State of Human Rights in 2018 English 1 PDF
State of Human Rights in 2018 English 1 PDF
State of Human Rights in 2018 English 1 PDF
Human Rights
in 2018
Printed by
Visionaries Division
Lahore
visionariesdivision@gmail.com
March 2019
Price:
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ISBN:
978-969-8324-88-0
Introduction … 1
Key Issues … 5
I Rule of Law
Laws and law-making … 17
Administration of justice … 33
Death penalty … 49
Pakistan and international human rights mechanisms … 53
II Enforcement of Law
Law and order … 65
Jails and prisoners … 81
Enforced disappearances … 93
III Fundamental Freedoms
Freedom of movement … 101
Freedom of thought, conscience and religion … 111
Freedom of expression … 125
Freedom of assembly … 137
Freedom of association … 147
IV Democratic Development
Political participation … 157
V Rights of the Disadvantaged
Women … 171
Children … 187
Labour … 201
The elderly … 217
People living with disabilities … 227
Refugees and IDPs … 237
VI Social and Economic Rights
Education … 253
Health … 267
Housing, land grabbing and public amenities … 281
Environment … 293
Appendices
HRCP Activities … 307
HRCP Stands … 321
Abbreviations
ADB Asian Development Bank DSJ District and Sessions
ADR Alternate Dispute Judge
Resolution DSP Deputy Superintendent of
AJK Azad Jammu and Kashmir Police
ANP Awami National Party ECL Exit Control List
ASI Assistant Sub-Inspector EIA Environment Impact
[of Police] Assessment
ASJ Additional Sessions Judge EPA Environment Protection
ATA Anti-Terrorism Act Agency
ATC Anti-Terrorism Court EPI Expanded Programme for
BHC Balochistan High Court Immunisation
BHU Basic Health Unit FATA Federally Administered
CDA Capital Development Tribal Areas (now merged
Authority with KP)
CEC Chief Election FCR Frontier Crimes
Commissioner Regulation
CEDAW Convention on the FDMA FATA Disaster
Elimination of all Forms of Management Authority
Discrimination against FIA Federal Investigation
Women Agency
CCI Council of Common FIDH International Federation
Interests for Human Rights
CIA Criminal Investigation FIR First Information Report
Agency HEC Higher Education
CII Council of Islamic Commission
Ideology HRCP Human Rights
CJ Chief Justice Commission of Pakistan
COAS Chief of Army Staff ICCPR International Covenant for
CNIC Computerised National Civil & Political Rights
Identity Card ICESCR International Covenant on
CrPC Criminal Procedure Code Economic, Social and
CRC Committee on the Rights Cultural Rights
of the Child IDMC Internal Displacement
CRPD Convention on the Rights Management Centre
of Persons with IG Inspector General [of
Disabilities Police]
DCO District Coordination IMF International Monetary
Officer Fund
DFID Department for INGO International Non-
International governmental
Development UK organisation
DIG Deputy Inspector General ISI Inter-Services Intelligence
[of Police / Prisons] ISPR Inter-Services Public
DPO District Police Officer Relations
IUCN International Union for PPC Pakistan Penal Code
Conservation of Nature PPP Pakistan People’s Party
IUS Unesco Institute for PS Police Station
Statistics PTI Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf
JI Jamaat-e-Islami RHC Rural Health Centre
JJSO Juvenile Justice Systems SC Supreme Court
Ordinance SAARC South Asian Association
JPP Justice Project Pakistan for Regional Cooperation
JUI (F) Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Islam SAFRON States and Frontier
(Fazlur Rehman Group) Regions
LHC Lahore High Court SCARP Salinity Control and
LHW Lady Health Worker Reclamation Project
MNA Member of the National
SCBA Supreme Court Bar
Assembly
Association
MPA Member of the Provincial
SHC Sindh High Court
Assembly
MQM Muttahida (formerly SHO Station House Officer
Mohajir) Qaumi SI Sub-Inspector [of Police]
Movement SITE Sindh Industrial Trading
NA National Assembly Estate
NAB National Accountability SP Superintendent of Police
Bureau SSP Senior Superintendent of
NACTA National Counter Police
Terrorism Authority TLP Tehreek-e-Labbaik
NAP National Action Plan Pakistan
NCHR National Commission for TTP Tehreek-e-Taliban
Human Rights Pakistan
NCSW National Commission on UDHR Universal Declaration of
the Status of Women Human Rights
NEQS National Environment UNDCP United Nations Drug
Quality Standards Control Programme
NGO Non-governmental UNDP United Nations
organisation Development Programme
NIC National Identity Card UNESCO United Nations
NIRC National Industrial Educational Scientific and
Relations Commission Cultural Organisation
NSC National Security Council UNFPA United Nations
PAEC Pakistan Atomic Energy Population Fund
Commission
UNHCHR United Nations High
PATA Provincially Administered
Commissioner for
Tribal Areas
Refugees
PFUJ Pakistan Federal Union of
Journalists UNICEF United Nations Children’s
PHC Peshawar High Court Fund
PkMAP Pakhtunkhawa Milli WAPDA Water and Power
Awami Party Development Authority
PMA Pakistan Medical WASA Water and Sewerage
Association Authority
PML(N) Pakistan Muslim League WB World Bank
Nawaz. PML-Q is WHO World Health
Pakistan Muslim League, Organisation
Quaid-e-Azam. WTO World Trade Organisation
PONM Pakistan Oppressed WWF Worldwide Fund for
Nations Movement Nature
Glossary
[Terms commonly used in discourse on rights and laws]
Introduction 1
religious minorities, showed no sign of receding, with blasphemy laws
providing yet another opportunity to vent hatred. One bright prospect
opened up when the Supreme Court acquitted Aasia Bibi, but the
ensuing violence against the verdict could only be quelled when an
‘agreement’ was reached.
The year began with a horrifying crime against a six-year-old child
and the relative speed with which the culprit was apprehended was
in no small part due to the public outcry. The sentence handed down
proved to be no deterrent—distressing reports of abuse and violence
involving children continued to surface and the revulsion that the nation
felt against the predators and the criminals was accompanied by the
despairing realisation that this was only the tip of the iceberg.
To bring an end to the exploitation and ill treatment of children in
industries and homes, and restore their right to a safe and protected
childhood, calls for a monumental and dedicated effort. Legislation may
exist or be forthcoming, but is there the will and the means to enforce it?
This was also a year in which the proliferation of suo motu cases raised
eyebrows, perhaps more so for the questionable choice of some issues.
Nonetheless, it spoke volumes about the prevailing law and order
situation that many deserving cases might never have been heard had
they not been taken note of by the Supreme Court.
While the interventions of the Supreme Court attracted much attention,
the long-awaited reform of the criminal justice system remained on the
back burner. And the steady accumulation and growth of the backlog
of cases went unchecked in all the courts of the country. The frustration
and suffering of litigants was exacerbated by delays, and the judicial
process was further marred by the simmering conflict between lawyers
and the judiciary.
Particularly notable during the year were the prolific and widely
reported activities of the National Accountability Bureau, whose modus
operandi was viewed with a mix of approbation and dismay. No one,
it seemed, was immune from their endeavours to root out corruption.
The axe fell on former prime ministers, politicians, media personalities,
CEOs, and university officials alike.
The festering sores of enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings
remained a blight on the nation’s image. Until and unless victims and
families are given full and unimpeded recourse to due process, and
impunity is denied to the perpetrators, these extreme violations of the
rights of citizens will never be eradicated.
Never was there a time more in need of the fearless, forthright, and
uncompromising defender of the rule of law. The sudden and tragic
loss of Asma Jahangir in February 2018 left the country bereft of a
Mehdi Hasan
Chairperson
Introduction 3
Key Issues
Laws and law-making
• The federal parliament made a total of 39 laws in 2018, a slight
increase from 2017 when 34 laws came into effect.
• The Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) were merged with
the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on 31 May 2018.
• The Transgender Persons (Protection and Rights) Act 2018 was
passed, covering a range of provisions, and significantly allowing a
transgender person to be recognised as per his or her self-perceived
gender identity.
• The Juvenile Justice System Act 2018 replaced the Ordinance
promulgated in 2000.
• Sindh was once again just ahead with the highest legislative output,
closely followed by the Punjab. Two significant Act passed by the
Sindh government were The Sindh Maternity Benefits Act 2018, and
The Sindh Home-Based Workers Act 2018.
Administration of justice
• By year end, there were close to 1.9 million cases pending in over 250
lower, special, and superior courts.
• The National Accountability Bureau filed 440 corruption references,
apprehended 503 accused persons, received 44,315 complaints, and
conducted 1,713 complaint verifications during the year.
• While suo motu interventions by the Supreme Court proliferated,
the long-awaited reform of the criminal justice system was put on
the back burner.
• At the end of the year 4,688 prisoners were on death row. At least
500 have been executed since 2014, fourteen of them in 2018.
• The landmark judgment on the acquittal of Aasia Bibi by the
Supreme Court was a welcome sign that, even in a flawed judicial
system, the rule of law was still capable of protecting an innocent
victim.
Pakistan and international human rights mechanisms
• Pakistan has affirmed in its election pledge to the Human Rights
Key Issues 5
Council that it is ‘firmly resolved to uphold, promote and safeguard
universal human rights and fundamental freedoms for all.’
• HRCP expressed concern that Pakistan had chosen to only ‘note’
key human rights principles including, among others, the reporting
of investigation and prosecution of security forces that commit
human rights violations; amending discriminatory laws against
marginalised groups, taking effective measures to prevent the abuse
of blasphemy legislation, and the use of violence against religious
minorities.
• Requests for country visits from UN Special Rapporteurs on
extrajudicial executions; the situation of human rights defenders;
the promotion and protection of human rights while countering
terrorism; freedom of religion or belief; and torture and other cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, remain pending.
• Pakistan has ratified the eight ILO fundamental conventions but
never fully applied them.
Law and order
• As in previous years, there has been a steady decline in conflict-
related deaths, although the 2018 General Election saw a rise in
violent deaths for the period between June and July.
• During the year, numerous reports emerged of police blackmail and
extortion, torture and harassment during raids, custodial deaths,
refusal to register FIRs, and corruption.
• HRCP monitoring data showed 845 incidences of sexual violence
against women, and 316 crimes in the name of ‘honour’ perpetrated
against both men and women. These are minimum figures.
• Child sex abuse incidents are on the rise. One report showed an
increase of 32 percent in the first six months of 2018 compared to
the same period the previous year, a 47 percent increase in cases
involving boys, and a 75 percent rise in sexual violence against
children in the age group of 0-5 years.
• Despite legislation, violence against the transgender community
continued during the year.
• Cybercrime and online harassment across Pakistan have seen an
exponential rise in cases.
Jails and prisoners
• Overcrowding continues to be a major challenge with jails across the
country holding up to 57 percent more inmates than their capacity.
• In an NCHR report on Balochistan prisons, the need to adopt a
Key Issues 7
unprecedented levels during the period of the elections.
• Media coverage was severely inhibited and journalists intimidated
into self-censorship, most specifically in reporting on abuses by
government security and intelligence agencies as well as militants.
• The government’s announced intention of forming a ‘Pakistan Media
Regulatory Authority’ was greeted with concern by the media as
another means of restricting the freedom of the press.
• Pakistan’s internet freedom ranking declined in 2018, attributed to a
problematic cybercrime law, internet shutdowns, and cyber-attacks
against political dissenters, justified on the grounds of national
security.
• A Freedom Network report documented more than 150 violations,
including verbal threats, killings, harassment, arrests, abductions,
illegal confinements, and physical assaults, against journalists and
media groups across the country between May 2017 and April 2018.
Freedom of assembly
• Pre-emptive detention of activists was frequently employed to
restrict or disrupt rallies and protests, particularly in the months
preceding the elections.
• Roads leading to the venues of rallies were blocked and media
coverage blacked out.
• The government was said to be preparing a comprehensive strategy
to prevent violent protests on the road and hate speech on sensitive
religious issues and to ensure that people’s lives and properties
were protected.
• Police frequently used force to hamper or break up peaceful protests,
including visually impaired demonstrators protesting about the lack
of jobs and salaries.
Freedom of association
• Barriers to setting up unions, categories of workers prohibited from
joining unions, limitations on, and methods used to break up, certain
types of strikes, as well as the possibility of dismissal are factors that
inhibit the growth of trade unions.
• The restrictions and banning of INGOs continued in 2018 with 18
ordered to wind up and leave the country by 30 November.
• The restoration of student unions remained pending and unresolved.
• Workers and supporters of social movements and some with
political affiliations were subjected to intimidation or detention on
charges of sedition and terrorism.
Key Issues 9
persists in industries and homes and the cases of abuse of child
domestic workers continue to surface.
• Only four percent of children in Pakistan receive a ‘minimally
acceptable diet’ according to a UN report.
• In the Thar region of Sindh, 638 children died of malnutrition in the
period 1 January to 31 December 2018.
• The National Commission on the Rights of the Child (NCRC) Act
was passed in 2017, and the Commission has yet to be constituted.
Labour
• The Sindh government produced a record number of labour-related
legislation, including the first-ever law in Pakistan to protect the
rights of home-based workers (The Sindh Home-Based Workers Act
2018).
• In general, implementation of international ILO and UN conventions
and covenants relating to labour standards and human rights is an
ongoing problem in Pakistan.
• Scores of mine workers lost their lives in deadly incidents in
Balochistan and other provinces with no evidence of progress in the
implementation of safety and health standards.
• Despite legislation, Pakistan ranked 8th on the Global Slavery Index
2018, with an estimated three million living in modern slavery/
bonded labour.
• An estimated 12 million children are involved in child labour in the
country.
The elderly
• The current figure of over 11 million senior citizens in Pakistan is set
to rise to over 43 million by 2050 according to the UNFPA.
• The implementation of existing Acts for the rights of senior citizens,
and the formulation of others, is painfully slow.
• There is a dearth of housing and health facilities for those unable to
live with their families.
• The informal sector accounts for 70% of the economy, yet it remains
out of the ambit of The Employees Old Age Benefits Act 1976.
People living with disabilities
• Statistics on the number of persons with disabilities (PWDs) in
the country vary in the absence of verifiable survey data, but the
prevalence of disability has been estimated at 15 percent by WHO.
• Laws fully based on the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons
Key Issues 11
Supreme Court.
• The funding for the Higher Education Commission was slashed by
around Rs5 billion in a mid-term budget released in October.
• Militants torched 12 schools, mostly for girls, in Gilgit-Baltistan, the
Khyber tribal district, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Balochistan.
• Cases of corporal punishment continued to be reported throughout
the year from the Punjab, KP, and other provinces.
Health
• The country’s spending on the health sector is still less than one
percent of its GDP whereas WHO recommends it should be around
6 percent.
• The unsatisfactory quality and coverage of public health services
means a high dependence on the private sector which is too costly
for many. As a result, people are driven to consult unqualified
medical practitioners and quacks, often with dire consequences.
• The country is becoming increasingly depressed, according to the
Pakistan Association for Mental Health. There is no evidence that
Pakistan has developed a coordinated national strategy to achieve
the objectives of WHO’s comprehensive mental health action plan
(2013-2020).
• The control of communicable diseases remains a challenge, while
there is a rising trend of non-communicable diseases—heart disease,
stroke, diabetes, hypertension, and various types of cancers.
Housing
• There were some notable efforts to stop land grabbing and illegal
encroachment, but those practices as well as illegal occupation and
china cutting continued especially in the major cities.
• With a deficit of roughly seven to 10 million houses in the country,
the government’s pledge to build five million affordable houses
throughout Pakistan might be a major challenge particularly after
the announcement that applicants would have to bear 20 percent of
the total cost of their home.
• The authorities’ operations to evict ‘illegal’ occupants from
residential areas and to demolish illegal structures met with some
strong resistance.
• The frequent reports of roof and wall collapses causing numerous
fatalities expose the substandard quality of construction in homes
and buildings.
Key Issues 13
I
Rule of Law
Rule of Law
Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights
of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace
in the world.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Preamble
In 2018, a total of 107 Acts were passed by the Parliament and provincial
assemblies. Thirty-nine of these Acts were federally passed—applicable
to the whole nation—while 68 Acts were passed by the four Provincial
Assemblies. This represented an overall increase from the previous year.
This report summarises the 2018 Acts categorised according to their
jurisdictions. Within provincial jurisdiction, Sindh passed the highest
number of Acts in 2018; many of them, however, were amendments to
existing statutes. The Punjab, however, was just two Acts short of the
same number as Sindh.
Most notably, this year saw the merger of the Federally Administered
Tribal Areas (FATA) with the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on 31
May 2018, thereby ending the reign of the Frontier Crimes Regulations
(FCR). The FCR was a special set of laws, enacted in 1901 by the British
Empire to confront Pashtun insurgents. Under the FCR, a whole tribe
would be held responsible for the crime of one individual.
Also, this year an Act for the protection and welfare of Pakistan’s
transgender community was passed. There was a pressing need for this
recognition as the prominent community of transgenders in Pakistan
has been cornered into forgoing their fundamental rights as a result of
discrimination. Pakistan now recognises the right of transgenders to
Balochistan 14 16 3 4 17 20
Sindh 61 61 14 14 75 75
Khyber
35 45 8 10 43 55
Pakhtunkhwa
Federal Capital 2 3 - - 2 3
Provincial Acts
Punjab
The following is a summary of the 23 Acts passed by the Punjab
Provincial Assembly in, 2018. The Punjab has remained fairly active in
legislative matters, maintaining its stand as one of the larger provinces
of Pakistan.
