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URGENT
APPEALS – GENERAL URGENT APPEALS – GENERAL URGENT APPEALS -
GENERAL
ASIAN
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION - URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME
Urgent
Appeal General
18 April
2006
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UG-003-2006: PAKISTAN: Alarming situation of forced
disappearance of political and human rights activists in
Balochistan
PAKISTAN:
Forced disappearance; absence of effective investigation;
impunity; collapse of rule of law
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Dear
friends,
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) is deeply concerned
by the continuous disappearances of political and human rights
activists in Balochistan, the southern province in Pakistan.
It is alleged that government’s security personnel are
involved in these disappearances.
The latest
disappearance took place on 7 April 2006. Mr. Munir
Mengal, the management director of Baloch Voice, a
Balochi-language television station based in Bahrain, the
United Arab Emirates, went missing after arriving in Karachi,
Pakistan from Bahrain on April 7. His family alleges that he
was arrested by the military intelligence officers at the
airport. Mr. Mengal’s wife Mrs. Aziza Mengal said that the
victim went to Karachi to recruit technical staff for a TV
station, which was scheduled to start its broadcast from
Bahrain on June 16. Mr. Mengal’s whereabouts remain unknown.
Reporters Without Borders showed its concern about Mr.
Mengal’s disappearance saying “Launching a TV station for 10
million Balochi in Pakistan and other parts of the world
cannot be considered a crime.” Due to the ongoing military
operations in Balochistan, the Government of Pakistan has
severely restricted Balochi people’s right to access
information. Mr. Ghulam Mohammad, a staff of the Balochistan
National Movement said, “When Pakistan has electronic channels
of each language, why are Blaochis denied to have their own
channel?”
This is
not an isolated case. There have been several reported
disappearance cases in Balochistan. The whereabouts of most of
the missing persons are unknown. In some cases, the courts
ordered that the disappeared be produced before courts but
this was ignored by the authorities. Some other disappearance
cases are described below:
1.
Dr. Haneef Shareef, the prominent poet and writer in
Blochi language has been missing for over three months after
being picked up by the military intelligence officers in
Turbat, Balochistan on 15 January 2006. His whereabouts are
not known to his family. Dr. Sareef has written articles and
poetry regarding the poor economic and social conditions of
the people in Balochistan. Desperate to learn of Dr. Shareef’s
whereabouts, his mother and relatives have staged a hunger
strike in front of the Karachi Press Club for over 40 days.
2.
Mr. Asghar Bangulzai, the political activist in
Balochistan, has been disappeared for the last four years
since he was abducted by law enforcement agencies on 18
October 2001 in Quetta, the capital city of Balochistan. His
young children and relatives have staged a hunger strike for
the past five months in front of the Quetta Press Club.
3.
Mr. Hafiz Saeed Ahmed was also allegedly abducted by
law enforcement officers in 2002 in Quetta. His family members
have been on a hunger strike for over four months in front of
the Quetta Press Club urging the government to locate his
whereabouts and release him.
4.
Mr. Rauf Sasuli, a member of the central committee of
Jamhoori Watan party has been missing since 2 February 2006.
Mr. Salim Baloch, the vice-president of the
same political party, has been missing since 10 March 2006. He
was arrested by the police after holding a demonstration in
front of the Karachi Press Club.
5. Seven
members of the Baloch Students Organisation (BSO),
including its president, Mr. Imdad Baloch, were taken by law
enforcement officers in March 2005 and detained in a secret
place in Punjab province, where they were severely tortured.
Three months later, three students including Mr. Lmdad Baloch,
who were suffering from severe medical conditions at the time,
were thrown on the street in a remote area in Dera Ghazi Khan
District, Punjab province. They later told their families and
the media that military officers had tortured them while
asking information about the Balochistan Liberation Army,
which the students claim they knew nothing of. Meanwhile, the
remaining four students are still missing and their families
fear that they have been killed as a result of the torture
inflicted on them.
BACKGROUND
INFORMATION:
Balochistan was incorporated into the new state of Pakistan,
as the Indian subcontinent was split at the end of British
rule in 1947. Since then, there have been continuous
insurgencies by Baloch nationalists in the province seeking
greater autonomy.
The
Pakistan Army started military operations in Balochistan
province in 2001 to construct the cantonments and to have full
control over the sea port of Gwader and routes connecting
Central Asian countries with those in South Asia. During this
time, the clampdown in Balochistan has become serious.
According to a January 2006 statement by Pakistani Senator
Sanaullah Baloch, at least 180 people have died in bombings,
122 children have been killed by paramilitary troops and
hundreds of people have been arrested since the beginning of
the campaign in early 2005. On 8 December 2005, the federal
interior minister stated that some 4,000 people had been
arrested in Balochistan since the beginning of 2005.
Baloch
people also suffer from great poverty. According to the
Karachi-based Social Policy and Development Centre (SPDC),
poverty levels in Balochistan are the highest in the country.
Every second person in Balochistan lives below the poverty
line. Only 50 percent of the province's 7 million people have
access to clean drinking water, only half the children attend
primary schools and only a third of children between 12 and 23
months are immunised, according to the SPDC.
Balochistan has in fact very rich mineral resources. However,
all the resources in the province are controlled by the
federal government and no royalty or compensation has been
paid to people in Balochistan. Also, the country's most
populous province, Punjab, is controlling the military, the
administration and utilises of all the resources. In addition,
the government has provided little resources towards social
welfare in comparison with other provinces. People in
Balochistan blame the federal government for their plight and
point out that the benefits derived from the province's
natural wealth have not been returned to it.
