Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

What can be done to remove the short comings of our anti terrorism laws, as because of flaws in our existing legal system most of the killers/terrorists get acquitted. And this in turn gives rise to other un constitutional acts from the state like abduction, killing and dumping which further deteriorates the law and order situation in the country.
Sectarian killers thrive under legal system | Blog | DAWN.COM

The bloodbath of Shia Muslims at the hands of fundamentalist Sunnis continues along the streets and roads in Pakistan. The Shia victims of sectarian violence have little hope for justice since three out of every four terrorism cases end up in an acquittal on technicalities.

Yesterday, Shias en route to their homes in Gilgit were removed from buses, lined up along the road, and shot in cold blood near Kohistan. Eighteen perished, while scores others were injured. Less than two weeks ago in Parachinar 43 Shias were killed in a bomb blast and subsequent firing by the security agencies. Eyewitness account reveals that the bomb was detonated remotely after it was placed on an empty cart in the Kurrami Bazaar by a person who disappeared in the same hotel where security forces were hosting reportedly “internally displaced people.”

While the convoy of buses near Kohistan was attacked by Jundallah, a sectarian outfit that thrives on murdering Shias, the attack in Parachinar was perpetrated by the supposedly “good Taliban”, who only recently were presented to the world as those who have renounced violence. However, killing Shias for the Taliban, both good and bad, is fair game.

Shias, however, have not been the only victims of violence in the past two weeks in Pakistan. Peshawar is experiencing a spell of murderous violence. A bomb blast at the Kohat Road bus stand killed 13 last Thursday. The very next day four policemen died in a coordinated attack on the fortified Kotwali police station by militants who blew themselves up during the attack. Yesterday, a Chinese woman and her guide were murdered in the centre of the Peshawar City. In the neighbouring city of Nowshera, six people were killed in a bomb attack after a political rally on Monday.

While the attacks on police and indiscriminate violence against civilians is equally reprehensible, the perpetrators of violence, however, are not attacking the victims for their religious, political, or any other beliefs. The attacks on Shias and other religious minorities are targeted killings primarily motivated by the bigoted religious intolerance exhibited by certain fundamentalist Sunni sects.

The State seems helpless in delivering justice even when it is successful in arresting those accused of terrorism. The path from arrest to conviction is punctuated with traps that capture the public prosecutors, but give a free pass to the accused. Several well-known terrorists have been acquitted by the anti-terrorism courts because of the flawed judicial system where errors and omissions during documentation, investigation and prosecution of the crimes have earned the accused their freedom who wasted no time in rejoining militant outfits.

**When courts fail victims
**
During 1990 and 2009, the anti-terrorism courts (ATC) in Punjab alone failed to convict the accused in 74 per cent of the 311 cases in which a final verdict was delivered. Most of the accused were acquitted not because they were able to demonstrate and/or substantiate their innocence, but because the judicial system in Pakistan is not capable of handling terrorism cases where prosecution’s case rests on circumstantial and forensic evidence, and not on the eyewitness account.

A systematic review of 178 ATC verdicts by Syed Ejaz Hussain, who until recently served as the deputy inspector general of police for anti-terrorism in Punjab and also holds a doctorate in criminology from University of Pennsylvania, revealed that the courts acquitted the accused in 77 per cent of the cases. Most of the accused were apprehended for being involved in sectarian violence.

The review of cases revealed that errors, omissions, misconduct and the judicial system’s undue requirements during the registering of the complaint (first information report (FIR)), investigation of the crime, and prosecution lead to the acquittal in three out of four cases.

In 36 per cent of the cases, the courts acquitted the accused because they were not personally named in the FIR. This is an absurd requirement in terrorism cases. How can one ascertain the identity of the accused immediately after the terrorist attack when the FIR is registered? In most instances, FIRs are registered against unknown accused, which should not be the reason for the courts to acquit the accused because their identity was not known to the police or to the victims the very second the attack took place.

In 11 per cent of the cases, the courts have acquitted the accused because eyewitnesses could not put the accused at the crime scene. Again, an absurd requirement by the anti-terrorism courts. The dead victims of the terrorist violence cannot step out of their graves to identify the accused for the courts. The injured may have never seen the person/s detonating the bomb through a remote control device. Victims of sniper firing never know where the bullet has come from. Why then are the courts acquitting the accused because the eyewitnesses could not place them at the crime scene?