• The Bahawalpur Development Authority (Repeal) Act, 2018
repealed the BDA 1991 Act so that Bahawalpur Development
Authority may be constituted under the provisions of Development
of Cities Act 1976. Proceedings by the repealed Act are to remain
active unless explicitly repealed.
• The Cholistan University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences
Bahawalpur Act, 2018 aims towards promoting and stimulating
animal health services, making provisions for advanced teaching.
• The Punjab Bonded Labour System (Abolition) (Amendment)
Act, 2018 amends the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1992
(III of 1992) for the purpose, among others, of making more effective
provisions to deal with the menace of exploitation of the persons
subjected to any form of bonded or forced labour. The scope of the
Act has been expanded to include forced labour as well.
• The Explosive Substances (Punjab Amendment)Act, 2018 inserted
an amendment in Section 7 of the Explosive Substances Act 1908
(VI) where it said that the trial of any person for an offence under
this Act could not proceed without the consent of the provincial
government. To prevent delays in proceedings, the Amendment Act
stipulates that consent to a trial will be deemed to have been given
if a response is not received from the provincial government within
60 days.
• The Code of Civil Procedure (Punjab Amendment) Act, 2018
updates certain provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908.
• The Limitation (Punjab Amendment) Act, 2018 amends the
Limitation Act 1908 and provides a limitation of 90 days for filing a
revision petition under Section 115 of CCP 1908.
• The Punjab Agricultural Marketing Regulatory Authority Act,
2018 facilitates and regulates growth of agricultural produce and
assists development of agricultural commerce.
Balochistan
The following is a summary of Acts passed by the Provincial Assembly
of Balochistan in, 2018. Despite being the largest province in the
country, Balochistan passed only six statutes in, 2018, out of which four
were Amendments. There appears to be a lack of legislative activity in
Balochistan, especially in human rights awareness.
• The Balochistan Juvenile Smoking (Balochistan Repeal) Act 5 of,
2018 repealed the Balochistan Juvenile Smoking Ordinance 1959
(West Pakistan Ordinance no. XII of 1959).
• The Balochistan Prohibition of Smoking in Cinema Houses
(Balochistan Repeal) Act No 4 of, 2018 has repealed the Balochistan
Prohibition of Smoking in Cinema Houses Ordinance 1960 (West
Pakistan Ordinance no IV of 1960).
• The Balochistan Finance Act 2 of 2018 takes effect from the first
day of July and extends to the whole of Balochistan except the tribal
areas. It defines the rate of tax payable by the following:
1. Contractors/Suppliers
2. Medical Practitioners
3. People running private hospitals/diagnostic centres
4. Hotels.
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
The following is a summarisation of the 14 Acts passed by the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Assembly in 2018. The Act regarding marriage
functions and protection against harassment of women reflects on the
changing patterns of Pakistan regarding women’s position in society.
However, the passing of Acts does not automatically lead to a change in
societal trends.
• The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Finance (Amendment) Act, 2018 aims
to further amend the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Finance Act 2013, to
levy, continue and revise certain taxes in the Province of Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa.
• The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Child Protection and Welfare
(Amendment) Act, 2018 was passed to further amend the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Child Protection and Welfare Act 2010 in Section 2, 3,
4, 5, 9, 11, 13, 14 and 21.
• The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Medical Teaching Institutions Reforms
(Amendment) Act, 2018 was passed to further amend the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Medical Teaching Institutions Reforms Act 2015. The
insertion of a new Section 4A was made to establish a Policy Board
for these institutions.
• The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Employees of the Elementary
and Secondary Education Department (Appointment and
Regularisation of Services) (Amendment) Act, 2018 was passed
for the administrative amendments that were required in the
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Employees of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Department (Appointment and Regularisation of
Services) Act 2017.
• The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Employees of Transport Department
(Regularisation of Services) (Amendment) Act, 2018 was passed
to amend the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Employees of Transport
Sindh
The following is a summarisation of all Acts passed by the Sindh
Provincial Assembly in 2018, including 14 Amendments on previously
existing Acts. This year again, Sindh has been the frontrunner in passing
the highest number of statutes within one year.
• The Sindh Public Procurement (Amendment) Act 2017 amended
The Sindh Public Procurement Act, 2009, in section 2, for clause (p),
where the definition of ‘services’ was reconstituted.
• The Code of Criminal Procedure (Sindh Amendment) Act 2017
amends The Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, in its application to
the Province of Sindh, in section 144, in sub-sections (a), (b), (c), (d),
(e).
• The Sindh Sales Tax on Services (Amendment) Act, 2018 amends
The Sindh Sales Tax on Services Act 2011, substituting its provisions
in Section 4 and Section 84.
• The Sindh Holy Quran (Printing, Recording and Disposal of
Damaged or Shaheed and Sacred Auraqs) Act, 2018 regulates
the handling of the Holy Quran (Arabic text), in the context of its
translation, drafting, disposal, and offences against the Act. This Act
repeals The Publication of Holy Quran (Elimination of Printing and
Recording Errors) Act, 1973 (Act No. LIV of 1973), in its application
to the extent of the province of Sindh.
• The West Pakistan Highways (Sindh Amendment) Act, 2018
amends the West Pakistan Highways Ordinance 1959, in its
application to the province of Sindh.
Observations
The focus in 2018 has been on administrative amendments. Apart from
a few initiatives, there appears to be no real movement within the ambit
of human rights in Pakistan.
The country has faced the reality of child abuse during the year as the
media has raised awareness regarding the issue. Some action is being
taken for the protection and welfare of children but the implementation
in practical terms is less visible.
The Twenty-fifth Amendment in the Constitution regarding the
allocation of seats even now lacks the ultimate gender equality that a
democratic nation should represent.
The quota that has been allocated to women in the National Assembly
has improved over the year although the true essence of the right to
equality, which has been promised in the Constitution, is still lacking.
Moreover, the alterations for women in the provincial seats has been
negligible and the increase in the number of seats this year has not
benefited women whatsoever.
The issue of enforced disappearances is more prevalent in Pakistan
and the brutality of the crime is an offspring of the lack of legislation
surrounding it. The inability of victims and their families to seek
legal assistance in cases of enforced disappearance is a violation of
fundamental rights.
The stifling of freedom of expression intensified when the Prevention
of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) 2016 was used to harass, subdue,
and arbitrarily detain human rights defenders over commentary made
online.
Blasphemy laws continued to contribute to the violation of the rights
of Pakistan’s citizens, used as they are to settle personal disputes and
enmities without the application of basic rule of law. The civil unrest
incited after Aasia Bibi’s acquittal demonstrated the opposition of
conservatives to a fair and accepting environment.
Minorities are still at the receiving end of discrimination despite the
relevant legislation being enacted. Issues relating to human rights stem
primarily from the cultural backgrounds of Pakistan’s various
Administration of Justice
To enjoy the protection of law and to be treated in accordance with law is the
inalienable right of every citizen, wherever he may be, and of every other person
for the time being within Pakistan. In particular (a) no action detrimental to the
life, liberty, body, reputation or property of any person shall be taken except in
accordance with law, (b) no person shall be prevented from or be hindered in doing
that which is not prohibited by law; and (c) no person shall be compelled to do that
which the law does not require him to do.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 4(1) and (2)
No person shall be deprived of life or liberty save in accordance with law.
Article 9
All citizens are equal before law and are entitled to equal protection of law.
Article 25(1)
There shall be no discrimination on the basis of sex alone.
Article 25(2)
The state shall ensure inexpensive and expeditious justice.
Article 37(2)
No property shall be compulsorily acquired or taken possession of save for a public
purpose and save by authority of law ...
Article 24(2)
Recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all
members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the
world. Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Preamble
Everyone has the right to recognition everywhere as a person before the law.
Article 6
All are equal before the law and are entitled without any discrimination to equal
protection of the law.
Article 7
Everyone has the right to an effective remedy by the competent national tribunals
for acts violating the fundamental rights granted him by the Constitution or by
law.
Article 8
Everyone is entitled in full equality to a fair and public hearing by an independent
and impartial tribunal in the determination of his rights and obligations and of any
Administration of Justice 33
criminal charge against him.
Article 10
No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his property.
Article 17(2)
No one within the jurisdiction of a State Party to the present Optional protocol
[on abolition of death penalty] shall be executed. Each State Party shall take all
necessary measures to abolish the death penalty within its jurisdiction.
Second Optional Protocol to ICCPR
Article 1
In June 2018, the Chief Justice admitted that he had been unable to put
his ‘house in order’, effectively conceding that the long overdue judicial
reforms had yet to materialise, and that the courts were overwhelmed
by a mounting backlog of cases. By year end, there were close to 1.9
million cases pending in over 250 lower, special, and superior courts,
according to estimated official figures released by the Law and Justice
Commission of Pakistan (LJCP).
The expeditious disposal of cases and revamping of the criminal
justice system were among the topics for discussion at the 8th Judicial
Conference 2018 held in Islamabad in May. However, no effective
mechanisms were put in place as judicial activism took centre stage.
Judiciary – Pending cases
Pending cases in the Supreme Court (SC) hit an all-time high of 40,336
on 31 July. There has been an increase in the institution of cases in the
top court—1,739 cases were filed in the month of July alone. During
the same period, the SC decided 1,355 cases. In the first half of August,
682 new cases were received. The clearance of the backlog appeared an
insurmountable task, with an average of over 1,000 cases added to the
pendency every month, and the suffering of litigants was exacerbated by
the slow judicial process.
According to Law & Justice Commission data, collected as at 15 January
2019, as many as 39,742 cases were pending in the top court. Similarly,
in the high courts of all the provinces and Islamabad, 309,131 cases
were pending. In the district judiciary, of the 1,470,264 cases yet to be
decided, the Punjab accounted for 1,109,578 cases, Sindh 102,663; Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa 202,641, Balochistan 14,139, and Islamabad 41,243.
The Panama Papers case which led to the disqualification of
Nawaz Sharif alone lasted for months. Another petition seeking the
disqualification of Imran Khan and Jehangir Tareen of the PTI took
almost a year to arrive at a conclusion. According to some reports, the
increasing number of pending cases was primarily due to there not
140,000
120,000
100,000
89,576
80,000
60,000
39,742
40,000
29,270
20,000 17,168
6,000
375
0
Lahore High Court Sindh High Court Peshawar High Islamabad High Balochistan High Supreme Court Federal Shariat
Court Court Court Court
Administration of Justice 35
One key objective of this initiative was to ensure that children who had
to appear in court could do so without having to miss school, as well
as to keep children away from the traditional environment of courts. A
pilot project of family courts in the evening was launched in November
at the Lahore High Court under the West Pakistan Family Courts Act
1964 and Guardians & Wards Act 1890. This will be extended to 36
other districts if required for the expeditious deciding of family cases.
Over time, it is expected that this new venture will be extended to the
courts generally, and would necessitate the induction of more judges
and associated staff.
A pilot project of family courts in the evening was launched in November at the Lahore High
Court.
Accountability
The most touted promises of the new government have been to build
a special task force to recover looted national wealth and to strongly
pursue large tax evaders. The activities of the National Accountability
Bureau (NAB) have been prolific in 2018. The conviction rate was said
to have reached 70 percent as the current NAB administration filed
440 corruption references, apprehended 503 accused persons, received
44,315 complaints, and conducted 1,713 complaint verifications during
the year. NAB claimed to have deposited Rs2.5 billion in the national
exchequer in 2018.
The pursuance of accountability has become extremely newsworthy,
attracting both acclaim and criticism—and even apprehension, according
to the Sindh Chief Minister, who said the fear and insecurity generated
Administration of Justice 37
The Supreme Court took suo motu notice of 70-year-old Dr Kamran
being led to his Lahore court hearing in handcuffs. The NAB Chairperson
also took notice of the incident and directed the Bureau’s Lahore chief
to investigate the matter and take action against the people involved.
The National Commission on Human Rights (NCHR) wrote to NAB in
November asking them not to humiliate detainees, saying ‘basic human
rights cannot be curtailed even if someone has been put into jail.’
Administration of Justice 39
Justice System Reform
A key discussion at the Judicial Conference in May revolved around the
need to counteract the drift towards lawlessness and extremism through
the rule of law, a culture of tolerance and the guarantee of justice. Much
emphasis was placed on the long-term measures needed to improve the
criminal justice system, a continuing refrain throughout the year from
several quarters.
In November, the PPP expressed concern over the ‘broken criminal
justice system’ and called for an overhaul of the system including the
creation of a separate constitutional court in the country besides the
Supreme Court, an amendment to the Constitution to provide the right
of appeal against decisions in all suo motu cases under Article 184(3),
and a review of the procedure for appointment of superior court judges.
The Strengthening Participatory Organisation (SPO) organised a
conference in July, titled ‘Rule of Law: Access to Justice and Citizen Inclusion’,
where it was stated that many vulnerable and marginalised people in
the country including women and minorities, especially those from the
lowest socioeconomic classes and rural areas, were in fact unable to get
justice or access to legal aid and were not even aware of their legal rights.
The Pakistan government supported the recommendation in its 2012
Universal Periodic Review Report to ‘continue the reform of the
judiciary’. Point 20 of the National Action Plan (NAP) requires reform in
the criminal justice system, and this remains one of the most neglected
actions, with no distinct progress at either federal or provincial level.
Several of the other points in the NAP are interlinked with criminal
justice which has a direct impact on their effective implementation.
The NACTA National Counter Extremism Policy Guidelines (NCEPG)
2018 go some way towards addressing this, but implementation across
the provinces could prove problematic, with the lack of coordination
between federal and provincial authorities.
Tensions between the bar and the bench have also highlighted the flaws
in the judicial infrastructure, a fact recognised in the Judicial Conference
declaration that ‘both the Bar and the Bench must work together in order
to curb delays’. There were numerous reports of stand-offs between
judges and lawyers, and the activism of lawyers in campaigning for
separate high court benches to be established received much news
coverage. An uncompromising resolution passed by the Karachi
Bar Association in June, ostensibly over the Chief Justice’s alleged
disparagement of an additional district judge in Sindh which resulted
in his resignation, implied that the CJ was micro-managing the judicial
system and interfering in the functioning of high courts. Prolonged
activism by lawyers has often disrupted and delayed court proceedings.
Administration of Justice 41
According to the ministry, 185 were still under process and had to be
completed by March 2019.
During the year, the Peshawar High Court (PHC) overturned a number of
convictions by military courts. In October, the PHC set aside convictions
by military courts of as many as 74 terrorism-accused, the majority of
whom faced death sentences.
Earlier, in September, another bench of the PHC stayed the execution
of a man who, his father claimed, had gone missing in 2009. According
to the father, he came to know about the fate of his son through a May
2018 ISPR press release announcing the award of the death sentence to
11 ‘hardcore militants’ by a military court.
This is an indication that the requirements of justice are not being
fully met in the military courts, known for their lack of transparency,
disregard of eyewitness accounts, and not giving the accused the benefit
of the doubt in the absence of sufficient evidence.
Blasphemy (see also Freedom of Thought, Conscience, and Religion)
The landmark judgment on the acquittal of Aasia Bibi was a beacon
of hope for opponents of the blasphemy law and a sign that, even in a
flawed judicial system, the rule of law was still capable of protecting an
innocent victim.
Aasia spent eight years on death row until she was acquitted by
the Supreme Court in October. At the end of the year she was still in
protective custody until the ruling has been reviewed and she can leave
the country to claim asylum.
The judgment could herald a new era of judicial precedent in which
someone accused of blasphemy will not be presumed guilty before the
trial begins. Accusations of blasphemy have an instantly inflammatory
effect, and threats from radical extremists are a very real concern for
judges and lawyers involved in such cases.
Weeks after Aasia’s acquittal, two Christian brothers were sentenced
to death for blasphemy. Qaiser and Amoon Ayub from Lahore fled the
country after they were first accused in 2011 but eventually returned
home. They were arrested at the airport while trying to leave a second
time and have been in Jhelum prison since 2014. They were convicted
in December of the ‘use of derogatory remarks in respect of the Holy
Prophet’, and sentenced to hang, after the judge ruled that the prosecution
had proved its case beyond the shadow of reasonable doubt.
Though no one has yet been hanged for committing blasphemy, the delay
in pronouncing a verdict is a tactic often employed by the judiciary to
keep the accused behind bars—many languish for decades before being
acquitted.
In January, for the first time in the history of Pakistan, a commissioner for
transgender persons was appointed at the Wafaqi Mohtasib Secretariat
to redress the grievances of the community, as well as systemic issues,
through consultations with key stakeholders, research and studies. The
commissioner was also empowered to take suo motu action with prior
written approval from the Federal Ombudsman of Pakistan, coordinating
with the law enforcement agencies and making efforts for their welfare.
The Punjab Chief Secretary said in June that, in accordance with the
orders of the Supreme Court, the process for the issuance of computerised
national identity cards (CNICs) to transgender people would be made
simple and easy under a one-window operation, by setting up facilitation
centres in all districts through NADRA’s mobile vans.
In September, the Lahore High Court sought an explanation of the
unavailability of separate wards and rooms in public hospitals for the
transgender community, in response to a petition that pointed out the
Supreme Court had already issued an order in this regard which had not
been complied with.
