Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

**Musharraf’s brutality at its best.

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Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment](The Observer archive | The Guardian)

**The bruises suffered by Hassan Tariq, a senior barrister in Sindh province, extend in large purple patches from his hip to his rib cage. According to his own account, he was beaten with ‘a hard object’ and kicked and punched by officers for refusing to chant slogans in favour of Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf.He was seized on 8 November, but it was five days later when police brought him to the hospital in Nawabshah where doctors found that he had fractured ribs and internal bleeding to his lungs. After the operation to clear his lungs, he discovered the police who had been stationed outside his door had fled, leaving him a free man. **
**Tariq was fortunate. Thousands more members of civil society and the opposition remain in jail, under house arrest or simply unaccounted for in a crisis that claimed its first deaths last week, in a Karachi protest. The trouble escalated this weekend as US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte held talks with Musharraf to urge him to lift the emergency rule declared on 3 November.Negroponte spoke to Musharraf’s political rival, Benazir Bhutto, in the hope of persuading the two to resume talks on power sharing and a transition to democracy. His visit was being seen as a last chance to prevent wider turmoil.
**
Two weeks into the crisis that began when Musharraf purged the judiciary, muzzled the media and clamped down on politicians who opposed his re-election, the full details of what the ‘state of emergency’ entails are emerging as human rights groups in Karachi, Islamabad and Lahore collect testimonies.

Retribution is being meted out on a massive scale and Pakistan’s powerful gossip mill has attributed a particular motive to Musharraf’s thinking - his aim is to ‘teach a lesson’ to those who have dared object to his belief that only he can save his country. The aim of the state of emergency has been largely to humiliate the opposition.

Mahrouf Sultan, of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan - whose most prominent member Asma Jahangir was under house arrest in Lahore until Friday - described what is emerging as a typical experience of human rights activists.

**‘On 5 November, at 1am, around 10 police surrounded my house and started banging on the door asking for me. My sons refused to let them inside and told them I would come out to meet them. They hurled abuse at us,’ he said.
‘The men said they were taking me to the police station for 15-20 minutes to meet a superintendent, but when I went outside five or six men grabbed me and drove me to the Gulbahar police station where I was locked up and given no food for 24 hours.’

The next day he was taken to Karachi’s central jail. 'Along with 300 other people, I was made to sit on my feet for 10 hours while we were filling our “entries” as a form of punishment. We had to sit in the hot sun with no shade. They kept around 150 of us in one barracks meant to accommodate no more than 60 people.
‘There were four toilets in the barracks, but no water. The stench was terrible. We didn’t even have water to wash ourselves before our prayers.’**

Reports of humiliation and abuse are common from those who, because of age or good connections, have been let go or transferred to house arrest. Political activists have in effect been criminalised by being denied the legal ‘class 1 status’, which offers better conditions of custody and segregation from those charged with criminal acts.

Those in custody are held under Pakistan’s Anti-Terrorism Act. The list of names in Lahore alone of those lawyers charged under the act runs to several dozen, and includes Sarfraz Ahmad Cheema, secretary of the Lahore High Court Bar.
Each day brings new names. On Wednesday it was Imran Khan, the cricketer turned politician. On Thursday three of Khan’s sisters and four of his cousins were arrested in Lahore when they arranged a protest rally.

Charges are vague. Rafiq Ahmed, arrested with more than 50 other lawyers, said: ‘We had no idea why we were detained… Our detention orders stated that they had apprehensions that we were involved in anti-state activities.’

Even those who have thus far avoided arrest are not immune to the threats.
Last week The Observer listened as a warning was delivered to a prominent civil society activist, who asked to remain anonymous A relative had been sent with a message from Pakistan’s intelligence organisation, the ISI, warning: ‘Shut up or else.’

‘Musharraf built up this idea of being a benevolent dictator,’ says Farrukh Saleem, a columnist for the News. ‘But now people are being beaten up. Ten, 20 years ago, when you went to these demonstrations it would be the party workers getting arrested. The people arrested now are the intelligentsia.’

After a year of being challenged in the courts, Musharraf has taken the laws being used to question to the legitimacy of his rule and refashioned them. As a result, many of those arrested have been charged under either the Anti-Terrorism Act or the provisions of the colonial-era Maintenance of Public Order Act.