SUGGESTED
ACTION:
Please
send your appeal letters to the central and local government
authorities of Pakistan and urge them to locate the
whereabouts of Mr. Munir Mengal and release him immediately.
Please also urge them to take prompt action to locate all the
missing persons allegedly taken by law enforcement officers
and immediately inform their whereabouts to their families.
Please also urge them to respect the right to access
information of the Balochi people and halt the ongoing
military operation in Balochistan and take genuine steps to
consult with people in Balochistan to restore peace. Please
also write to the relevant UN agencies listed below and
request them to pressure the Government of Pakistan to
intervene in this matter.
Suggested
letter:
Dear
______________,
PAKISTAN:
Alarming situation of forced disappearance of political and
human rights activists in Balochistan
I am
writing to bring to your attention the disappearance of
Mr. Munir Mengal, the management director of
Baloch Voice, a Balochi-language television station based in
Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, who has been missing since
7 April 2005 after allegedly being taken by military
intelligence officers at the airport in Karachi, Pakistan. Mr.
Mengal’s whereabouts remain unknown. He arrived in Karachi
from Bahrain to recruit technical staff for a TV station,
which was scheduled to start its broadcast from Bahrain on
June 16. It is believed that he was arrested due to his plan
to launch a TV station for Balochi people, while the
Government of Pakistan has severely restricted Balochi
people’s right to access information due to ongoing military
operations in Balochistan.
I am very
concerned that this is not an isolated case. I have been
informed of the continuous disappearance of political and
human rights activists in Balochistan, who were allegedly
taken by the government’s security personnel. Some of the
disappearance cases are as follows:
1.
Dr. Haneef Shareef, the prominent poet and writer in
Blochi language is missing after being picked up by military
intelligence officers in Turbat, Balochistan on 15 January
2006. Dr. Sareef has written articles and poetry regarding the
poor economic and social conditions of the people in
Balochistan.
2. Mr. Asghar Bangulzai, the political
activist in Balochistan, has been disappeared for the last
four years since he was abducted by law enforcement agencies
on 18 October 2001 in Quetta, the capital city of Balochistan.
3. Mr. Hafiz Saeed Ahmed was also allegedly
abducted by law enforcement officers in 2002 in Quetta.
4. Mr. Rauf Sasuli, a member of the central
committee of Jamhoori Watan party has been missing since 2
February 2006 and Mr. Salim Baloch, the
vice-president of the same political party, has been missing
since 10 March 2006. Mr. Baloch was arrested by the police
after holding a demonstration in front of the Karachi Press
Club.
5. Four members of the Baloch Students Organisation (BSO)
remain missing after being arrested by military officers in
March 2005. According to the president of BSO, Mr. Imdad
Baloch, who was taken together with the said four students and
later released, they were all severely tortured by military
personnel in a secret place in Punjab province. Families of
the victims fear that those not yet released may have been
killed as a result of the torture inflicted on them.
The
whereabouts of all of these missing persons are unknown. I
was also informed that the courts ordered that the missing be
produced before them, but this was ignored by the government
authorities.
In light
of the above, I strongly urge you to take immediate action to
locate the whereabouts of Mr. Munir Mengal and release him
immediately. Launching a TV station for Balochi people in
Pakistan cannot be considered a crime and the right to access
information of the Balochi people should be respected. I also
urge you to take prompt action to locate all the missing
persons mentioned above and immediately inform their
whereabouts to their families. The orders of the courts with
regards to producing missing persons before courts should be
observed by the concerned authorities. I further request you
to halt the ongoing military operation in Balochistan and take
genuine steps to consult with people in Balochistan to restore
peace, and ensure the social welfare of the Baloch people, who
suffer from great poverty.
I look for
your urgent intervention into this matter.
Yours
sincerely,
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PLEASE
SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:
1. General
Pervez Musharraf
President
President’s Secretariat
Islamabad
PAKISTAN
Fax: +92 51 922 1422, 4768/ 920 1893 or 1835
Email:
CE@pak.gov.pk
2. Mr.
Muhammad Wasi Zafar
Minister of Law, Justice and Human Rights,
S Block,
Pakistan Secretariat,
Islamabad,
PAKISTAN
Fax: +92 51 920 2628
E-Mail:
minister@molaw.gov.pk
3. Mr.
Awais Ghani
Governor of Balochistan
Governor House,
Quetta,
Balochistan,
PAKISTAN
Fax: +92 81 920 2178/ 2992
4. Mrs
Rifat Iqbal
Ambassador of Pakistan,
Embassy of Pakistan,
Ailesbury Villa,
1B Ailesbury Road,
Ballsbridge,
Dublin 4
U.S.A
Tel: +1 261 3032 / 01 261 3033
Fax: +1 261 3007
5. Prof.
Manfred Nowak
Special Rapporteur on the Question of Torture
Attn: Safir Syed
c/o OHCHR-UNOG
1211 Geneva 10
SWITZERLAND
Tel: +41 22 917 9230
Fax: +41 22 917 9016 (ATTN: SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR TORTURE)
E-mail:
ssyed@ohchr.org
6. Ms.
Hina Jilani
Special Representative of the Secretary General for human
rights defenders
Att: Melinda Ching Simon
Room 1-040
C/o OHCHR-UNOG
1211 Geneva 10
SWITZERLAND
Tel: +41 22 917 93 88
Fax: +41 22 917 9006 (ATTN: SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE HUMAN
RIGHTS DEFENDERS)
E-mail:
MChingSimon@ohchr.org
Thank you.
Urgent
Appeals Programme
Asian Human Rights Commission (ahrchk@ahrchk.org)
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Source:
http://www.ahrchk.net/ua/mainfile.php/2006/1666/ |