The same month, the transgender community in the twin cities of
Rawalpindi and Islamabad expressed their resentment over the
Administration of Justice 43
discriminatory treatment they received in healthcare facilities. The
Forum of Dignity Initiatives (FDI) and Blue Veins produced a study—
Barriers to the Provision of and Access to Quality Healthcare for Transgender
Population of Pakistan—highlighting the serious widespread ignorance,
insensitivity, and discriminatory attitude of the healthcare providers.
By the end of November, the Human Rights Minister and the Federal
Minister for National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination,
inaugurated a separate ward at PIMS Hospital in Islamabad, announcing
free treatment and separate doctors for transgender patients.
It is too early to comment on the effects that the recently enacted
Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act will have but, as in all
other human rights issues, the implementation of legislation is often a
supremely difficult task.
Racial Profiling
In June, at least eight people including four Pashtuns in Lahore were
injured in a ‘clash’ between the local residents and Pashtun traders over
a petty dispute which turned into an incident of alleged racial profiling.
According to witnesses, an announcement was made from a nearby
mosque calling on all the residents to ‘teach the Pashtuns a lesson’. The
Pashtun traders shut down their shops and fled the attackers, who then
allegedly damaged and ransacked the shops. The traders said the police
had been reluctant to register an FIR on their behalf but had allowed an
FIR against them. In August, the Punjab Police removed from its official
website a list of ‘Real Terrorism’ that contained pictures and names
of Punjab University students, mostly Pashtuns and Balochis, after an
uproar on social media.
A controversial government advertisement was pulled from TV
broadcasts on 15 September 2018 after it courted controversy and
allegations of racial profiling of Pashtuns. The advert urged people to
report hate speech, display of arms, illegal use of loudspeakers, and any
other suspicious activity.
Cases of significance
Supreme Court
• The Court acquitted Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman condemned to
death on blasphemy charges, after accepting her appeal against her
sentence, saying the ‘prosecution has categorically failed to prove its
case beyond reasonable doubt.’
• The Supreme Court (SC) reinstated a ban on the transmission of
Indian content on terrestrial, satellite, and cable TV channels, setting
aside an earlier verdict by the Lahore High Court (LHC), and citing
as justification the fact that India was constructing a dam in the
Administration of Justice 45
imprisonment in 2017 by a judicial magistrate, which was later
commuted to five years by a sessions court in March. The original
judge had observed that the crime had been established beyond
doubt.
Khadija Siddique was stabbed 23 times by Shah Hussain, the son of a prominent lawyer.
Administration of Justice 47
Islamabad High Court
• In a landmark judgment in the case of the disappearance of IT expert
Sajid Mehmood, the Court ruled that officials involved in enforced
disappearances would be subject to criminal sanctions and may
be charged under the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA). It said the police
had ignored grave violations of fundamental rights of citizens
in not investigating the case. The Court said it was the ‘duty and
obligation of the State to take effective and prompt action when
“enforced disappearance” has been alleged’. In its judgment, the
High Court used a definition of enforced disappearances in line with
the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from
Enforced Disappearance (ICPPED), despite Pakistan not having
ratified it.
Recommendations
• Expedite the reforms of the criminal justice system under the
National Action Plan and ensure implementation across the country
to improve coordination and conformity in law and order.
• Address issues of conflicting jurisprudence on similar questions of
law. Conflicting judgments give rise to frivolous litigation and larger
backlog of cases and will create uncertainty in the interpretation of
legal provisions and maxims.
• Exercise sparingly the discretionary power of taking suo motu
notices by the Supreme Court, ensuring that these matters are
expeditiously disposed of with directions to concerned parties,
as opposed to being kept in pendency for long periods. Make all
decisions delivered under Article 184 (3) of the Constitution of
Pakistan, 1973 (in exercise of the Supreme Court’s suo motu powers
or on an application by anyone) appealable.
• Ensure inclusion in the selection criteria for the appointment of
judges an assessment of the candidates’ knowledge of human
rights issues. Candidates who demonstrate a bias against gender or
minorities should not be elevated to the bench.
• Ensure fair and transparent trials for everyone as there is little
evidence to show that military courts have succeeded in increasing
respect for the rule of law.
• Reinstate the moratorium on the death penalty and also consider
abolishing it by ratifying the Second Optional Protocol of the ICCPR.
• Restrict the number of offences carrying the death penalty to the
most serious crimes only, and refrain from adopting new crimes
entailing capital punishment.
Death Penalty
No one within the jurisdiction of a State Party to the present Optional protocol
[on abolition of death penalty] shall be executed. Each State Party shall take all
necessary measures to abolish the death penalty within its jurisdiction.
Second Optional Protocol to ICCPR
Article 1
At the tail end of the year, human rights campaigners and proponents
of justice and mercy were stunned at the news that Pakistan, along with
161 other countries, had voted in favour of a UN resolution calling for a
moratorium on the death penalty. Sadly, the news really was too good
to be true—within hours the Foreign Office said that the UN had made
a ‘mistake’. Pakistan had voted against the resolution in accordance
with its ‘consistent policy’. This was yet another missed opportunity.
Particularly at risk are the poor and undereducated, who have to rely on
substandard legal defence.
The extraction of ‘confessions’ under duress, unsubstantiated evidence
and allegations made to settle personal scores, defective investigations
by law enforcement officers, and the military courts who operate without
transparency, are all characteristics of the flawed criminal justice system
that allows the death penalty to be handed down for 27 offences. Many
of these offences do not cause death.
Grim statistics
According to Justice Project Pakistan (JPP), a non-governmental
organisation working for prisoner’s rights:
• There were 4,688 prisoners on death row at the end of the year.
• At least 500 have been executed since 2014, 14 of them in 2018.
• Despite a reduction in death row numbers, Pakistan continues
to account for 13 percent of global executions.
• The Punjab still accounts for 81 percent of the executions carried
out, and 89 percent of the death sentences awarded since 2014.
• The average time a person will spend on death row is 11 years.
The Amnesty International report, Death Sentences and Executions 2017,
which was released in April 2018, placed Pakistan 5th amongst the
Death Penalty 49
countries where most executions took place, and among four countries
which together accounted for 84 percent of all reported executions.
The report also mentioned that it ‘believed that juvenile offenders
remained on death row’ in Pakistan, along with four other countries,
noting that ‘imposition and execution of the death penalty against
people who were aged under 18 when the crime was committed is a
violation of international law’. Pakistan was also mentioned along with
several countries where people with mental or intellectual disabilities
were executed or remained under sentence of death.
Figures submitted by the Federal Ombudsman to the Supreme Court
indicated that there had been a drop of 2,476 prisoners on death row.
Despite a 35 percent reduction in the death row population since 2012,
Pakistan accounts for 24 percent of the world’s death row and continues
to add prisoners at an average 351 annually since 2004.
Pakistan’s prisons are severely overcrowded, with inmates said to be 57
percent over capacity. As many as eight prisoners could be confined for
most of the day in a cell meant to accommodate two, as their numbers
are topped up regularly.
Anti- Anti-
Death Sessions Military Other/No
terrorism narcotics
Penalty courts Courts info
courts courts
2017 2018 2017 2018 2017 2018 2017 2018 2017 2018
Executions 18 11 43 1 2 2 - - 1 -
Death Penalty 51
involving a homicide were predominate amongst the cases resulting in
death sentences. It was suggested that delays in resolving civil disputes
moved people to take matters into their own hands, with the inevitable
violence and fatalities inviting death sentences for the perpetrators.
Pakistan still needs to do a lot more to support key human rights principles, such as taking
effective measures to prevent the abuse of blasphemy legislation
Enforcement
of
Law
Enforcement of Law
Violence
As in previous years, there has been a steady decline in conflict-related
deaths, although the 2018 General Election saw a rise in violent deaths
for the period between June and July.
According to the Centre for Research and Security Studies (CRSS)
Annual Security Report 2018, of the 2,333 casualties in 2018, 1,131 were
fatalities, down 45% from 2047 the previous year. Balochistan had the
highest number of fatalities at 407, followed by erstwhile FATA (208)
and Sindh (192). The biggest decline was in the Punjab, where fatalities
dropped by nearly 69% (469 to 146), followed by Sindh (57.8%) and the
Police encounters were frequently reported across the country throughout the year
Death penalty
194 346 295 32 17 2
awarded
Death penalty
14 14 10 0 4 0
executed
Violence in
36 38 30 4 0 3
prison
Sectarianism 13 117 0 3 96 18
‘Honour’ 374 199 118 72 30 *
crimes (Men/ 316 F: 254 F: 153 F: 71 F: 43 F: 16
Women) M: 120 M: 46 M: 47 M: 29 M: 14
Sexual violence
845 856 820 18 17 1
against women
Acid attacks 67 67 58 4 2 3
Women
583 620 587 10 23 0
kidnappings
Domestic
violence 129 135 117 10 6 1
against women
Burning 77 77 66 8 3 0
Participants of the Aurat March 2018 demand an end to violence against women
According to a disturbing report, there has been a 75 percent rise in sexual violence against
children in the age group of 0-5 years.
women police officers with the aim of catering to female victims of crime
and domestic violence.
Safety of women in the police workforce is also cause for concern. In
September 2018 a case emerged where a female constable was allegedly
sexually assaulted by an unidentified individual on her way home from
work.
Recommendations
• Create effective, independent checks and balances for law
enforcement agencies and guard against human rights violations,
extrajudicial killings, and abuse of power.
• Embed greater transparency in the police force relating to
disciplinary and accountability mechanisms, particularly in cases of
police brutality and torture.
• Introduce more stringent procedures for the recruitment and training
of police officers to ensure integrity, honesty, and professional
conduct in a police force that earns the trust and respect of citizens.
• Take affirmative action to recruit and induct women in the
police force to ensure gender sensitisation and equitable gender
participation.
• Expand Violence Against Women Centres (VAWC) across Pakistan
Overcrowded prisons are difficult to manage and are often plagued by an increase in conflict
and violence amongst prisoners.
1,955 women and 1,225 juveniles are imprisoned in different jails of the country.
The case further revealed that the Ministry also moved a summary to
the Finance Division for a supplementary grant of US$35,000. This grant
would be used to make the relevant arrangements for the repatriation
Enforced Disappearances
No person who is arrested shall be detained in custody without being informed,
as soon as may be, of the grounds for such arrest, nor shall be denied the right to
consult and be defended by a legal practitioner of his choice. Every person who is
arrested and detained in custody shall be produced before a magistrate within a
period of twenty-four hours of such arrest.
Constitution of Pakistan Article 10(1) and (2)
No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 8
Enforced disappearance» is considered to be the arrest, detention, abduction or any
other form of deprivation of liberty by agents of the State or by persons or groups
of persons acting with the authorisation, support or acquiescence of the State,
followed by a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment
of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person, which place such a person
outside the protection of the law (Art.2)
International Convention for the Protection
of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances
Article 2
Enforced Disappearances 93
obvious reasons.’
The families of the victims have little recourse to fall back on other
than their protest camps, and their pleadings to be heard. Too often,
these peaceful gatherings are disrupted and dispersed with force. The
families’ anguish is exacerbated by the financial difficulties they have to
endure without the breadwinner of the family.
Judicial interventions
After hearing a petition for the recovery of an IT expert abducted from
his Islamabad home in March, the Islamabad High Court (IHC) imposed
fines on several high officials and ordered that Rs117,000 per month be
paid to the family. The ruling introduced strict penal consequences for
officials involved in enforced disappearances.
In November, the IHC imposed a fine of Rs2 million and froze half the
salaries of the defence and interior secretaries, and the inspector general
of Islamabad police, as well as censuring members of a joint investigation
team (JIT) for their failure to trace a missing person, Abdullah Omar. The
court set a six-month deadline for the recovery of Omar and indicated
that members of the JIT might be dismissed from service if they failed to
recover him. The petition claimed that Omar was injured during a firing
incident in Rawalpindi in May 2013 when he lost the use of his legs. He
was admitted to hospital and taken into custody in June 2013 until 2015
when he was released on bail by the anti-terrorism court of Islamabad.
He was then allegedly abducted by agency officials in June 2015.
Both these court decisions were challenged on appeal but they served to
demonstrate the courts’ frustration at the way their efforts to do justice
to the victims of enforced disappearances have been thwarted by the
executive authorities.
Commission of Inquiry on Enforced Disappearances
The Commission, set up through an interior ministry notification, has not
been given the necessary authority to effectively fulfil its responsibilities,
nor does it have adequate financial and human resources. As a
consequence, their efforts to trace missing persons does not have the
cooperation of military and intelligence agencies.
The chairman of the Commission of Inquiry on Enforced Disappearances
(CoIoED) said in August 2018 that the issue of missing persons “has
always been politicised” and that the situation is “not as bad as it is
made to sound”. He added, “In Balochistan, there are merely 131 cases
regarding missing persons being heard,” and that, in a number of
instances, the Commission had found that people were picked up by
rival tribes due to personal enmity.
According to the Commission, it received 5,706 complaints related to
Enforced Disappearances 95
CoIoED, to supervise long-running ‘missing’ persons cases, monitor the
Commission’s proceedings, and ensure implementation of production
orders issued by the Commission. The CoIoED report claimed that 3,519
cases out of the 5,349 it had received in the year had been resolved, and
the Commission was working on the remaining 1,830 cases.
On 16 October 2018, the Commission submitted a monthly progress
report to the special bench which said that 36 ‘missing’ persons had
been traced in Sept 2018. Fourteen of those were found to be detained at
various internment centres for militants.
Of the 84 cases received in November, the Commission claimed to have
disposed of 78:
Traced Persons 70
Returned to Home 22
Confined in Internment Centres/Jails 46
Dead Body 02
Deleted not being cases of enforced disappearance
/incomplete address 08
Counting the cost
Enforced disappearances continued to be reported in significant
numbers and many more are not reported either in the absence of redress
mechanisms or fear that protests or agitation may endanger missing
persons. The HRCP in a statement said, ‘the lack of reliable estimates
of the number of disappeared people, given the enormous discrepancy
between official estimates and reports on the ground, was a chilling
reminder of why the state cannot afford to stall this issue’.
In November, Sardar Akhtar Mengal of the BNP-M expressed doubts
about whether the situation would be any different in Naya Pakistan as
235 people, including nine women, had gone missing from Balochistan.
Families had received 45 dead bodies during the period from 25 July to
30 October 2018 and as many as 5,000 people are still reportedly missing
from Balochistan. According to him, people were afraid to register FIRs
if any of their family went missing because, if they did, they received
threats from law enforcement agencies. Sardar Akhtar claimed that
human rights activists, nationalists, and anyone who raised the issue
of enforced disappearances on social media were also picked up by
intelligence agencies.
In their Bi-annual Report 2018 The State of Balochistan’s Human Rights,
the Baloch Human Rights Organisation and Human Rights Council
of Balochistan said they had received ‘partial reports’ of 541 cases of
enforced disappearances in the first half of the year. In the majority of
Enforced Disappearances 97
Victims’ families and friends—and the public—were denied the right to
know the truth of the circumstances of the disappearance.
On 19 November, huge rallies were held across the province to protest
enforced disappearances in Balochistan. Families had initially camped
outside the Quetta Press Club until they were forced to move away
to the Chief Minister’s House to continue their sit-in, demanding
reassurance from the government that they would have recourse to due
legal process. In expressing solidarity with the families, HRCP expressed
shock that women, children and the elderly had to camp out in large
numbers in the open in winter to merely ask that they be heard and their
constitutional rights respected. The families were later given assurances
by the government that their demands would be heard.
In December, it was reported that students of Bahauddin Zakariya
University were protesting the disappearance of a classmate. Jiand
Baloch was allegedly taken by security agencies from his residence in
Quetta along with his father and 13-year-old brother on 30 November.
Demands may be heard, but they will not necessarily be met. During its
last Universal Periodic Review, Pakistan supported the recommendation
to ‘specifically criminalise enforced disappearances in the penal code
and reinforce the capacities of the Pakistanis [sic] Inquiry Commission
on Enforced Disappearances in order that the Commission can fully
carry out its mission.’ Simply adding enforced disappearances to the
Penal Code will not suffice. Until and unless the government forms a
statutory commission or tribunal, answerable to the Supreme Court
and independent of external interference, the process of eliminating
this particular crime and providing redress to the victims and their
families will continue to be stalled. And the cases of missing persons
will continue to pile high.
A government bill on the subject of disappearances has been pending
in parliament since 2014. It criminalises enforced disappearances and
proposes the creation of tribunals to trace the victims of enforced
disappearance and refer cases for trial of perpetrators of this crime by
sessions courts. But the new government indicated that it wished to
draft a new bill.
Recommendations
• Ratify the International Convention to Protect All Persons against
Enforced or Involuntary Disappearance.
• Replace the CoIoED with a statutory commission answerable to the
Supreme Court.
• Review the justification for maintaining internment centres under
the Actions in Aid of Civil Power Regulations.
Fundamental
Freedoms
Fundamental Freedoms
Freedom of Movement
Every citizen shall have the right to remain in and, subject to any reasonable
restrictions imposed by law in the public interest, enter and move freely throughout
Pakistan and to reside and settle in any part thereof.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 15
Everyone has the right to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of
each state. Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to
return to his country.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 17(1,2)
1. Everyone lawfully within the territory of a State shall, within that territory,
have the right to liberty of movement and freedom to choose his residence.
2. Everyone shall be free to leave any country, including his own.
3. The above-mentioned rights shall not be subject to any restrictions except
those which are provided by law, are necessary to protect national security,
public order, public health or morals or the rights and freedoms of others, and
are consistent with the other rights recognised in the present Covenant.
4. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his own country.