Pakistan’s attorney general has hinted that the political activists might be freed as a concession to Negroponte’s visit but that the charges would remain on file.
‘Musharraf is trying to cling on to power by beating and jailing an ever-growing number even of opposition activists,’ said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. ‘His abuse of anti-terrorism laws in a desperate bid to hold on to power must end.’

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

Unrest in Pakistan, concern in Md.](http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.pakistanis18nov18,0,2492884.story)**

                                                                                                                                **Pakistani-Americans watch and worry**

In Pakistan, the arrests of two acclaimed professors at Lahore University of Management Sciences sparked large student protests.

In Baltimore, Riwan Chaudhry became inspired. Lahore is his hometown, the university his alma mater, and the professors his heroes.

The doctoral student in computer science at the Johns Hopkins University joined a demonstration outside the Pakistani Embassy calling for an end to Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf’s state of emergency, a move that suspended the nation’s constitution, imposing de facto martial law.

“I’ve always known this culture of independence in Pakistan, then suddenly, one day it all goes away,” said Chaudhry. “With these arrests, that was the flash point. We had to do something.”

In the two weeks since Musharraf issued the emergency decree - which has included silencing the press and dissolving the Supreme Court - Pakistan’s political turmoil has monopolized conversation among local Pakistani-Americans.

While some have taken part in protests, others have called their representatives in Congress, urging the United States government to pressure Musharraf to end the state of emergency. And many more panicked expatriates are making frequent calls to anxious relatives while scouring satellite TV for updates.

Musharraf, who is also chief of Pakistan’s army, has said he issued the emergency decree because of a rising threat of Islamic militants and interference by the judiciary. But opponents called the move unconstitutional, noting it came just as the Supreme Court was expected to rule on the legality of his re-election last month.

Authorities placed opposition leader and former Prime Minster Benazir Bhutto under house arrest and detained her supporters, who were planning a rally denouncing the president. Nevertheless, anti-Musharraf demonstrations have persisted and Bhutto has called for the president to step down.

“A lot of people feel that progress has been made in Pakistan in the last five to six years,” said Irfan Malik, an engineer from Ellicott City who left Pakistan for the United States 22 years ago. “And now you have this. We’re going 180 degrees the other way, and people are really asking why. No one has been able to answer that.”

Malik said his mother and three sisters who remain in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad are worried the political instability will cause a surge in Islamic militancy. One of his sisters, who works as a human resource officer in a government agency, recently called Malik, alarmed after encountering road barricades and opposition rallies on her drive to work.

“There have been incidents where some people are targeting army officers and their families,” he said. “Many of my family members and friends have cut down their outside activities. They are afraid to be in an open place, in case some violence were to break out.”

Fear has so gripped Dr. Anees Ahsan’s family in Lahore that when he calls to ask about the political turmoil, they change the subject, he said.

“They are too afraid to talk on the phone; they think the lines might be tapped,” said Ahsan, a cardiologist from Clarksville, who has friends in the Pakistani government. “This is the kind of oppression and suppression going on.”**

Ahsan, who visits his mother and two brothers in Pakistan every year, calls his hometown of Lahore - where Bhutto has been detained and students and lawyers have demonstrated - “the eye of the storm.” The latest strife has been difficult for him to stomach, since he was once an ardent supporter of Musharraf.

“I thought he was the right person to make Pakistan become a terrorist-free zone,” said Ahsan, who has lived in the U.S. since 1983. “But I feel that he is more concerned about staying president than he is worried about the country.”

Ahsan said he and many other U.S. citizens born in Pakistan feel they have a foot in each nation. But they say they are resolved to view the conflict as Americans, with the hope that the Bush administration gets tougher on Musharraf’s regime.

“The international community must convey to him that they will not deal with a dictator,” Ahsan said. “When you have judges arrested, the constitution suspended, but you say, ‘I’m going to have fair and free elections,’ that’s so ridiculous. And for a person like me, very painful.”

Malik, who is active in the National Association of Pakistani-Americans and a local organization of Pakistani entrepreneurs, said he thinks Pakistani immigrants can play an important role in affecting U.S. policy.