In another 17 per cent of the cases, the courts have acquitted the accused because the FIR registered soon after the incident either did not describe the unknown accused or his role in the crime.

It appears that the courts fail to appreciate the fact that perpetrators of terrorist violence are not immediately known to the victims or to the police. Their identities are ascertained much later as the case is investigated. Just because the accused have not been singled out in the first information report, which is filed immediately after the incident either by the victims or by the state, the courts should not necessarily acquit the accused, especially when other compelling circumstantial/forensic evidence is available to consider.

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The review of the 178 cases further revealed that many cases were thrown out because of the shortcomings during investigation. In 35 per cent of the cases issues with the police line-up (identity parade) resulted in an acquittal. In some cases the witness failed to identify the accused in the line-up, while in other cases a police line-up was never put together. In 26 per cent of the cases, the recovered evidence was found unsatisfactory by the courts. For instance, the recovered evidence, such as the weapon used in the crime, did not match the weapon described by the forensic expert. In another 14 per cent cases, the confessional statements were not recorded adequately, which resulted in an acquittal. Excessive delays in submitting cases to the courts, improper recording of witness statements, and compromised medical or forensic evidence also resulted in acquittals.

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The above suggests that there is an urgent need to train the investigators in modern detective work that now involves forensic scientists, and computer and communication experts. Furthermore, there is a need to have the public prosecutors and magistrates advise detectives so that the evidence collection procedures comply with the regulations set by the courts. For instance, there should never be a delay in presenting the accused in front of the courts. The public prosecutors are intimately aware of the repercussions of such delays, and hence they can advise the detectives of the legal requirements. In fact, the government may want to show episodes of shows, such as Law & Order, and CSI to the investigators in Pakistan so that they may learn about the intricacies of investigative work.

Lastly, missteps during prosecution have also resulted in acquittal of the accused. Most problems arise with witnesses who often change their testimony, fail to show up during the trial, offer contradictory testimony or settle with the accused. Most of the time the witnesses feel intimated by the accused and out of fear for their lives or that of their families, they refuse to bear witness. This suggests that there is an urgent need for a witness protection program in Pakistan to offer necessary safety to the witnesses in terrorism cases. In fact, the witness protection program may work only if the witnesses are settled abroad afterwards rather than having them settle in Pakistan where they will always be looking over their shoulders.

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The Supreme Court and the press in Pakistan are pressuring the intelligence agencies in the missing person cases who have been accused of terrorist activities and have been secretly kept in custody by various intelligence agencies. The Supreme Court is well-placed to argue and stand for the rights of the accused, who are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

At the same time, it is also incumbent upon the higher courts and the press in Pakistan to be mindful of the fact that the accused in terrorism-related violence are most likely to be acquitted by the lower courts on technicalities. I understand and appreciate that due process matters.
However, the rights of the victims of terrorism matter as well. With the odds of conviction being less than one in four, the balance is tilted in favour of the accused rather than the victims of terrorist violence in Pakistan.

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Murtaza Haider, Ph.D. is the Associate Dean of research and graduate programs at the Ted Rogers School of Management at Ryerson University in Toronto. He can be reached by email at [EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected]*
The views expressed by this blogger and in the following reader comments do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Dawn Media Group.

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

The so-called sectarian violence in Pakistan has always been one sided and most of the victims of this violence have been shias.

I understand that when I think of sectarian violence, it means violence or riot from both sides.

But here it seems one side is planning cold blooded murder of other side. Its more of a genocide.

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

its pretty sad that majority of Sunni muslims are silent on this. :frowning:

anyhow, there was this article I read, so well written by the author! I thank him to speak up against this brutality and for raising points
that most of the time nobody likes to talk about it.

its so sad that the CJ has time to take sou moto of Waheeda Shah act, but he has no time to bring the Shia genocide culprits to justice!

Shia killing: Identified, offloaded and shot – The Express Tribune Blog

**Last time it happened they called it the Holocaust. The Nazis did not annihilate the Jews for what they had done or for what they had not done for that matter. They exterminated millions of Jewish men, women and children for what they were – the Jews.
**
That was the identity of those unfortunate souls that led them to ghastly ghettos and horrific concentration camps set up by the Third Reich across Europe. The holocaust was the genocide of one of its own kind, where no territory dispute or any material stakes were involved, but simply the hatred for a specific race that instigated one of the most horrendous mass killing events of hitherto history.