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
Article 12
Sikh Pilgrims gather in the Kartarpur Gurdwara Sahib after the groundbreaking ceremony.
MNAs Mohsin Dawar and Ali Wazir were detained by FIA officials while attempting to travel
to Dubai in November
Disasters
High levels of year-round ambient air pollution (smog) made visibility
especially poor for several days in January and December, when major
motorway routes in Punjab and KP were closed and some flights
diverted.
Malpractice
Over a dozen locals were arrested by the FIA for travelling on fake
documents. FIA arrested a few people issuing fake identity documents
to Afghan nationals. Some travel agents were arrested for illegal Umrah
visa facilitation in Sargodha. In March, FIA recovered 133 passports
from a human trafficker in Rawalpindi, who had been smuggling people
to Europe via the Middle East on the pretext of arranging visits to
religious sites.
The Gwadar Passport Office was non-operational for over two months
due to resource shortages. There were allegations of officers accepting
bribes and ‘agent mafia’ operating in certain passport offices in Lahore
and Gujranwala in January and February respectively.
Recommendations:
• Guarantee citizens freedom of movement across the entire territory
of Pakistan, making sure that there are no restricted areas, and that
the people are safe while travelling throughout the country.
• Protect freedom of movement from public and private interference.
Special efforts should be made to ensure that women are denied
none of the rights available under Article 12 of the ICCPR.
• Make public the ECL, as well as the reasons for placing anyone’s
name on it, and stop its arbitrary use. Any anomalies in the passport
issuance process should be addressed.
• Make special efforts to protect citizens’ right to reside in a place of
Freedom of Thought,
Conscience and Religion
Though the number of Ahmadi target killings has gone down compared
to the previous year, the malicious intent seems overwhelming. The
burials of three Ahmadis were denied in common cemeteries. Eight
Ahmadis were charged under the blasphemy law PPC 295-C, ten were
booked for allegedly defiling the Holy Quran, and one was booked for
preaching in 2018.
Christians
This proved to be another hard year for Christians in Pakistan. According
to Open Door’s World Watch List 2019, for the reporting period 1
November 2017 - 31 October 2018, Pakistan ranked fifth in the list of
worst places to be a Christian, and one of two places where Christians
suffer the most violence. According to the report, an estimated 700
Christian women and girls are abducted every year and often forced to
marry Muslim men.
In a huge loss to the Sikh community, human rights activist and well-
known Sikh leader Sardar Charanjeet Singh was shot dead by
unidentified assailants in the outskirts of Peshawar in May.
After receiving threats and attacks on account of his struggle for human
rights, Sikh activist and serving president KP’s Pakistan Minorities’
Alliance Radesh Singh Tony was forced to move from Peshawar.
In October, two rescue 1122 men raped a mentally-challenged Sikh girl
in Nankana Sahib.
In February, Guru Singh Saba petitioned against Evacuee Trust Property
Board (ETPB) who were going to demolish a Gurdwara in Sahiwal. The
Sikh community moved the Peshawar High Court against Auqaf and
Demonstrations against Aasia Bibi’s acquittal only ended when an agreement was signed to
review the decision
The apparent ease with which a few thousand extremists shut down
Pakistan’s major cities, controlling roads into and out of Lahore, Karachi
and Islamabad, has invoked real concern as to whether the apex court,
let alone a trial court, can dare to release a victim of alleged blasphemy.
HRCP strongly condemned the vicious reaction of far-right religious-
political groups who took to violent protests and openly threatened the
lives of those associated with this case. It urged the state to make it
perfectly clear that any party’s incitement to religious hatred—notably
that of Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan—will not be tolerated and is
punishable under the law.
Blasphemy remains a highly sensitive issue and allegations do not have
to be proven before provoking murder. On 23 January, a student killed
his college principal on the allegation of blasphemy in the Shabdqadar
Krishna Kumari (centre) - the first Thari Hindu woman to be elected to the senate
Wazir Zada has become the first ever Kalash legislator on a reserved seat
for minorities in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly. The Kalasha are
the smallest ethno-religious community of Pakistan.
The Punjab government has announced a ‘Minorities Empowerment
Freedom of Expression
Every citizen shall have the right to freedom of speech and expression, and there
shall be freedom of the press, subject to any reasonable restrictions imposed by law
in the interest of the glory of Islam or the integrity, security or defence of Pakistan
or any part thereof, friendly relations with foreign States, public order, decency or
morality, or in relation to contempt of court, [or commission of] or incitement to an
offence.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 19
Every citizen shall have the right to have access to information in all matters of
public importance subject to regulation and reasonable restrictions imposed by law.
Article 19-A
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes
freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart
information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 19
“…promote the exercise of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, including,
as a matter of high priority, against journalists or other professionals in the field of
information.”
Mandate of the Special Rapporteur
UN Human Rights Council
Journalists hoist black flags at the National Press Club building as they chant slogans during a
protest for press freedom and against moves to curtail the distribution of Dawn.
HRCP received numerous complaints from journalists in the print and broadcast media of
interference with freedom of expression
Information Minister said that both Pakistan Television (PTV) and Radio
Pakistan would now enjoy complete editorial independence over the
content they produced.
Similar announcements have been made by previous governments, but
PTV is not considered a particularly impartial channel. Owned by the
government, administrative control over the organisation and editorial
content is managed by the party in power.
The International Press Institute (IPI) welcomed the announcement,
noting that ‘the independent media in Pakistan is facing serious
intimidation, restrictions on the sale and circulation of newspapers as
well as the blockading of television broadcasts by the administration.’
The IPI had written to the Prime Minister both before and after the
elections expressing grave concern over the decline of press freedom in
the country.
Soon after, the Federal Information Minister’s reference to the formation
of a ‘Pakistan Media Regulatory Authority’ to replace existing media
regulatory bodies was met with mixed reactions as to whether it signalled
positive changes in the media industry, or a move towards greater state
control of the media.
The Council of Pakistan Newspaper Editors (CPNE) called on the
government to consult editors, journalists, publishers, and other
stakeholders before carrying out legislation on any media law. The
At least two scheduled panellists claimed that their invitation to speak at a prominent festival
in Lahore was rescinded at the last minute for reasons left unspecified
Freedom of Assembly
Every citizen shall have the right to assemble peacefully, and without arms, subject
to any reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the interest of public order.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 16
Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 20(1)
…that the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly [and of association] are essential
components of democracy, providing individuals with invaluable opportunities to,
inter alia, express their political opinions, engage in literary and artistic pursuits
and other cultural, economic and social activities, engage in religious observances
or other beliefs, form and join trade unions and cooperatives, and elect leaders to
represent their interests and hold them accountable.
Human Rights Council
Preamble, Resolution 15/21
In March, predominantly young activists of the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM) staged a
10-day protest in Islamabad against extrajudicial executions, enforced disappearances and other
human rights violations
The leader of the PTM, Manzoor Pashteen, was denied a boarding pass
for the flight he had booked on a private airline to Karachi. He was
prevented from reaching the Lahore airport to catch a flight from there,
and finally travelled by road, arriving late for the rally.
There was a massive turnout at the event but, once again, the media was
blacked out.
In June, a three-day sit-in was held in Zhob, Balochistan to protest
against the continued detention of the 37 PTM activists.
On 28 June, activists of the PTM were arrested for raising anti-army
slogans. At least 10 people were injured in a fight that broke out in Wana
after a PTM gathering, adding to the tension.
Aasia Bibi’s acquittal by the Supreme Court prompted massive protests by the TLP
The legal fraternity were again in the news as they staged protests that
descended into mayhem. In May, scores of lawyers in Faisalabad reacted
to the registration of a terrorism case against 30 colleagues by attacking
the office of the City Police Officer, pelting its main building with stones,
thrashing policemen and visitors, damaging vehicles and staging a sit-in
that brought traffic to a halt. The aforesaid 30 lawyers had allegedly
thrashed SHO and his subordinates when they produced an accused,
the brother of a lawyer, in court.
Freedom of Association
Every citizen shall have the right to form associations or unions, subject to any
reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the interest of sovereignty or integrity of
Pakistan, public order or morality.
Constitution of Pakistan, Article 17
Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful …association. No one may be com-
pelled to belong to an association.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 20(1,20)
Everyone shall have the right to freedom of association with others, including the
right to form and join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
ICCPR
Article 22
Workers and employers, without distinction whatsoever, shall have the right to
establish and, subject only to the rules of the organisation concerned, to join organ-
isations of their own choosing without previous authorisation.
ILO Convention 87
Article 2
Workers shall enjoy adequate protection against acts of anti-union discrimination
in respect of their employment.
ILO Convention 98
Article 1
Unions held a day of protest on 28 September against continuing deaths in coal mines. Many
miners are insufficiently organised and lack union representation.
Clashes on the Punjab University campus resulted in the arrest of over 200 students.
Democratic
Development
Democratic Development
Political Participation
…the state shall exercise its powers and authority through the chosen representatives
of the people…
Constitution of Pakistan
Preamble
Every citizen shall have the right and the opportunity, without any of the
distinctions mentioned in article 2 and without unreasonable restrictions:
(a) To take part in the conduct of public affairs, directly or through freely chosen
representatives;
Many candidates from PML-N and PPP crossed over to the PTI camp days before the election
forces should stay a reasonable distance away from the polling booths.
Polling on the Election Day was by and large peaceful. The ECP made
a good gesture by accepting a PTI plea for increasing the voting period
by one hour. However, the situation took an ominous turn towards the
close of voting time. Since a large number of people were still waiting in
queues as the time to close the voting drew near, PML-N requested for
a short extension of the voting time but ECP rejected the plea and only
allowed the voters who had entered the polling station before the time
for voting expired to cast their ballots, a direction that was variously
respected by the different batches of the security forces.
Rigging charges
What happened after the close of polling had no precedent in Pakistan’s
election history. The security forces assumed control of the polling
stations and told all polling agents to leave their posts and come back an
hour later. This activity laid the foundation of doubts about the fairness
of the election.
Some other happenings that strengthened these doubts were the
delays in announcement of results, and the discontinuation of ECP’s
prized system of rapid transmission of the vote count figures from all
polling stations to the ECP control room and the immediate release of
consolidated results. It was said that the system had collapsed. NADRA,
the agency responsible for operating the system, contested this view and
asserted that the system did not collapse; rather its use was discontinued.
118 64
Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf Pakistan Muslim League-N
43 11
Pakistan People’s Party Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal
6 2
Muttahida Qaumi Movement-P Grand Democratic Alliance
4 3
Pakistan Muslim League-Q Balochistan Awami Party
3 1
Balochistan National Party-M Awami Muslim League
12 1
Independent Awami National Party
2 2
Result awaited Election postponed
158 82 63 15
PTI PML-N PPP MMA
7 5 5 4
MQM PML-Q BAP BNP
3 1 1 1
GDA JWP ANP AML
4
INDEPENDENTS
Rights
of the
Disadvantaged
Rights of the Disadvantaged
Women
All citizens are equal before law and are entitled to equal protection of law.
There shall be no discrimination on the basis of sex.
Nothing in this Article shall prevent the State from making any special provision
for the protection of women and children.
No citizen otherwise qualified for appointment in the service of Pakistan shall be
discriminated against in respect of any such appointment on the ground only of…
sex…
Nothing in clause (1) shall prevent the State from making any special provision for
women and children.
Steps shall be taken to ensure full participation of women in all spheres of national
life.
The state shall protect the marriage, the family, the mother…
Constitution of Pakistan
Articles 25, 27, 35, 37
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.
Everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration,
without distinction of any kind…
All are equal before the law and are entitled without any discrimination to equal
protection of the law…
Men and women of full age...are entitled to equal rights as to marriage, during
marriage and at its dissolution.
Marriage shall be entered into only with the free and full consent of the intending
spouses.
Everyone has the right of equal access to public service in his country.
Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Articles 1, 2, 7, 16, 21(2), 25(2)
Pakistan has been named once again the second worst country in terms
of gender equality in the world by the Global Gender Gap Index 2018,
flanked by Iraq (147) and Yemen (149). The scores are based on economic
participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and
survival, and political empowerment. Pakistan was said to have made
some good progress in wage equality as well as on the Educational
Attainment sub index. However, this progress was considered
‘insufficiently rapid to avoid the country being overtaken by a number
Women 171
of faster-improving countries at the lower end of the Index’s global
rankings’.
The outlook for women showed little signs of improvement from that
reported in previous years, and the issues that confront women were
illustrated in stark terms in the news throughout the year—most
notably in the cases of domestic and sexual violence that prevail in
such a patriarchal society. When other factors come into play—so-
called ‘honour’ killings, acid attacks, extended family dynamics, social
restrictions on movement and jobs, inequality and abject poverty, forced
and arranged marriages—a grim picture emerges.
Yet there were some positive signs: the record number of women in the
running for NA general seats, reports of higher women turnout during
the elections, the initiatives taken for transgender people, and the first
woman chief justice appointed in a Pakistani high court.
Legislation
Over the past decade, a raft of legislation has been enacted that focuses
on women’s rights. The fact that so many violent and unlawful practices
persist and continue to escalate illustrates yet again the massive
challenges to implementing the law and changing deeply entrenched
societal attitudes. Significant legislation includes:
• Protection Against Harassment of Women at the Workplace Act
Women 173
reasons other than adultery.
Women from religious minority communities remained particularly
vulnerable to abuse. According to a report by the Movement for Solidarity
and Peace in Pakistan, at least 1,000 girls belonging to Christian and
Hindu communities are forced to marry Muslim men every year. The
government has done little in the past to stop such forced marriages.
Shortly before the election, the PTI leader Imran Khan pledged to take
effective measures to prevent forced marriages of Hindu girls with
Muslims, saying that he had received complaints from the Hindu
community in Sindh. Most Hindu families in Pakistan live in Sindh
and, according to media reports, some 25 forced marriages take place
every month in the Umerkot district. The Criminal Law (Protection
of Minorities) Bill prohibiting forced conversions was adopted by the
Sindh Assembly in 2016 but sent back for reconsideration by the then
Governor after pressure from the Council of Islamic Ideology (CII) and
religious parties to either withdraw or amend it.
Women and the economy
Closing the gender gap could boost GDP in Pakistan by 30 percent,
according to a report the International Monetary Fund (IMF) released in
June. Quoting empirical data and research statistics, the study—Pursuing
Women’s Economic Empowerment—suggests that ‘educational attainment
correlates positively with female labour force participation’. It cannot be
disputed that women’s empowerment in the labour force would boost
the economy, which could ultimately be measured in rising GDP.
Increasing workforce participation for women aged 20 and over through
greater access to quality education, financial services, and health facilities,
as well as incentive policies to encourage and accommodate women,
would go some way towards achieving this. The report noted that some
advances had been made by linking conditional cash transfers to female
school enrolment through the Benazir Income Support Programme,
but the aim should be inclusion in formal finance—currently denied
to so many—which would open up access to the means to bring about
empowerment.
The Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security Index 2017-
18 ranked Pakistan 150th out of 153 countries. The primary goal of the
index is to accelerate progress on both the international Women, Peace
and Security agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals, bringing
partners together around an agenda for women’s inclusion, justice, and
security.
The lowest ranked included the countries with the worst global scores
on female employment and discriminatory norms. The WPS Index uses
a new measure for discriminatory norms derived from the Gallup World
Women’s entry into the labour force is dependent on education levels, family and domestic
restrictions, and transport
The study noted that the baseline for gender equality in the labour force
left significant room for improvement. While women’s labour force
participation in Pakistan has increased by more than 50 percent over
the past 15 years, only one out of every five women participates in the
labour force.
A woman’s entry into the labour force in Pakistan is dependent on
Women 175
several socioeconomic and cultural factors—among them education
levels, family and domestic restrictions, transport etc. Pakistan’s labour
laws do not create an enabling working environment for women and
suffer from inconsistencies in the definitions of labour and labour rights,
among other problems, according to a gender audit carried out by
Women’s Action for Better Workplaces.
The report’s findings and recommendations were revealed at an event
in October attended by parliamentarians, political workers, civil society,
and working women from various fields. The laws were analysed
through categories that included freedom of association or freedom to
bargain collectively, wages, occupational safety and health, protection
against sexual harassment in the workplace, equality of work and
opportunities for women, and maternity leave and benefits.
The Peace and Development Foundation, an organisation working on
interfaith harmony and women’s rights, conducted a study to evaluate the
implementation of the 15 percent job quota for women and five percent
job quota for minorities, especially women. The findings of its study,
shared in July, revealed that most of the 327 government departments
did not respond, while a large majority of the 121 departments and
institutions that did respond reported that the job quota was not being
met. There was evidence that, to some extent, the quota system did help
rectify women’s underrepresentation in the public sector but women still
faced many challenges due to the work-life balance as well as cultural
and religious issues.
Despite the many disadvantages faced by women in the formal sector of
employment, they are still at the higher end of the spectrum as compared
to the vast numbers of women working in the informal sector.
Women in agriculture
With almost two-thirds of Pakistan’s population in rural areas, seventy-
five percent of women and girls are employed in the agriculture sector,
according to a Rural Women in Pakistan Status Report 2018, launched in
July by United Nations Women. Sixty percent of their work is being
utilised as unpaid—in family farms and enterprises—while only 19%
are in paid employment.
A college education facilitates entry into formal, paid employment. Only
three percent of rural women have college degrees and 57 percent of
those are engaged as primary teachers at an average wage of Rs16,000
per month. According to the report, the literacy rate of rural women
between the ages of 15-64 years is 35 percent, while in urban areas it is
69 percent. Twenty percent of rural women are classified as own account
workers. Support for microenterprises is still limited to low return skills
and average loans of Rs25,000 per woman.
