks escalating tensions in a strategically sensitive region bordering major global shipping lanes.

Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar took up the issue during the 22nd Extraordinary Session of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Council of Foreign Ministers held in Jeddah on Jan. 10, which was convened specifically to discuss recent developments related to Somalia.

“In his address, the DPM-FM strongly condemned the illegal and unlawful recognition by Israel of the Somaliland region, as well as subsequent unwarranted and highly provocative visits of Israeli officials to the territory,” the foreign office spokesman said in a weekly briefing.

“He termed such acts as political aggression and a direct assault on Somalia’s internationally recognized borders, setting a perilous precedent and threatening peace and security in the Horn of Africa, the Red Sea region, and beyond.”

The FO spokesman said Dar also addressed the Palestinian issue in his speech, rejecting proposals for the displacement of Palestinians and reaffirmed Pakistan’s long-standing support for a two-state solution.

Dar also welcomed the OIC’s continued backing for Pakistan’s position on Kashmir and urged the bloc to intensify efforts toward what it describes as the right to self-determination of the people of Jammu and Kashmir.

“The Extraordinary OIC Session demonstrated collective determination of OIC member states on various issues of facing Muslim Ummah, particularly Somalia,” the foreign office spokesman said.

“It sent a clear message to the international community on upholding the principles of state sovereignty and territorial integrity.”