While he acknowledges that Congress has little bearing on the administration’s policies toward Pakistan, Malik said he has made phone calls to Rep. Elijah E. Cummings’ office to urge an end to Musharraf’s policies. “They really need to tell Musharraf - and in real terms, not just politely - that he needs to roll back the emergency and reinstate the judiciary,” he said.

Naveeda Khan, an assistant professor of anthropology at Johns Hopkins, said the Bush administration is unlikely to come down harshly on Musharraf.

“They have banked on this guy, and they don’t know how to change the game,” said Khan, who has studied sectarianism in Pakistan. “I think the Americans have backed themselves into a corner now.”

Khan is concerned about how Pakistani academics are coping under the restrictions. She and colleagues at Hopkins and elsewhere have reached out to professors in Pakistani universities hoping to conduct a “virtual conference” to offer support and share analysis on the turmoil.

“I think there is fear that they might feel really isolated,” she said. “While there hasn’t been a systematic backlash against academics that I know, there is more like a suspension of free speech, so there is this concern about who is next.”

Other observers, like Anwer Hasan of Clarksville, a Karachi-born engineer, say Pakistan has weathered worse.

Hasan said his relatives in Karachi and Islamabad have gone about their daily activities without much concern. Hasan, who arrived in the U.S. in 1981, said the ethnic clashes in the early 1970s, in which strikes closed schools and colleges, immobilized the country.

He characterized the current upheaval as a wave of political infighting among “failed leaders,” a pattern he is skeptical will change.

“We have to stop worrying about the people in charge and look at the collective gain of the country,” he said. “We need new folks, new blood, new energy and excitement to take the country to the next level.”

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

I'm sure dictators apologists will be able to find the way to defend these serious violations of human rights.

2 Likes

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

Yes the protesters aka anarchists and trouble makers are punished, and yes when police is hauling these anarchists away and removing them from public properties.

Police officers are there to keep peace in the cities so we don't see more suiciders and hate mongers to get their black acts (kalay kartoot) done on innocent Pakistanis.

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

The protesters are out against a traitor and police should protect them not do the dictators dirty work. This is all evidence against him when he will be hauled up against the courts once the police is there not to protect him. The same police will whip hiss ass even harder than condi did, than what will you do? The suicide bombers have been doing their kalay kartoot because of his incompetence and people like yourself supporting him.

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

You Mush lackeys just disgust me, always trying your best to justify even his most heinous crimes against humanity. Peaceful protest is a fundamental right of every human-being in a civilised society. Locking this lawyer up was bad enough but mal-treating him this way constitutes the worst violation of human rights. I don't blame you though. Just feel sorry for you lot. We who now live in the West take all such freedoms for granted. But what do you know? ghulaamana zehniyat aur danday k saamnay jhuknay kee aadat jo ho gayee hai tum sab ko. budd dua lagay sab kee iss dictator ko! He has crossed all limits of decency. Mark my words, these same crimes will be his nemesis one day.

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

I honestly wish now that Musharaf had died way back when in those assasination attempts... Hope someone stand up to this dictator and saves whatever remains of Pakistan from this Psycho...

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

Police in pakistan have been brutal since the day pakistan was created. But even then they are better than taliban police which is the next alternative to them. Keep things in perspective. This is Pakistan we are talking about where extra-judicial killings of mohajirs was the norm daily not that long ago.

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

That's equally deplorable and condemnable but two wrongs don't make a right. We all need to stand up against this police brutality.

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

Where was Geo, ARY, Gupshup, PPP, PML when that was happening? Oh that's right, free electronic media did not exist, and the political parties were the ones inflicting massacres on mohajirs.

So, don't get all upset if I don't cry myself to sleep tonight because someone got a little beating (which is normal activity in any police station in case you have been away from pakistan for some time) while thousand's of mohajirs cried themselves to sleep not knowing what happened to their relatives.

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

Anarchy is spread by imposition of emergency and not by protesting against it. Read below from first post:
According to his own account, he was beaten with ‘a hard object’ and kicked and punched by officers for refusing to chant slogans in favour of Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf.

Yes sure, thats why influx to Swat was controlled, Lal Masjid never had any terrorists… because our saviour police is doing their job :dhimpak:

Re: Musharraf widens his sphere of punishment

You need to complain that to Al-Gore why he was late in inventing internet... oh wait, Taliban were attacking Al-Gore back then hence the late arrival.