Seventy-five percent of women and girls are employed in the agriculture sector
Women 177
Supreme Court on charges of detaining and abusing his maids, Yasmin
and Saima, over a theft allegation.
The exploitation and abuse of (mostly) female domestic employees—
children number among these to an alarming extent—is an issue
that is rarely brought out into the open. Considered indispensable in
middle and upper class households, these women are nonetheless often
subjected to long working hours, low pay, heavy workloads, no rest, no
holidays and, worst of all, physical abuse. Even the more considerate
employers do not have contracts for their domestic staff, which means
that they are unregistered and unrepresented.
Transgender rights (see also Administration of Justice)
The year 2018 saw progress for transgender rights as the state responded
to campaigns launched by transgender rights activists to improve state-
based facilities as well as enact legislation protecting and enhancing the
rights of transgender persons as citizens. The most significant and far-
reaching step has been the enacting of the Transgender Persons (Protection
of Rights) Act, 2018. The Act acknowledges the right of transgender
people ‘to be recognised as per his or her self-perceived gender identity’,
which has been a great success for the transgender community who
have, over the years, endured allegations of inauthenticity and fraud, as
well as invasive tests and procedures to determine their gender.
The Act also forbids discrimination in employment, housing, education,
health, and harassment; significantly, it specifies harassment ‘both
within and outside the home’, thus enacting protection for transgender
people from their own families. The explicit ensuring of the rights to
assembly and to access public spaces, combined with anti-harassment,
provides legal protections for transgender people in daily public life and
space.
Furthermore, the Act ensures that transgender people have inheritance
rights, the right to vote, to hold public office, and to own property, thus
removing any legal barriers there may have been for transgender people
to acquire wealth and participate in the democratic process of the country.
The Act holds the Federal Ombudsman, the National Commission
for the Status of Women (NCSW), and the National Commission for
Human Rights (NCHR) accountable for attending to complaints filed in
violation of the rights in the Act (in addition to all normal criminal and
civil procedures available to citizens under the law).
The year saw the introduction of a raft of initiatives and recognition for
the transgender community, including the appointment in March of a
transgender person as news anchor on a private television channel, the
opening of a school, The Gender Guardian, in Lahore for their education
and vocational training, as well as an old-age home where free of cost
Women 179
Authorities exhume body of Sana Cheema after allegations of an ‘honour’ killing
Women 181
What scant data exists shows that, like the rest of the country, Balochistan
is also plagued with brutal misogynistic violence, targeting women
and girls alike. Rape, abduction, and murder are commonplace. What
is different in Balochistan is that locals hold the state responsible for
the majority of violence, particularly abduction. As disappearances are
commonplace in Balochistan and state actors are always suspected, but
never brought to light to confirm or deny, the abduction of women is
rolled into the sum of abductions and disappearances. The motivations
for violence against women in Balochistan are likely exacerbated by
political concerns around nationalism, resources management, and
other grievances that the Balochi people have with the state.
Women and the elections
A provision in the Elections Act 2017 required political parties to allocate
at least five percent of tickets to women on general seats of the national
and provincial assemblies. In these elections, there were more women
candidates for general seats than in any past election.
Women political workers across the parties complained that their
involvement in the elections stemmed primarily from a need to fulfil
the set minimum criteria for representation. In addition to the number
of women who were passed over by their parties, there were a few
instances in the run-up to the elections where it was reported that tickets
had actually been taken back from women candidates and given to
men regarded as more likely to win the contest. A scrutiny of the list of
candidates appeared to indicate that the majority of the chosen women
candidates belonged to influential or prominent political families.
According to the ECP rules, the results of polls could be declared void if
the share of women in the total votes cast in a constituency was found to
be less than 10 percent.
In the pre-election period, the gender electoral gap was estimated
to have increased to 12m from 10.97m in 2013. Many women do not
possess a CNIC without which it is impossible to register to vote. The
ECP launched an emergency registration campaign in collaboration
with NADRA and civil society, which may have only been partially
successful due to widespread illiteracy and other impediments such as
resistance from male relatives and local elders.
In the event, the polls in Shangla and North Waziristan were declared null
and void as the women voters were less than 10 percent. In the Shangla
re-poll, the votes for both the main candidates increased, indicating that
the women voters had turned out in force, and the successful candidate
in the first election won again by a much greater margin.
In Upper Dir, where a woman contested one of the general seats for the
first time in its history, the women increased the overall voter turnout
Women 183
criteria for candidates and voters, giving them the right to determine
their own gender identity in all official documents.
In a society where their African ancestry is still discriminated against,
Tanzeela Qambrani became the first Sheedi woman to be elected to
the Sindh Assembly on the PPP’s quota of reserved seats for women.
Another PPP candidate, Krishna Kumari, became the first Hindu Dalit
woman to be elected to the Senate. Ms Kumari is from Tharparkar,
where the women set a record in the 2018 elections with a turnout of
almost 73 percent.
Women and family planning
Much concern was expressed early in the year about the burgeoning
population of the country, currently well over 200m at an annual growth
rate of 2.4 percent. Taking suo motu notice, the Supreme Court in July
constituted a committee to formulate a uniform policy on population
control.
Lady health workers often provide the only access to contraceptives for women in rural areas
Being able to exercise a choice means a woman has more control over her
health and can decide whether to join or stay in the paid labour force.
This can ‘rapidly improve the wellbeing of women and girls, transform
families and accelerate global development’, according to a report issued
Women 185
• Establish separate wings/cells to curb gender-based violence and
provide protection to victims of sexual violence. Provide special
training to police to deal with such issues. Provide Women’s Shelters
and Crisis Centres across provinces.
• Develop policy and enact legislation to ensure universal access
to family planning and reproductive health services. Increase
awareness programmes on nutrition and care during pregnancy.
Children
No child below the age of 14 years shall be engaged in any factory or mine or any
other hazardous employment.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 11(3)
The state shall make provision for…ensuring that children…are not employed in
vocations unsuited to their age…
Article 37(e)
…childhood is entitled to special care and assistance.
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
Preamble
In all actions concerning children, whether undertaken by public or private social
welfare institutions, courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative bodies,
the best interests of the child shall be a primary consideration.
Article 3(1)
States Parties recognise the right of the child to the enjoyment of the highest
attainable standard of health and to facilities for the treatment of illness and
rehabilitation of health. States Parties shall strive to ensure that no child is deprived
of his or her right of access to such health care services.
Article 24
The child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have the right from
birth to a name, the right to acquire a nationality and. as far as possible, the right
to know and be cared for by his or her parents.
Article 7
States Parties recognise the right of the child to be protected from economic
exploitation and from performing any work that is likely to be hazardous or to
interfere with the child’s education, or to be harmful to the child’s health or physical,
mental, spiritual, moral or social development.
Article 32
States Parties undertake to protect the child from all forms of sexual exploitation
and sexual abuse.
Article 34
The new government sworn in this year brought with it a new set of
promises and resolutions to uphold child rights in Pakistan. The Ministry
of Human Rights showed renewed resolve to improve the situation
of child rights in the country through legislation, judicial reforms,
Children 187
awareness raising, and other practical measures. Greater international
cooperation was also sought by the government to tackle issues such as
child sexual abuse and sale of children. In December 2018, the National
Assembly also adopted a resolution to reinforce its commitment to
protecting and promoting child rights, eradicating malnutrition and
improving care during the first 1000 days of a newborn.
Overall, Pakistan failed to protect its children in 2018 with nearly all
their fundamental rights and freedoms infringed or put at serious risk
of violation. Lack of neonatal care, low birth registration levels, food
insecurity, excessive violence and inadequate legal and social protection,
hazardous labour, as well as child marriage were some of the recurring
issues faced by children of the country. While the judiciary and law
enforcement were seen to be more actively pursuing cases of crimes
against children, the extent and severity of the violence against children
did not see much improvement.
Health
The right to survive and grow healthily and the right to good quality
healthcare is a fundamental human right but most often denied to
children in Pakistan for several reasons including food insecurity, water
contamination, poor sanitation, and inadequate health services. This year
saw a deteriorating malnutrition crisis in Tharparkar district in Sindh, a
nutrition emergency in Balochistan, soaring stunting rates in children,
and rising infant and child mortality due to preventable diseases and the
derelict state of health services.
Only four percent of children in Pakistan receive a ‘minimally acceptable
diet’ according to a report titled Asia and the Pacific Regional Overview
of Food Security and Nutrition, published by the United Nations in
November 2018. Another similar study by National Complementary
Feeding Assessment (NCFA), launched in September by the Ministry
of National Health Services in collaboration with DFID and UNICEF,
also found that only 15% of the children aged six to 23 months receive a
minimum acceptable diet in Pakistan.
Malnutrition has remained a major threat to children’s health in the
country and Sindh and Balochistan were the worst affected provinces.
In the Thar region in Sindh, 638 children died of malnutrition in the
period 1 January to 31 December 2018, the highest death toll in the past
four years. Since June 2013, according to the Sindh health department,
2,363 children have lost their lives to famine in Tharparkar. In response
to the crisis, the Sindh Government announced its plans of launching a
nutrition programme for 5,000 families in Tharparkar district and, as a
quick relief measure, the Chief Minister also directed the setting up of
medical camps in every taluka.
Children 189
comprising of government representatives, civil society members, and
donor agencies to tackle the problems of drought and malnutrition.
The 2018 Global Nutrition Report found Pakistan to be one of the three
countries that bear half the burden of stunted children globally and
alone is home to 10.7 million stunted children. In addition to poverty,
intake of contaminated water is one of the main causes of malnutrition
which results in stunting and diarrhoea in children.
A World Bank report titled ‘When Water Becomes a Hazard: The State of
Water Supply, Sanitation and Poverty in Pakistan and its Impact on Child
Stunting’, released in November 2018, states that almost 38 percent of
children in Pakistan suffer from stunted growth and a leading cause
of this is scarcity of safe drinking water due to poor sanitisation and
waste management systems. In another report released this year by
Concern Worldwide and Welthungerhilfe, it was found that the highest
child stunting and child wasting rates are found in South Asia. Pakistan
was ranked 106 out of 119 countries on the list, with a second highest
Global Hunger Index score of 32.6 based on four indicators of hunger:
undernourishment, child wasting, child stunting, and child mortality.
Pakistan also fared poorly in terms of infant mortality. A UNICEF
report on child mortality titled Every Child Alive, released in February
2018, stated that Pakistan bears the worst infant mortality rates globally
with a 1/22 probability of babies dying at birth. Preventable diseases
are one of the most common causes of child mortality in Pakistan. A
study by Johns Hopkins University and Save the Children has estimated
that 700,000 children will die of pneumonia in Pakistan by 2030, making
it one of the four countries set to carry the highest burden of deaths
by this disease. The study, which was released in November 2018,
recommended interventions such as expanding existing vaccination
coverage, provision of affordable antibiotics, and improved diet to
control the spread of the disease.
This year also Pakistan continued to struggle with the polio virus and
remains one of only three countries in the world where this disease
is endemic. While there has been a drastic fall in the number of cases
since 2016, Pakistan has still not become entirely polio-free. A total of
12 cases were reported in 2018, four more than last year, with four cases
occurring in September alone.
Eight out of 12 cases were reported from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (5
cases in Bajaur, 1 in Charsadda, 1 in the Khyber district and 1 in Lakki
Marwat), 3 from Balochistan (Duki district) and 1 in Sindh (Gadap
Town, Karachi). The last nationwide polio vaccination campaign was
started on 10 December 2018 with the goal of administering the vaccine
to 38.7 million eligible children.
Children 191
President on 18 May 2018. This is the first law that aims to create a child
protection system in the capital, protecting children from all forms of
physical or mental violence, injury, neglect, maltreatment, exploitation,
and abuse. Salient features of the law include establishment of a ‘Child
Protection Advisory Board’ and ‘Child Protection Institutions’. The
Board is responsible for ensuring that all necessary measures are taken
for the implementation of the Act while the Institution is responsible
for processing all complaints, coordinating with relevant departments
to provide relief and maintaining records. There was no progress on the
formation of the Protection Institution or Advisory Board by the end of
the year.
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa assembly passed the Child Protection, Welfare
(Amendment) Bill 2018 to modify the 2010 child protection law in the
province. The amendment bill mainly aims to improve the language and
coherence of the existing law by rewording and elaborating some of the
existing clauses.
Despite the lapse of more than a year since the National Commission on
the Rights of the Child (NCRC) Act 2017 was passed, the Commission
has yet to be constituted. The Commission is mandated with the
responsibility of promoting and protecting child rights in the country
and must comprise of six members, one from each province, Islamabad
Capital Territory, and the former Federally Administered Areas. The
Ministry of Human Rights stated in April 2018 that the implementation
of this law had been hindered by the lack of required nominations from
the provinces despite repeated follow ups. The Ministry also stated
that corresponding rules for the law had been drafted and would be
sent to the Cabinet for approval once all provincial nominations for the
Commission were received.
The National Child Protection Centre, formed in 2006-7 under the
Federal Ministry of Human Rights, announced its work plan in October
for the upcoming year. In 2019, it intends to focus work on four key areas
of child protection including street children, child beggary, violence
against children, coordination with stakeholders, and awareness on
child protection. Specific programmes include the formation of Child
Rights Committees in the slums of Islamabad, holding a mapping
exercise to identify the child beggary hubs in the capital city, improving
coordination with district administration, police, bar association, civil
society and the media, and developing a Child Protection Information
System.
In October, the Sindh High Court directed the Social Welfare Department
and Sindh Child Protection Authority to establish reformatory
institutions for abandoned and destitute children at division level and
also ordered the DG Sindh Child Protection Authority (SCPA) to furnish
Zainab’s brutal rape and murder drew extensive media attention and resulted in massive
riots due to the inaction of the police
Children 193
This incident led to the formation of a task force by the Federal
Ombudsman to conduct a situational analysis of child abuse in the
country. The ensuing report released by the task force in October
titled ‘Mapping of Issues and Response to Sexual Violence against Children’
proposed short and long-term measures to counter the rising sexual
violence against children in the country. The measures included setting
up of one-stop facilitation centres that provide medical, psychiatric,
psycho-social, and legal support to the victims and their families at
district and tehsil level, starting from Kasur and developing a database
of DNA of the criminals, suspects and potential perpetrators at district
Kasur level.
According to the mid-year Cruel Numbers Report compiled and released
by the NGO Sahil, there had been an increase in child sexual abuse in
the first half of the year compared with the same period in 2017, with a
drastic rise in the number of cases involving boys. (See Law and Order)
The Federal Ministry of Human Rights drafted an action plan in November
2018 to address the issue of child abuse in the country. In a document
presented before the National Assembly’s Special Committee on child
abuse, it was stated that the plan would focus on prevention, protection,
recovery, reintegration, and participation. It included an extensive range
of practical measures such as formation of school protection committees
through parent-teacher associations, running nationwide sensitisation
and information campaigns, establishment of child-friendly courts,
training of law enforcement officials, parliamentarians and court
officials, strengthening the National Commission for Child Welfare and
Development (NCCWD), and developing a referral system for child
abuse victims.
Very little focus on investigation and recovery of missing children was
seen despite thousands of children going missing every year in Pakistan.
In July 2018, a constitutional petition was filed in the Supreme Court by
Roshni Research and Development Organisation, an NGO working for
child protection, urging the Court to order the federal and provincial
governments to recognise cases of missing children as a cognisable
offence. The Court was informed in the ensuing hearings that 30 children
had disappeared from various parts of the country, particularly Karachi,
within the first six months of 2018 and between 5,000 and 6,000 children
disappear every year in Karachi alone. After hearing the arguments, the
SC directed the federal secretary interior, and home departments as well
as IGPs of the provinces to submit reports on missing children within
three weeks.
Six years earlier, the same NGO had filed a similar petition in the Sindh
High Court. In December 2018, the Court ordered that the FIA and
police should take joint action for recovery of the children reported
Children 195
a ladle, detaining her in a storeroom, and threatening her with ‘dire
consequences’. A week later, a division bench of the IHC suspended the
one-year jail sentences handed down to the judge and his wife.
The parents of Tayyaba told the IHC that they did not wish to pursue
the case. In June, the IHC accepted an appeal filed by the state and
increased the prison sentence from one year to three years with a fine
of Rs500,000. The bench observed that the criminal justice system had
failed to protect the most vulnerable members of society from neglect,
inhuman treatment, and the worst form of abuse, and had only started
functioning after publicity on social media and the subsequent suo motu
notice taken by the Supreme Court.
A couple were arrested in Gujjarpura for allegedly torturing their
11-year-old maid, Sumera, clubbing and burning her with an iron rod.
Another 11-year-old girl, Kinza, was beaten with blunt instruments by
her employers—a woman army officer and her doctor husband. The
husband was arrested in November after his interim bail expired. The
wife, named as the prime suspect, was already being investigated by
army authorities.
Kinza was beaten with blunt instruments by her employers—a woman army officer and her
doctor husband.
Seven-year-old Hadia was shot dead by her employer, and her six-year-
old sister Safia injured, when they arrived late for work. The incident
took place in Lakki Marwat, in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
These are the tip of the proverbial iceberg—incidents that only come
to the attention of the authorities and the media when neighbours
report them or parents complain. Far too often, however, parents who
have farmed out their children because of their own impoverished
Children 197
district jails of the province and which would cater to children aged
from three to six years. The first such school was opened in District Jail
Gujranwala in November 2018.
