ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Asia

Families of Shia missing persons hold protest against Pak govt's role in enforced disappearances

Karachi [Pakistan], April 5 (ANI): Pakistan's Joint Action Committee (JAC) for Shia missing persons and families held a sit-in protest against the Imran Khan government's involvement in the rising cases of enforced disappearances in the country.

ANI Apr 05, 2021 21:33 IST googleads

Representative image

Karachi [Pakistan], April 5 (ANI): Pakistan's Joint Action Committee (JAC) for Shia missing persons and families held a sit-in protest against the Imran Khan government's involvement in the rising cases of enforced disappearances in the country.
The JAC held a protest on Friday demanding the whereabouts of the missing persons.
According to Dawn, the families of the missing persons said that their sit-in will continue till the recovery of their people. It was said that the authorities, including the President of Pakistan Arif Alvi, have repeatedly assured them regarding the missing persons' recovery but none have kept their promise.
Action Committee leaders attended the protest. They stated that if the missing persons were involved in any crime, they should be brought before the courts. They should not be taken away like this with their families not even knowing whether they were dead or alive, Dawn further reported.
Zaheera, one of the family member of missing people said that her 22-year-old son, Wahid Hussain, went missing on March 21, 2018. "My son had applied to the army and had even cleared all their tests. While he waited for his letter to come from there he was driving a loading pickup truck to earn some money and supplement the household income. He went missing along with the pickup truck. The truck was recovered three months later but not my son. Two days ago completed three full years of his going missing."
Farhat Fatima, another family member of the missing people said that her son Syed Ibad-ul-Hasan Rizvi went missing in 2017. "He worked with a bank here. We only know that he was picked up by [a law-enforcement agency]. We have not heard from him since then. This is his five-year-old son."
Enforced disappearances have been a long stain on Pakistan's human rights record. Despite the pledges of successive governments to criminalise the practice, there has been a very slow movement on legislation, while people continue to be forcibly disappeared with impunity.
Enforced disappearance has been used as a tool by the Pakistani state to silence the minority communities. While countless abductees have been killed, many of them are still facing inhuman torture in army secrets cells. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Europe

Blasphemy laws in Pakistan target religious minorities: GHRD

Blasphemy laws in Pakistan target religious minorities: GHRD

At the 61st session of the United Nations Human Rights Council, the organisation Global Human Rights Defence (GHRD) raised concerns over the continued misuse of blasphemy laws in Pakistan and their impact on religious minorities.

Read More
Asia

3 Indian seafarers dead in Gulf maritime incidents: Rajesh Sinha

3 Indian seafarers dead in Gulf maritime incidents: Rajesh Sinha

"There have been maritime incidents involving Indian crew on foreign-flagged vessels. Of these vessels, there were 78 Indian seafarers. Of these, 70 are unhurt and escaped. Four sustained injuries over the last few days, but are stable. Unfortunately, there have been three casualties, and one seafarer is missing," he said.

Read More
Asia

Jaishankar, Indonesia’s FM exchange perspective on W Asia crisis

Jaishankar, Indonesia’s FM exchange perspective on W Asia crisis

In a post on X, Jaishankar wrote, "Pleased to talk to FM Sugiono of Indonesia. Exchanged perspectives on the West Asia conflict. Discussed bilateral ties and agreed to hold the Joint Commission meeting at an early date."

Read More
Asia

MEA rejects Pakistan’s statement on India-Canada deal

MEA rejects Pakistan’s statement on India-Canada deal

"We reject this statement made by Pakistan on the matter. India's credentials regarding non-proliferation are impeccable and well recognised by the global community. A country with a well-documented history of clandestine nuclear proliferation can hardly preach the virtues of export controls and proliferation risks. Such ludicrous statements are nothing more than an attempt by Pakistan to distract from its own abysmal record," he said.

Read More
Asia

India rejects Pakistan's "baseless allegations"

India rejects Pakistan's

India on Thursday rejected Pakistan's allegations of aggravating skirmishes with Afghanistan, calling them "baseless" and accusing Pakistan of blaming others for its own misdeeds.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.