More recently, on September 20, 2011, an incident took place in Ganjidori area of Mastung, about 30 kilometers southeast of Quetta when a group of armed men attacked a passenger bus carrying Shia pilgrims from Quetta to Iran. The passengers were identified, offloaded and shot dead – 26 of them bore the brunt of being Shia.

**This came as a shock to many, who were largely unaware of faith based killings owing to the dominant public narrative in Pakistan that barely allows anyone to think or analyse critically out of their respective comfort zones.

Not many lovers of Mohsin Naqvi’s poetry are aware of the fact that he was murdered by fanatics because of being an adherent to Shia faith. There are only few out there who know that eminent scholar and Urdu poet Rais Amrohvi, brother of Jaun Elia, was assassinated in 1988 by the virtue of his faith.

There is a complete blackout in mainstream media about those 85 Shia doctors who have been killed in Karachi since 1990. Very little coverage, if any, has been given to the plight of Hazara Shias in Quetta who are being targeted for nearly a decade now. Parachinar is probably too far to get attention where Turi and Bangash Shias are under siege and assault of extremists, and scores have been killed since 2007. The only thing that binds all these sufferers together and distinguishes them is their faith based identity.

**As the state has miserably failed to protect its citizens, the intelligentsia and journalists – with few exceptions – share the proportionate blame for misrepresenting the spate of violence against Shias, that has come to be a systematic phenomenon. Deafening silence and misrepresentation of these inhumane killings have added to the miseries of the Shia community. Already indoctrinated by the state propagated narrative, the urban middle class of Pakistan barely gets the chance to come across anything objective coming from the mainstream media that further obfuscates already perplexed and macabre state of affairs. The identity of victims is usually missed out on purpose making it more difficult for common viewers / readers to comprehend the situation which is getting wretched with each passing day.

**Why call them Shia?
**
A fundamental question comes to the fore. Why is it requisite to bring up the specific identity of the victims? Why doesn’t the simple appellation of Muslim or Pakistani suffice?
Well, the answer is not so incomprehensible.

**A little out of the box approach is solicited to fathom the significance of specific identity. Here’s a case in point, an excerpt from a news item related to the recent massacre of Shias in Kohistan area:****Gunmen flagged down the buses, climbed on board and asked passengers for identification. They then proceeded to drag a group of men off the bus, stood them in a line by the roadside, and mercilessly sprayed them with bullets….They checked the identity of the passengers, got the Shias off the vehicles and shot them dead.
**
It’s evident like the shining sun from the above extract **what got the unfortunate souls killed. Ruthless killers did not identify and segregate the passengers by their Muslim or Pakistani identity, but otherwise. What bars us from calling it as it is? The most commonplace answer is:****To maintain sectarian harmony and not to aggravate things further.
**

Again, this is by and large a shallow perspective. **This justification can only be vindicated if we maintain that the ongoing killings of Shias across the country is the inevitable result of sectarian violence – when, by any standard, this is not sectarian violence but faith based mass killings of a particular group. Sectarian violence is necessarily a two-way phenomenon based on quid pro quo principle, while looking into the statistics of those killed during last few years the fact comes to the fore that killings of any other group does not even come near the Shias killed for their faith.

**This is not to play down historical disputes that persist between different sects and have always been there, but in fact to put the blame only on dogmatic issues that are tantamount to the elimination of the sinister elements perpetrating these killings. Masses have nothing to do with sectarian issues rather they have their own problems to deal with.

Taking into account the subcontinent, the Muslims had been living peacefully not only with the adherents to different religions but also there was peaceful harmony between different Muslim sects. **Mughal emperor Aurangzeb ruled the same society that once was governed by his predecessor Akbar. Shias were killed en masse during Aurangzeb’s era while Akbar’s rule was peaceful for them. That was a mindset, not society or Sunni sect for that matter, which led to the systematic persecution of Shias who had been peacefully living in the same society for centuries. The mindset is still operative that emanates from the courtyard of ignorance and nourishes in the power corridors of tyranny and oppression.