Children with disabilities (see People Living with Disabilities)
Child marriage
Pakistan ranks sixth in the world in terms of the highest absolute
numbers of child marriage where 21 percent of girls are married
by the age of 18 according to a report titled ‘Ending impunity for child
marriages in Pakistan: Normative and implementation gaps’. This report was
prepared by the global advocacy group, the Centre for Reproductive
Rights (CRR), and released in Karachi in September. It also found that
child marriage impacts girls more than boys because it makes them
susceptible to domestic violence and reproductive health issues. The
report recommended underage marriages should be declared null and
void, penalties should be imposed on officials, including police and
magistrates, who fail to take preventive or protective actions, and access
provided to legal and other services to victims of child marriages.
A KP based study on child marriage conducted in 2018 by Blue Veins, an
organisation in Peshawar working for the rights of women, girls and the
transgender community, explored the community perception towards
child marriage. The study covered different communities in seven KP
Poverty is the main driver of child marriages of girls as families consider them a burden and
not as contributors to the household income.
Children 199
• Put in place effective and timely mechanisms to curb the increasing
food insecurity and resultant malnutrition in children in the country,
particularly in Sindh and Balochistan.
• Expand health facilities, vaccinations and health awareness
programmes to eradicate polio and stem the spread of measles
and other preventable diseases impacting thousands of children
annually.
• Immediately constitute the National Commission on the Rights of
the Child to have a central body overseeing the implementation of
child rights in the country.
• Ensure the strict enforcement of laws to overcome the cultural
acceptance that perpetuate practices such as child marriage and
corporal punishment.
• Set the legally valid age for marriage at 18 years across Pakistan
for both boys and girls. Apart from Sindh, applicable laws in all
provinces set the age of girls lower than boys for marriage.
• Devise a holistic policy to curb child sexual abuse and child
abductions with proper mechanisms in place for investigation and
prosecution of such cases. It must also be recognised that boys are
equally, if not more, at danger of sexual abuse and violence as girls.
Labour
Slavery is non-existent and forbidden and no law shall permit or facilitate its
introduction into Pakistan in any form. All forms of forced labour and traffic in
human beings are prohibited. No child below the age of 14 years shall be engaged in
any factory or mine or any other hazardous employment.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 11 (1-3)
Every citizen shall have the right to form associations or unions, subject to any
reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the interest of sovereignty or integrity of
Pakistan, public order or morality.
Article 17 (1)
The state shall make provision for securing just and humane conditions of work ...
Article 37
The state shall secure the well-being of the people, irrespective of sex, caste, creed and
race, by raising their standard of living, by preventing the concentration of wealth
and means of production and distribution in the hands of a few to the detriment of
general interest and by ensuring equitable adjustment of rights between employers
and employees, and landlords and tenants; provide for all citizens, within the
available resources of the country, facilities for work and adequate livelihood
with reasonable rest and leisure; provide for all persons, employed in the service
of Pakistan or otherwise, social security by compulsory social insurance or other
means; provide basic necessities of life, such as food, clothing, housing, education
and medical relief, for all such citizens, irrespective of sex, caste, creed or race,
as are permanently or temporarily unable to earn their livelihood on account of
infirmity, sickness or unemployment; reduce disparity in the income and earnings
of individuals ...
Article 38(a) to (e)
No one shall be held in slavery or servitude.
Universal Declaration of Human
Rights Article 4
Everyone, as a member of society, has a right to social security ....
Article 22
Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favourable
conditions of work and to protection against unemployment. Everyone, without
any discrimination, has the right to equal pay for equal work.
Everyone who works has the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring
Labour 201
for himself and his family an existence worthy of human dignity and supplemented, if
necessary, by other means of social protection. Everyone has the right to form and to
join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
Article 23 (1-4)
Everyone has the right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working
hours and periodic holiday with pay.
Article 24
Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being
of himself and his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and
necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment,
sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances
beyond his control.
Article 25 (1)
State parties recognise the right of the child to be protected from economic exploitation
and from performing any work that is likely to be hazardous or to interfere with the
child’s education, or to be harmful to the child’s health or physical, mental, spiritual,
moral or social development.
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
Article 32(1)
annual Labour Force Survey, despite the fact it had already completed
the census exercise in 2017. The last Labour Force Survey report was
released in 2014-15.
According to the Trading Economics portal, Pakistan’s labour force
had reached 62.23 million in 2017, from 58.53 in 2016. The World Bank
data, however, put Pakistan’s total workforce at 69.957 million in 2017,
previously 68.396 million in 2016.
There was no improvement in occupational safety and health at
workplaces in Pakistan. Industrial accidents were reported in major
industrial centres in Sindh and the Punjab, and death and injury resulted
mostly from cylinder or boiler explosions. Several deaths were reported
in the Balochistan mines due to gas explosions or cave-ins.
Political promises
The 2018 election manifestos of all major political parties clearly
mentioned labour and labour welfare policies. During its past four
tenures, the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) introduced labour laws
and the 2018 PPP election manifesto clearly mentioned further labour
support measures such as provision of living wages instead of the
minimum wage, universalisation of provincial social security services,
and pension benefits under the Employees Old-age Benefit Institution
(EOBI) etc.
Similarly, the PTI election manifesto commits to providing 10 million
new jobs, a demand-driven trades skills training to youth, and expanding
Labour 203
the social safety net and free health services to all citizens. As PTI has
formed governments at the centre and in three provinces, the party has
to work extensively to fulfil all its commitments made at the time of
elections for its five-year term.
In Sindh the PPP has formed the provincial government and labour
is now a provincial subject so it has to implement all its election
commitments. During its last tenure, the PPP government of Sindh
made some positive measures for labour including a record number
of labour-related legislation. The first-ever provincial tripartite labour
conference was held in December 2017 and as a result a Tripartite
Labour Standing Committee with equal representation from workers
and employers was held. This was considered another positive measure
of the Sindh government during 2018 as it announced a pro-workers
labour policy in early 2018. However, implementation of labour laws
and lack of effective labour inspection still remain a big challenge for the
Sindh provincial government.
The Punjab and KP governments also announced their respective
provincial labour policies in 2018 after Sindh. Balochistan has so far not
announced its labour policy, despite the fact that it had started work on
developing one in 2016.
Minimum wages
After the 18th Amendment, the provincial governments were bound
to announce minimum wages every year for unskilled workers under
the Minimum Wages Law (each province has a separate law). Usually
minimum wages are announced at the time of budget, but the former
government did not announce it at federal or provincial level. After the
elections, only the Sindh government announced the minimum wage for
unskilled workers, increasing the amount from Rs15,000 to Rs16,200 per
month. The other three provinces have kept the old rate of Rs15,000 for
the second consecutive year. Implementation of the minimum wage is
still scarcely observed.
Labour struggles
A report published in 2018 by the International Labour Organisation
(ILO) Pakistan—’A Profile of Trade Unionism and Industrial Relations in
Pakistan’—estimated that around 7,096 trade unions were registered in
Pakistan in December 2016. It also estimated that the total unionised
workforce at the same time stood at 1,414,160, as well as 1,390 collective
bargaining agents (CBAs) in the country.
While the ILO estimates that around 2.32% of the total workforce is
organised in trade unions, independent economists believe this number
is no more than 1%. Most of the trade unions in Pakistan exist only
in formal sectors and, according to the estimates, only 15.55% of the
Labour 205
the labour and trade unions because it causes unemployment and loss
of jobs of thousands of workers employed in those state-owned units. In
the past millions of employees of the state-owned entities lost their jobs
as well as other financial benefits as a result of privatisations.
On 16 November 2018 the federal cabinet decided to set up a holding
entity called Sarmaya Pakistan Company (SPC) to be run on the model
of Malaysian and Indonesian wealth funds. The government will hand
over control of 195 ailing units to the autonomous SPC to end its own
‘influence’ on State Owned Entities (SOEs).
Seven companies, including banks and power plants, have been
identified for initial privatisation. For ‘strategic reasons’ and the ‘social
value’ they create, the three big organisations Pakistan International
Airlines, Pakistan Steel and Pakistan Railways will not be privatised.
They are to be restructured to become financially viable.
The list included the power generation units, Convention Centre
Islamabad, and others. The SPE will also offer 93.38 percent shares in
SME Bank, 44.8 percent in Pakistan Reinsurance Company Limited, and
100 percent of State Life Insurance Corporation for privatisation with
management control.
Besides, in the medium-term, 82.6 percent shares of the First Woman
Bank would also be given to a private strategic partner.
The government is facing strong resistance from the workers’ unions in
WAPDA as the workers have opposed privatisation of Gencos (electric
generation power companies) and Discos (electric power distribution
companies).
Government employees
Health workers in all four provinces, especially the lady health workers,
continued their struggle for an increase in wages and regularisation of
their jobs.
The Lady Health Workers (LHWs) have been demanding regularisation
of their jobs and payment of dues from 2012. Violence continued against
LHWs, especially during polio immunisation campaigns and most
notably in KP and Sindh where parents resist the vaccination of their
children. Across the country, there were numerous reports of polio
workers being manhandled, attacked and, in some cases, killed.
On 26 May 2018 about 800 LHWs were booked for allegedly ransacking
the deputy commissioner’s office in Bahawalnagar and holding the
staff hostage during a protest against non-payment of their salaries.
The Health Workers Union (HWU) Punjab president criticised the
administration for registering an FIR against the LHWs despite the
resolution of the issue after talks.
PTI parliamentarians joined Port Qasim workers in October on the 27th day of their sit-in
Labour 207
a misconduct under company rules but also an offence under this Act.
With effect from 9 July the federal government declared that the Pakistan
Essential Services Act 1952 would apply for a period of six months to
all classes of employment in the PIACL. Any person found guilty of an
offence under this Act would be punishable with imprisonment for a
term which could extend to one year and would also be liable to a fine.
Steel Mill employees
The present government removed Pakistan Steel Mills from the
privatisation list. However, the Steel Mills is not functional and the fate
of thousands of workers still hangs in the balance. The largest industrial
unit of Pakistan, Steel Mills has been closed down since June 2015 and the
government is unable to pay the salaries of the employees. The federal
government has written a letter to the National Accountability Bureau
(NAB) stating that the Steel Mill’s closure was incurring a loss of Rs1.4
billion every month, and further resulting in the loss of valuable foreign
exchange due to the import of steel. The National Assembly’s panel had
asked the government to send the reference to NAB in July 2017.
The much-delayed salaries and pensions have placed the existing
workers in financial crises. Although the government is releasing their
salaries after approval of the federal cabinet, their main demand of
restarting the mill’s production has still not materialised.
Private sector workers
Private sector workers are the main victims of the current financial
situation. Their workplace conditions are pathetic, where occupational
health and safety standards are mostly ignored. The absence or
ineffectiveness of the state’s inspection system has resulted in numerous
industrial accidents, many of which are unreported. Throughout the
year, there were reports of deaths and injuries caused by roof collapses,
cylinder blasts, and falls at factories.
The lack of occupational health and safety facilities at the Gadani
shipbreaking yard continues to manifest itself. In October, seven
labourers working inside a non-functional ship parked at the yard were
burnt when the ship caught fire.
Ironically, the tragedy happened just one day after the Balochistan
labour minister visited the yard and surveyed the working and living
conditions of Gadani shipbreaking workers. Following the accident, the
government of Balochistan banned any kind of shipbreaking activity
and assembly of workers in the area.
Mine workers
The deadly incidents in mines in Balochistan and other provinces
continued during 2018, in which scores of workers lost their lives.
Labour 209
September, four more coal miners lost their lives after their mine was
filled with poisonous gas in the Sinjdi area near Quetta. In the same
month, nine miners were killed and three others injured when the roof
of a coal mine collapsed in the Darra Adamkhel area near Kohat.
As the casualties continued to mount, the Supreme Court in September
asked the Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa governments to file
replies on a petition moved to highlight deaths of mine workers.
There appears to be a pattern of explosions from methane gas
accumulations as labourers enter the mines. This would indicate that at
least a proportion of the fatalities could be avoided if a simple regime of
testing for lethal gases was put in place.
Modern slavery
Pakistan ranked 8th on the Global Slavery Index 2018, with an estimated
three million living in modern slavery. It was also one of four countries
that scored above 90 percent in the Vulnerability Model, which measures
systemic, individual, and environmental risk factors. It was particularly
mentioned that in countries such as Pakistan, where conflict-affected
areas could not be surveyed, these could be conservative estimates.
Conflict is considered a significant risk factor for modern slavery, with
the associated ‘breakdown of the rule of law, the loss of social supports,
and the disruption that occurs with conflict’.
Forms of modern slavery prevalent in Pakistan include forced and
bonded labour, human trafficking (including labour trafficking), and
domestic slavery.
Implementation of the existing laws is the main obstacle to the
elimination of such modern slavery. The previous Punjab Assembly in
its last session (16 May 2018) passed the Punjab Bonded Labour System
(Abolition) (Amendment) Bill 2018, which is a provincial version of the
1992 federal law. The provincial assembly of Sindh had already passed
the Sindh Bonded Labour System Abolition Act 2015. Both Sindh and
Punjab provinces have a high incidence of bonded labour, especially in
the agriculture and brick kiln sectors. Bonded labour or modern slavery
also prevails in many other sectors such as carpet weaving etc.
The Trafficking in Persons Report 2018 issued by the U.S. Department
of State showed Punjab was the only province to report legal action
taken against bonded labour other than Islamabad, which reported
one investigation. The Punjab authorities reported investigating 264,
prosecuting 257, and convicting 37 traffickers for bonded labour during
the period, an increase from the previous period. The Punjab reported
investigating 114, prosecuting 112, and convicting 17 people under PPC
section 369A (trafficking in human beings). The report claimed official
complicity in trafficking remained prevalent but the government failed
Labour 211
were reportedly freed and owners arrested in Sialkot.
In April, activists called for detailed information on the Punjab
government’s Integrated Project for Elimination of Child and Bonded
Labour 2014. The government had apparently allocated Rs5.1bn for
this project and claimed to have removed 88,000 children from brick
kilns and rescued around 41,000 from child labour in other sectors.
However, activists and people working with brick kiln labourers said
that the schools were empty and children were still working. In district
Sheikhupura, 204 one-room schools set up informally under this project
were reported to have been closed down.
The previous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa cabinet in its last meeting on 24 May
2018 approved what they said was the first every child labour policy of
its kind, claiming it would discourage child labour and help in preparing
a solid strategy for preventing the factors responsible for child labour.
The employment of children in homes continues to prevail unchecked
and only surfaces in the media when extreme cases of neglect and abuse
are reported. (See Children)
The regularity with which reports surface even after employers have
been exposed and prosecuted demonstrates once again that legislation
alone cannot eliminate child labour and it is the implementation of laws
and initiatives that presents the main obstacle. The mindset and attitude
towards child labour need to be changed. This can only be achieved
through awareness campaigns that bring about reforms in a society
Labour 213
in the Bill that raise concern, for example in setting the minimum age at
15 years, and making no mention of the hazards faced.
Farm workers
The end of the year 2018 brought positive news for the tenants of the
Okara Military Farms who have been struggling for ownership rights of
the land they have been tilling for decades. The National Commission
for Human Rights (NCHR) intervened and the military accepted before
the Commission that they did not have ownership of the agriculture land
as in fact the main owner of the land was the Government of Punjab.
According to the NCHR, although the tenants would not get ownership
rights, they would continue to work as tenants or sharecroppers without
further harassment.
According to the Awami Workers Party, at least 13 tenants have lost
their lives during this farmers movement, and around 1,900 tenants
have been jailed over the last few years, including over 200 peasant
women. Three of the main leaders of the tenants’ association, Anjuman
Mozareen Punjab (AMP), are still in jail.
Despite the brutal repression of the AMP, only ten percent of the tenants
have agreed to pay share cropping rent. Ninety percent are still resisting.
Over 68,000 acres of land are being cultivated by tenants in different
parts of the Punjab in public sector agriculture farms.
Overseas workers
According to the Economic Survey 2017-18 over 9 million Pakistanis are
working across the globe, with a concentration in the Middle East of
Labour 215
• Provide access to all citizens to social security schemes as a
fundamental right.
• Ensure provision of occupational safety and health facilities at every
workplace including mining sites.
• Strengthen the system of labour inspection at the provincial level by
increasing the number of trained inspectors. The capacity of labour
inspectors should be enhanced by organising training for workers
both local and abroad.
• Implement ILO Convention 144 and hold tripartite consultations
every year in all provinces, as initiated in Sindh.
The Elderly
All citizens are equal before law and are entitled to equal protection of law.
Pakistan Constitution
Article 25(1)
Nothing in this Article shall affect the validity of … (e) … any law providing for
the acquisition of any class of property for the purpose of … providing maintenance
to those who, on account of unemployment, sickness, infirmity or old age, are
unable to maintain themselves.
Pakistan Constitution
Article 24 (3)(e)(iii)
Elderly people faced problems at the polling stations during the general elections
All citizens are equal before law and are entitled to equal protection of law.
Pakistan Constitution
Article 25(1))
Respect for inherent dignity, individual autonomy including the freedom to
make one’s own choices, and independence of persons; Non-discrimination; Full
and effective participation and inclusion in society; Respect for difference and
acceptance of persons with disabilities as part of human diversity and humanity;
Equality of opportunity; Accessibility; Equality between men and women; Respect
for the evolving capacities of children with disabilities and respect for the right of
children with disabilities to preserve their identities.
Convention on the rights of persons with disabilities
Article 3 – General Principles
States Parties shall ensure an inclusive education system at all levels… States
Parties shall ensure that Persons with disabilities are not excluded from the general
education system on the basis of disability, and that children with disabilities are
not excluded from free and compulsory primary education, or from secondary
education, on the basis of disability.
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
Article 24(1)(2)(a)
States Parties recognise that persons with disabilities have the right to the
enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health without discrimination on
the basis of disability.
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
Article 25
States Parties recognise that a mentally or physically disabled child should enjoy a
full and decent life, in conditions which ensure dignity, promote self-reliance and
facilitate the child’s active participation in the community.
Convention on the Rights of the Child
Article 23(1)
There are at least 1,700,000 children with autism spectrum disorders in Pakistan, out of which 340,000
are girls
The government has allocated a two percent employment quota for persons with disabilities, but
this is only a fraction of their requirement
Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from
persecution.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 14(1)
No State Party shall expel, return (“refouler”) or extradite a person to another
State where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger
of being subjected to torture.
Convention against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment
Article 3
Source: UNHCR
Imran Khan initially announced that children of Afghan and Bengali refugees would be given
Pakistani nationality, but later clarified that he only meant to initiate debate on this issue
Hundreds of families that have returned to Kurram Agency after the military operation still
await compensation promised by the government
permission in advance.
The former Prime Minister inaugurated the newly reconstructed
Miranshah market in April 2018, saying that the rehabilitation of
temporarily displaced persons (TDPs) and the socio-economic uplift of
(erstwhile) FATA was a priority for the government, but recent protests
by tradesmen demanded fair distribution of shops in the 1,300-shop
market.
A ground military operation was launched in May 2018 in the Mir
Ali and Land Mohammadkhel areas of North Waziristan, including a
curfew in the area.
In June 2018, it was reported that the military had launched an operation
in the Ladha region of South Waziristan under the broader Operation
Raddul Fasad based on intelligence reports that militants had entered
the area along with returning IDPs, and six ‘suspected terrorists’ were
killed.
A military operation in the North Waziristan tribal district was also
reported in September 2018 along with a curfew.
At the same time, there were reports about the resurgence of a certain
faction of the outlawed Taliban through a so-called ‘Peace Committee’
in Wana, South Waziristan. The committee issued restrictive guidelines
for the local population through pamphlets and local mosques, warning
of severe consequences if their directives were not followed. Among the
measures they imposed were restrictions on the movement of women
Displaced tribesmen from North Waziristan performed the traditional Waziri Atan dance
outside the Governor’s House in Peshawar to get the government’s attention.
Social
and
Economic Rights
Education
Social and Economic Rights
Education
The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of
five to sixteen years in such manner as may be determined by law.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 25-A
...remove illiteracy and provide free and compulsory secondary education within
minimum possible period.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 37-b
Every citizen shall have the right to have access to information in all matters of
public importance subject to regulation and reasonable restrictions imposed by law.
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 19-A
(1) Everyone has the right to education. Education shall be free, at least in the
elementary and fundamental stages. Elementary education shall be compulsory.
Technical and professional education shall be made generally available and higher
education shall be equally accessible to all on the basis of merit.
(2) Education shall be directed to the full development of the human personality
and to the strengthening of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms.
It shall promote understanding, tolerance and friendship among all nations, racial
or religious groups, and shall further the activities of the United Nations for the
maintenance of peace.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 26
States Parties agree that the education of the child shall be directed to:
(a) The development of the child’s personality, talents and mental and physical
abilities to their fullest potential;
(b) The development of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, and for
the principles enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations;
(c) The development of respect for the child’s parents, his or her own cultural
identity, language and values, for the national values of the country in which the
child is living, the country from which he or she may originate, and for civilisations
different from his or her own;
(d) The preparation of the child for responsible life in a free society, in the spirit
of understanding, peace, tolerance, equality of sexes, and friendship among all
peoples, ethnic, national and religious groups and persons of indigenous origin;
Education 253
(e) The development of respect for the natural environment.
Convention on the Rights of the Child
Article 29
The States Parties to the present Covenant recognise the right of everyone to
education. They agree that education shall be directed to the full development of the
human personality and the sense of its dignity, and shall strengthen the respect for
human rights and fundamental freedoms. They further agree that education shall
enable all persons to participate effectively in a free society, promote understanding,
tolerance and friendship among all nations and all racial, ethnic or religious groups,
and further the activities of the United Nations for the maintenance of peace.
The States Parties to the present Covenant recognise that, with a view to achieving
the full realisation of this right:
(a) Primary education shall be compulsory and available free to all;
(b) Secondary education in its different forms, including technical and vocational
secondary education, shall be made generally available and accessible to all by
every appropriate means, and in particular by the progressive introduction of free
education;
(c) Higher education shall be made equally accessible to all, on the basis of capacity,
by every appropriate means, and in particular by the progressive introduction of
free education;
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
Article 13
Parents protesting against private school owners for charging exorbitant fees
Education 255
in the news showed that the administration at a major public-sector
university was not even aware of the law and was, therefore, enabling
perpetuation of predatory practices targeting women students.
Literacy
The official data on literacy and numeracy skills has not been updated
since 2016-17 when a two-percent drop was recorded in adult literacy
from 60 to 58 percent. The UN Global Education Monitoring (GEM)
Report also uses this figure. Literacy among the youth age group is
higher at 70 percent.
Public spending on education
Though there has been a slight improvement in the share of the
education sector in public expenditure, Pakistan continues to lag behind
international standards as well as regional averages. According to the
GEM Report for 2019, Pakistan has increased spending on education
both as a percentage of its Gross Domestic Product (from 2.6% in 2017
to 2.8% in 2018) and of total public expenditure (from 13.2% in 2017 to
13.8% in 2018). However, to put these gains into perspective, it should
be noted that the 2018 education spending figures for the South Asian
region were 3.8% as a percentage of GDP and 14.5% as a percentage of
total expenditure.
The levels recommended by the United Nations under its 2030 Education
Framework are 4-6% (GDP share) and 15-20 (share of total expenditure).
Enrolment and retention – gender, regional, and income gaps
The lack of adequate budgetary allocation was reflected in education
indicators, the most alarming of which remained the number of out-
of-school children. According to the Pakistan Education Statistics
2016-17 released in July by the Academy of Educational Planning
and Management (AEPAM)—a subsidiary of the federal education
ministry—the number had increased from 22.63 million to 22.84 million.
Education statistics released in 2018 highlight several important areas
where policy makers will need to work to ensure universal schooling for
children aged 5-16 years.
Firstly, the overwhelming majority of out-of-school children, around 17
million, are in the age bracket for middle (grades 6-8), secondary (grades
9 and 10), and higher-secondary (10-11) levels.
Secondly, girls constitute the majority of the out-of-school children. The
gender-wise breakdown of the 22.84 million figure showed that around
12 million of these are girls and around 10 million boys.
Thirdly, more than half of the out-of-school children (57 percent) come
from the poorest households, according to Alif Ailaan, an education
Education 257
external audits, for fifth and eighth graders in 2013 and has continued
the practice every year up until 2018.
Of the other two provinces, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) has also started
externally administered assessments, with the first such exercise held
in 2018 showing that only half of the pre-primary level students could
pass the test. In Balochistan, the Alif Ailaan report notes improvements
insofar as legislation and setting up of institutions is concerned. However
implementation, including that of learning assessments, remains poor.
The report notes that assessments conducted by the provincial education
department encourages ‘rote learning and test memory rather than
conceptual clarity and understanding’.
Importantly, the National Assessment Test 2016 report noted that a
countrywide initiative (excluding Punjab) under which supplementary
readers were provided to students in the last three years seems to have
made little impact on reading and writing skills.
The ASER report 2018 registered an improvement in learning levels.
Fifty-two percent of fifth graders across provinces could read sentences
in English, compared to 46% in 2016, with Sindh still at the bottom of
the league at only 25%. Fifty-six percent could read a story in Urdu,
Sindhi or Pashto compared to 52% in 2016, with AJK, ICT and the Punjab
leading, while Sindh at (43%) had been overtaken by the newly merged
tribal districts (46%) who had previously come last.
Teaching quality: The quality of teaching imparted to the students is
crucial to the learning experience, and reports published in 2018 highlight
that there have been some achievements in improving teaching quality
and identifying areas where there is still great room for improvement.
A positive change noted in the Alif Ailaan reports is that all four
provinces have instituted a merit-based recruitment policy for teachers.
The National Testing Service (NTS) exams are used to assess and shortlist
school teachers. However, the promotions policy is still tied only to the
seniority of the teaching staff and does not incentivise performance.
Similarly, the NAT report identified a mismatch between teachers’
academic and professional qualifications and grades assigned to them.
For instance, it found that most of the teaching staff at the primary and
middle level was over-qualified, having settled for school teaching
because of lack of other opportunities. The report posited that these
personnel were unlikely to take the profession very seriously unless
their pay scales were improved and a service structure framed for them.
Measures to improve quality also need to factor in the strength of
teaching staff at various levels of schools. In this regard, an alarming
statistic surfaced in the Pakistan Education Statistics 2016-17 report
A large number of schools in rural areas still operate without a proper building
The Pakistan Education Statistics report released in 2018 states that 7.5
percent of schools across the country, most located in rural areas, still
operate without a building. Additionally, about 9.5 percent of school
buildings are temporary, made of katcha materials (mud, dry-grass, etc).
The report shows that a little over 30 percent of the schools still lack
electricity, drinking water, and toilet facilities, with the crisis most severe
in Balochistan where almost three-fourths of the schools are without
electricity, 40 percent without drinking water, and 64 percent without
toilets.
The ASER report says 32 percent of government schools do not have
useable water facilities, 42 percent have no toilet facilities, and 30 percent
have no boundary walls. Eleven percent of private schools have no
useable water, 13 percent no toilet facilities, and 20 percent are without
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boundary walls.
Curriculum
The GEM Reports assess national curriculum of all member states
in terms of inclusion of material on human rights, gender equality,
sustainable development, and global citizenship. The 2019 report found
no progressive change in the national curriculum of Pakistan over the
previous year. The degree of inclusion of content promoting gender
equality, sustainable development, and global citizenship remained
low, and the degree of inclusion of content on human rights was found
to be high, similar to the assessment the previous year.
No major initiative was witnessed on curriculum reforms. The only
significant initiative of the outgoing government of the Pakistan
Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), under which schools’ curriculum was
upgraded, remained limited to the federal capital.
In November, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) government
announced the setting up of a National Curriculum Council. The
purpose of the Council will be to work towards the introduction of a
standardised curriculum in schools across the country. No progress was
made in the establishment of the Council by the end of the year. Similar
announcements were made by earlier governments as well, but were not
followed up with requisite actions.
School security
The GEM report included Pakistan among countries heavily affected
by attacks on education facilities, or use of such facilities by military
personnel.
The report also highlighted the plight of women teachers in the militancy-
hit regions in the former Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)
and Balochistan. Based on a series of interviews with women teachers
displaced from these areas, the report found that they were reluctant to
return out of fear for their safety.
The year 2018 witnessed several incidents where schools were attacked
by militants. The major such attack was reported from the Diamer
district of Gilgit-Baltistan where militants torched 12 schools, mostly for
girls. Other incidents reported during the year were from the Tirah area
of the Khyber tribal district, Chitral district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,
and Pishin district of Balochistan.
In a note issued in the wake of the G-B schools attack, the Human Rights
Watch (HRW) highlighted that schools had been at the frontline of
Pakistan’s war against militancy at least since 2004 when nine schools
were burned down in the Diamer district. The HRW stressed the need
for the federal government to take responsibility for the security of
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in May, a video of a teacher at Cadet College Mastung surfaced on social
media in which he was captured ruthlessly beating students with a stick.
In a first, a prominent Lahore-based all boys private school catering
to upper-income households featured in a social media campaign.
The school principal was accused by multiple alumni of the school
of promoting a culture of physical punishment in classrooms and on
campus.
Regulation of private schools – symptom of a deeper crisis
Though the majority of children still attend public schools across the
country, a sizeable number now go to private schools. The ASER report
revealed a shift in enrolments to public schools—77% in government
schools and 23% in private schools as compared to 74% and 26% in 2016.
Tuition fee hikes: It is clear that public schools (run by provincial
education departments) are not meeting the education needs of the
populace. However, tuition fee hikes at private establishments has
become a key issue of public policy over the last few years. Countrywide
protests pushed the provincial governments to promulgate ordinances
to regulate private schools’ fees. Eventually, the matter proceeded
to court and in December, while hearing appeals against decisions of
the high courts of Lahore, Sindh, and Peshawar, the Supreme Court of
Pakistan issued an interim directive to private schools charging more
than Rs5,000 a month for tuition to slash their fees by 20%.
Importantly, the question of law under debate in these court cases
did not concern education as a fundamental right (Article 25-A of the
Constitution), but the freedom (of private schools) to engage in business
(Article 18 of the Constitution). The ruling concerns only a minority
of schools catering to the education needs of upper and upper-middle
income quantiles. From a rights perspective, the private schools fee
regulation issue signifies that the state is not just institutionally incapable
of providing education to all children in the 5-16 years bracket; it also
does not yet have the political will to approach education as an issue of
rights.
Schools location: Owing to a lack of zoning regulations, most of the
private schools established in major cities during the booming of the
sector in the two last decades ended up located in residential quarters
and neighbourhoods. In the year 2018, the issue remained a bone of
contention between school administrations and government authorities
in Islamabad and Karachi. Following a directive of the Islamabad High
Court, the Capital Development Authority sealed such schools in the
month of July. Since the action was taken during the summer months
and the seals were removed on the orders of the Supreme Court in
August, it did not take a toll on educational activities at these schools.
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actual amount spent during 2017-18 was scaled down to Rs32.9 billion.
In its mid-term budget announced in October, the new PTI government
slashed funding for the HEC to Rs30 billion.
The missing links of student and teacher wellbeing
Student and teacher-led protests were reported from most prominent
public-sector universities in the country, highlighting the dismal state of
administrative affairs in the higher education sector.
The issues that triggered protests included tuition fee hikes (University
of Peshawar); lack of issuance of degrees or failure on the part of the
administration to secure recognition with relevant professional bodies
(University of Sargodha Lahore sub-campus and Federal Urdu University
pharmacy department); absence of the vice chancellor (University of
Engineering and Technology at Taxila); and alleged misuse of the vice
chancellor’s office at Quaid-e-Azam University (QAU).
The removal of the vice chancellor of Lahore-based Information
Technology University set up by the previous provincial administration
left students and research in the lurch. By the end of the year, the
university was unable to renew contracts of at least 90 researchers as a
full-time VC had yet to be appointed.
Throughout the year, teachers at the largest public sector higher learning
institute of Sindh, Karachi University, remained at loggerheads with the
provincial government over delayed payment of salaries and lack of a
service structure. Strikes and boycott of classes were held in May and
August.
Another issue of significance that triggered protests at KU was a
controversial amendment to the Universities Act of 1973. After a
protracted protest, the government agreed to meet some demands
of the teachers’ associations such as keeping the final authority over
admissions policy with the academic council. However, a faction of
protesting teachers remained opposed to the Bill on the grounds that
it had paved the way for government interference in academic affairs
by tilting the balance of power in the university syndicate in favour of
members nominated by the chief minister. This faction also opposed the
removal of a clause related to student representation on the syndicate.
Academic staff at degree colleges across the Punjab also held protests
over lack of a service structure.
Two issues that highlighted the lack of a caring and conducive learning
environment in the outgoing year were, first, widespread sexual
harassment on campuses and, second, multiple reports of student
suicides. Harassment incidents were reported from leading public and
private universities, as complainants emphasised the lack of institutional
Students from prominent universities of Lahore organised a march, demanding the restoration
of student unions
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down the annual scholarships from 100 to 53, depriving many deserving
students from remote areas of the western province access to higher
education.
Recommendations
• Consider a national campaign to improve the literacy rate.
• Improve public spending on education with particular focus on
Balochistan, former Federally Administered Tribal Areas, Azad
Jammu and Kashmir, and rural Sindh and Punjab.
• Immediately constitute the National Curriculum Council announced
by the government with a clearly defined timeline. The academia
and the policy and research community must be represented on the
Council.
• Improve the quality of government schools to counteract the trend
towards the privatisation of education to ensure that the state fulfils
its constitutional duty to provide good quality and affordable
education to all children.
• Require elite private schools to reserve a reasonable percentage of
seats in all classes for children from lower-income households to be
filled through a meritocratic framework.
• Conduct a performance audit of the Higher Education Commission,
review the commission’s current structure, and ensure greater
transparency in its proceedings.
• Restore student unions on campuses and make them viable
institutions for shared governance with equal representation of
women, as well as ethnic and religious minorities.
• Review tuition and other fees charged by public sector institutions
to evaluate if all households regardless of their income status can
afford higher education for their children.
• Restore the Punjab University scholarship quota for Baloch
students. Additionally, universities across the country must initiate
scholarships to ease access to higher education for children from
lower-income households.
• Address the root causes of the teachers’ protests and strikes which
concern working conditions and service structures.
• Put in place mechanisms in campuses to take up sexual harassment
complaints and to provide counselling services to students suffering
from depression or unable to cope with academic responsibilities.
• Ban corporal punishment in all its forms across all provinces through
legislative measures.