The problem at hand is not that who are the killers wreaking havoc across the country, but at first the question that our collective consciousness as a nation still ought to ask and reflect upon is that who are the people getting killed.

Once this question, which has been buried under the debris of lies and misconceptions, is addressed and well conceived, the truth immersed in the mist will start to emerge. Once we comprehend why a community persecuted and mass murdered during WWII is remembered as the Jews and not as Germans, Polish or Netherlanders despite being the residents of all these countries, we will start conceptualizing the reality.
Till then, there is no silver lining in dark clouds of horror for Shias of Pakistan living under the shadows of death.

**

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

That's what I was talking about the in the other thread, there are far bigger issues as compared to waheeda shah but the chief justice chose the latter. Anyways the elements who are killing the Shias tey are killing every one, mainstream Sunnis also don't support these killers but they need to be brought to task through our judicial system. Every now and then Lashkar e jhangvi chief gets released on bail.

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

you are right. this is like some third party who wants us to keep on fighting with each other .. larte reho, marte reho ...

however, its getting pretty tense since the last year or so ... I really hope Judicary does something about it.
but honestly speaking, not too hopeful ...

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

I was listening to dunya news yesterday and they were claiming that out of the six attackers of Srilankan team, four have been acquitted and the cases of the remaining two havent begun. This is the same thing that releases the sectarian terrorists.

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

sad state of our country ... a country where the most high profile murders havent been resolved yet
like Benazir bhutto, Liaquat Ali Khan and many more ...

if they couldnt bring their culprits to justice, should we really expect them to do something for a common Pakistani?

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

Not at all, they will need to change their criminal laws, and provide security to the witnesses...

for example if some one sees a taliban terrorist kill some one in front of his eyes, can he have the courage to go and say that in the court, because if he does that he will not have any security for himself as well as his family...

similarly we have recently seen a few instances in which people have given observations to the courts which the military/FC did not like, and we have seen what happened to them e.g. how the doctor who conducted autopsy on the 5 people killed in Kharotabad. The FC wanted him to say that the killed conducted a suicide attack or something, but when he presented a report that they were unarmed he was killed. Now we dont hear much about the incidence.

In these circumstances no one will provide any information on the tortures of the powerful, and will further increase the chaos in the society...

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

I wonder what the latest status of Kharotabad incidence and the killing of Sarfraz Shah by rangers in Karachi is now?

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

Something is really screwed in Pakistan, malik Ishaq of Lashkar e Jhangvi who is thought to be involved in sectarian killings is released every now and then. Malik Ishaq was also thought to be behind the Srilankan team attack.

[video]http://videos.geo.tv/VideoGallery.aspx?ID=4001[/video]

On the other hand a person has been handed death penalty on killing a Lashkar e Jhangvi leader.

Man gets death for killing banned outfit

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

yes, I think you are right, people are afraid of going to police, because they know it they wont be provided security and for the sake of their family
safety they just step back, out of fear for their lives.... security agencies and govt has miserbly failed to provide secuity to a common man.

Last year Judicary was taking bold steps, like they guy who got life sentence for Sarfaraz cold blooded murder ( I hope he actually did) and those two young boys who were brutally killed by the mob. Judicary did brought the culprits to justice ... though I still believe all those spectators who were watching tamasha while those boys were beaten to death should hav brought to court and put behind the bars. that inident was v disturbing and sickening.

they didnt follow up on Kharotabad inicident, last i heard the doctor was killed. and since then no news in the media???

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

You know, It would be easy to assume that the Pak power establishment is indifferent towards Shias, but the reality seems to be that they are indifferent to everyone including themselves.

Evan as their own are attacked and killed, Musharaf was attacked, Benazir was killed, Sherpao the other day, they do little beyond lip service and the token condemnation.

These people are hardly moved by the lack of safety even for themselves, why would anyone expect them to change for others?

Re: Sectarian killers thrive under legal system

not surprised there … this has been happening for quite some time now … these savages are roaming around free.


**PESHAWAR, March 3: A local anti-terrorism court on Saturday convicted a man of killing a banned organisation’s provincial secretary and sentenced him to death with a fine of Rs one million.

**wow …so wht happens whn these same banned outifit kill innocent people??