Health
The state shall secure the well-being of the people, irrespective of sex, caste, creed
or race…provide basic necessities of life, such as…medical relief, for all such
citizens…as are permanently or temporarily unable to earn their livelihood on
account of infirmity, sickness or unemployment…
Constitution of Pakistan
Article 38(a) and (d)
Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and
well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and
medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event
of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of
livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 25(1)
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measures and budget cuts do not extend to the already neglected
health sector.
Various reports and statistics reveal that the burden of communicable
diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria, dengue fever, typhoid, viral
hepatitis, cholera, measles and other infections could not be controlled
in 2018 while a rising trend of non-communicable diseases—heart
disease, stroke, diabetes, hypertension and various types of cancers—
was also witnessed.
One major factor for this unsatisfactory situation is that the country’s
spending on the health sector is still less than one percent of its GDP
whereas WHO recommends it should be around 6 percent.
Public health
The quality and coverage of public health is unsatisfactory in Pakistan.
On average, the country spends well below half the health spending
benchmark (of $86 per person per year) for low-income countries,
according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates.
Due to low coverage, people’s dependence on the private sector is
high due to which Pakistan is ranked amongst the top countries
having the highest percentage of out-of-pocket expenditures. Direct
expenses by the individuals on health-related services constitute
around 87 percent of private health expenditures.
This is despite the fact that investments in the health sector over the
years is said to have shown some improvement in health facilities and
healthcare providers. According to the figures mentioned in the
Economic Survey of Pakistan 2017-2018, by the year 2017 the number
of public sector hospitals had increased to 1,209, with 5,505 basic
health units (BHUs), 688 rural health centres (RHCs), 5,654
dispensaries, 727 maternity and child health centres, 431 TB centres,
and 126,019 hospital beds. These facilities, together with 208,007
doctors, 20,463 dentists and 103,777 nurses, represent the current ratio
of one doctor for 957 persons, and 9,730 persons per dentist, and
availability of one hospital bed for 1,500-1,600 people.
The increase in the number of cases of non-communicable diseases is
further evidence of how the public health sector has underperformed.
The three entirely preventable diseases—diabetes mellitus, cancer,
and hypertension—have been the major killers in Pakistan, with
rampant cases of infectious diseases such as dengue fever, Congo
virus, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, poliomyelitis and TB adding to the toll.
The multiple nutrition and health-related indicators are also not
encouraging. For example, according to the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO) findings, 37.5 million people in
Health 269
component of the health budget by Rs3bn, and allocated a separate
Rs5.1bn to deal with malnutrition and stunting. The finance minister
said the next government could add new schemes. In October,
however, the government announced it was slashing the funding of
new development schemes because of financial restraints resulting
from a shortfall in federal transfers.
The KP government had earlier declared that an outgoing
administration had no mandate to present a budget for 2018-19.
Their budget in October for the remainder of the fiscal year set aside
Rs78bn for healthcare, including Rs12bn for developmental projects.
Having presented a budget with a deficit of approximately Rs62bn,
the Balochistan government allocated just 8.7pc of its revenue to the
health sector in May. In October, the finance minister announced a
Rs75bn deficit in the current budget and looked to the federal
government for assistance. He admitted that, after education, a
major allocation had been taken up by the law and order situation,
and that had meant spending on health had suffered.
National programmes
After the passage of the 18th amendment to the Constitution of
Pakistan and devolution of health as a subject to the provinces, the
role of the federal government has become limited. However, it
does carry out national programmes and manages projects funded
by international donors. The health sector is one area in which
coordination between the federal government and the provincial
governments is crucial, as the disparities in the funding and
provision of vital health services across provinces reveal very
different approaches to healthcare.
The Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (DRAP) works under
the federal government and regulates the pharmaceutical sector
besides fixing medicine prices and granting licenses.
The National Nutrition Programme (NNP) 2017-18 is an important
initiative keeping in view the results of a survey initiated by the
Nutrition Wing at the federal level. The survey covered 120,000
households and gathered district specific data. It also includes
Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) indicators, and adolescent
and childhood obesity. The process is being monitored and
supervised through national steering and technical committees for
the National Nutrition Survey (NNS).
Furthermore, the deserving are being provided with health services
through the Prime Minister’s Health Programme. Under this
programme 30 lakh families in 41 districts were reported to have
The disparities in the funding and provision of vital health services across provinces reveal very
different approaches to healthcare.
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established at the federal level, and the government has decided to
undertake an international standard survey after every 2-3 years.
Mental Health
At the end of the year, the Pakistan Association for Mental Health
(PAMH) said the country was becoming increasingly ‘depressed’ and
expressed deep concern over the rising incidence of mental disorders,
especially in Karachi. According to officials, stress levels were
worsening over time, and every fourth house had a mental health
problem requiring specialised treatment. The PAMH said that 25
percent of the people with mental disorders suffered from depression,
and the number of women with depression was twice that of men. The
cited causes of stress included the law and order situation, political
instability, and the erratic supplies of necessities such as electricity,
water, and gas.
Suicide is the tragic recourse of many people suffering from mental
disorders. The alarming suicide rates in the country—HRCP recorded
1,338 (786 men and 552 women) in 2018—gives some indication of how
many people are affected who do not have access to psychiatric services
of diagnosis, treatment and support. Distressing reports regularly
appear in the newspapers. In Sheikhupura in May, Sarfaraz killed his
three children before committing suicide after his wife left them. In July,
an ASI in Lahore reportedly committed suicide after being refused leave.
In September, 26-year-old model Anam Tanoli took her own life in
Lahore after hitting out at online bullies. She had reportedly been
battling with depression.
There were reports of several student suicides in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
over poor exam results. By mid-November, the number of suicides had
reached 43 in Tharparkar alone, and rising suicide rates were reported in
Chitral and Gilgit-Baltistan, particularly among students and married
women. Although some of these could be attributed to other causes of
death, it is clear that poverty, crime, injustice, intolerance, socio-
economic, and family pressures are taking a drastic toll on the more
vulnerable.
Pakistan signed up to the World Health Organisation’s comprehensive
mental health action plan (2013-2020), adopted by the 66th World
Health Assembly. The principle of human rights is deeply embedded
in the plan, but there is no evidence that Pakistan has developed a
coordinated national strategy to achieve the objectives.
Sindh passed a Mental Health Act in 2013, but failed to form a Mental
Health Authority until October 2017. In May 2018, the Sindh High
Court heard a petition for the proper implementation of the 2013 Act
as well as the Sindh Mental Health Rules 2014. The chairman of the
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to be about 18% of the entire population. Factors contributing to
undernourishment are given as poverty, the low literacy rate, lack of
decision-making power given to women, inadequate living conditions,
and poor access to healthcare facilities. However, there are disparities
across provinces and the reasons need to be identified and addressed.
For example, undernourishment tends to be greater in regions more at
risk from climate extremes which affect agricultural production,
resulting in less food for people to eat.
A recent official report, ‘The Economic Consequences of Under Nutrition
in Pakistan: An Assessment of Losses’, linked malnutrition with the
economy. The report was prepared by the Pakistan Scaling Up
Nutrition (SUN) Secretariat, in collaboration with the United Nations
World Food Programme (WFP).
According to the report, the deaths of more than 177,000 children
annually in Pakistan before their fifth birthday is due to them or their
mothers being afflicted with malnutrition. This translates into the loss
of future generations of the workforce and a cost to Pakistan of an
estimated US$2.24 billion per year—more than two-thirds of Pakistan’s
children suffering from anaemia, iodine deficiencies, or stunting will
suffer deficits in mental and physical health, resulting in lower school
performance and lower productivity as adults.
Dengue
The three provinces where the dengue virus is rampant and responsible
for sporadic outbreaks are KP, the Punjab and Sindh. In 2018, a total
2,088 dengue positive cases were reported across the Sindh province
while two people died. In Rawalpindi, as many as 421 dengue patients
were admitted to hospitals during the year, including five in December.
The departments concerned focused throughout the year on drives to
locate dengue larvae, observe cleanliness, carry out fumigation at
different places, and ensure water was not stored in open containers
or left to accumulate in open spaces.
The National Institute of Health (NIH), Ministry of Health Services,
recently launched an Android-based app called Mosquitoes Alert in
Pakistan to help people learn about the types of mosquitoes in their
area and the types of diseases they cause. The institute has also
established well-equipped Disease Surveillance and Response Units
(DSRUs) in provinces for the prevention and control of dengue.
The NIH has also prepared a Dengue National Action Plan and shared
it with the provinces for implementation. Provincial governments are
implementing measures for vector surveillance and control which
needs to be enhanced during the high transmission season.
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Punjab has the most cases followed by Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
and Balochistan.
The Pakistan Health Research Council, under the Ministry of National
Health Services, Regulation and Coordination, is coordinating the
hepatitis response at federal and provincial level, through a ‘Technical
Advisory Group’. Additionally, the private sector is also playing a
significant role in hepatitis treatment. Awareness about active
screening and testing against hepatitis C is vital so that people can
seek timely treatment.
Diabetes
One in every four persons aged 20 years and above is said to suffer
from diabetes, which represents a massive increase from 8.7 percent in
1994-98 to 26.3 percent in 2016-17. This was revealed in the second
National Diabetes Survey of Pakistan (NDSP) 2016-17, released in July
2018 by the Baqai Institute of Diabetology and Endocrinology (BIDE)
in collaboration with the Health Ministry, Pakistan Health Research
Council, and the WHO-funded Diabetic Association of Pakistan.
It was reported in September that Denmark would be helping the
Punjab government to organise a diabetes awareness programme,
having already successfully run a similar one in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
Thalassaemia
Thalassaemia, a genetic disorder, is on the increase in Pakistan where
lack of knowledge and ignorance continues to complicate the problem.
Thalassaemia affects the red blood cells and ultimately makes the
patient blood-transfusion dependent for the rest of their life. Around
6,000 children are estimated to be born every year with the deadly
disease of Thalassaemia major.
Thalassaemia is an inherited disease and can be passed on to a child
from a parent who is a carrier. For this reason, there is an ever-
increasing demand to make pre-marital screening for this disease
compulsory.
Recently, the Punjab Health Department opened a discussion on a
proposed Thalassemia Bill, under which males would have to undergo
testing for their Thalassaemia status before their marriage. If a male is
diagnosed as Thalassaemia minor, the would-be spouse would also
have to undergo screening.
Under the Bill, a couple with the Thalassaemia gene in one individual
could marry but if both are carriers, then they would be advised to
conduct a pre-natal test during the initial stage of pregnancy to avoid
the birth of a Thalassaemia child.
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Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis (TB) continues to be the top infectious killer worldwide,
claiming over 4,500 lives a day. Pakistan, with 267 cases per 100,000
population, is ranked 5th amongst eight countries on WHO’s list of
high TB burden countries accounting for two-thirds of the world’s
cases. Pakistan also has to position itself to tackle the emerging threat
of Multi-Drug Resistant (MDR) TB and already has an estimated
27,000 cases of that strain.
The WHO Global Tuberculosis Report 2018 (2017 figures) show that
525,000 people were affected by TB—359,224 cases notified and
165,776 people not notified or not diagnosed. These comprised 291,000
males, 235,000 females, and 57,000 children. A total of 56,000 people
died of the disease, including 2,200 infected with HIV. The majority of
cases were attributed to undernourishment.
So far, the National TB Control Programme (NTP) claims to have
achieved over 80 percent Directly Observed Treatment System (DOTS)
coverage in the public sector and provided care to more than half a
million TB patients. However, under DOTS, the patient is directly
observed by a healthcare visitor in taking treatment and there is doubt
over whether the management of public sector hospitals have properly
implemented this.
According to WHO, the national TB budget for 2018 was US$118
million (3% domestic, 54% international, 43% unfunded). The Global
Fund for HIV, TB & Malaria provided 70 percent of medicines.
HIV/AIDS
A report submitted by the NHS ministry in the Supreme Court in
October stated that 60,000 people in the Punjab had AIDS, 52,000 in
Sindh, and 17,000 each in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Islamabad. The
data was prepared for a suo motu case on the high rate of HIV/AIDS in
Jalalpur Jattan which, according to the report, had 130 people with the
disease.
The National AIDS Control Programme (NACP) said that nearly 150,000
people were living with HIV in Pakistan, out of which 25,000 people
were registered with NACP while a large number of patients were
receiving treatment from NACP centres.
However, officials said that the majority of cases go unreported due to
social taboos about sex and the victims’ fears of discrimination. Official
estimates show that Pakistan has seen a 45 percent increase in new HIV
infections since 2010. WHO said that Pakistan was registering
approximately 20,000 new HIV infections annually, the highest rate of
increase among all countries in the region, adding that mortality among
Health 279
international recognition. The private company spent 90 percent and the
government met 10 percent of the total expenditure incurred on the
treatment of patients. The initiative had benefited 2,100 people with an
88 percent survival rate at Hayatabad Medical Complex, Peshawar, and
had been replicated in Sindh and the Punjab.
Recommendations
• Increase the budgetary allocations for public health from the existing
less than one per cent to recommended levels.
• Improve the quality of public health services and make their cost
more affordable.
• Regulate the private health sector in the interests of the public.
• Focus on the preventive as much as the curative aspects of diseases.
• Incorporate health awareness programmes and campaigns into
health policies.
• Develop screening programmes for different diseases to ensure
early detection and treatment.
• Appoint qualified doctors and paramedics at healthcare facilities in
rural areas, and offer incentives.
• Adopt a zero-tolerance policy towards quacks who put the lives of
innocent people at risk.
• Ensure the availability and uninterrupted supply of medicines in
the market, particularly the life-saving ones.
The state shall secure the well-being of the people, irrespective of sex, caste, creed
and race, by raising their standard of living.
Constitution of Pakistan Article 38(a)
Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and wellbeing
of himself and his family, including ... housing
Universal Declaration of
Human Rights Article 25 (1)
The States Parties to the present Covenant recognise the right of everyone to an
adequate standard of living for himself and his family, including adequate food,
clothing and housing, and to the continuous improvement of living conditions...
International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights Article 11 (1)
housing societies are operating within the capital. Most of them lack civic
facilities such as schools, playgrounds, parks, graveyards, and mosques.
Land designated for amenities is being misused by their operators.
In October, the CDA directed all housing societies to seek approval of
their building plans or action would be taken against them. The CDA also
planned to start action against societies violating the approved layout or
changing the public utility areas reserved for playgrounds, post offices,
schools, parks or mosques and parking spaces into residential areas.
The Capital Development and Administrative Division (CADD), CDA
and IESCO now fall under the Ministry of Interior (MoI). The MoI asked
the CDA to disclose names of the officers concerned who facilitated
illegal possession of the land in and around Islamabad. In a drive to
retrieve the state land from unlawful expropriation by housing societies,
the said authority retrieved around 250 acres (2000 kanals) land from the
illegal possession of a private housing society.
As an outcome of stringent action, close to 54 of the ‘approved housing
societies’ in and around Islamabad submitted their affidavits to the CDA
to begin their residential and commercial construction. But the china
cutting process has not spared Rawalpindi and Islamabad as certain
areas in and near Rawal Dam, Sectors G-13 and E-11 are also falling
victim to this practice.
Housing finance and public housing schemes
There is a deficit of roughly 7 to 10 million houses in the country.
The Pakistan Mortgage Refinance Company (PMRC) has already
commenced its operations with initial funds of Rs6 billion. The company
offers housing loans and mortgages to borrowers and end-users at an
which the ruling party announced that it would build 5 million affordable
houses throughout Pakistan in collaboration with the Association of
Builders and Developers of Pakistan (ABAD), the Housing Task Force’s
Chairman revealed in November that the applicants would have to bear
20% of the total cost of their dream home as down payment.
Land record and revenue
The Punjab Land Record Authority (PLRA) had undertaken the
centralisation of data to be made available to all tiers of governance up to
union council level. It also planned to introduce mobile land record vans
after the completion of data by the Computerised Land Record Centres
(CLRCs) in all the 36 districts of Punjab to facilitate people in obtaining
ownership documents of their properties at their doorstep. The Punjab
government claimed to have established CLRCs in 28 out of 36 districts.
However, the efficiency of the system has yet to be evaluated. In Taxila
it was reported that the Land Records Management Information System
(LRMIS) failed to deliver due to the unavailability of trained staff and a
poor computer system.
It was reported in February that the local residents faced difficulties in
getting their property-related issues such as sale, purchase and transfer
of land redressed. Those seeking a fard (record of rights) of their land
had to get to LRMIS centres early in the morning and faced long queues
to obtain tokens and receive a single-page document. The staff at the
centres issued 50 tokens a day. Reportedly, there were 15 data entry
positions and 10 of them were vacant.
There were numerous reports during the year of casualties arising from
land disputes. In Orakzai and Buner districts, seven people, including
a man and his son, were killed over land and family disputes. Several
people were injured when rival groups clashed over a land dispute in
the central tehsil of District Orakzai.
The Akazai and Gujjar Tribes set alight over two dozen of each other’s
houses over a land dispute in Torghar district. The district government
called a jirga to defuse the tensions.
In Bajaur, a dispute over a piece of land between two groups claimed
two lives. A man and his son were shot dead while one person was
wounded in an exchange of fire between the rival groups in Kamal
Environment
All human beings have the fundamental right to an environment adequate for their
health and well-being.
States shall conserve and use the environment and natural resources for the benefit
of present and future generations.
States shall establish adequate environmental protection standards and monitor
changes in and publish relevant data on environmental quality and resource use.
Proposed Legal Principles for Environmental
Protection and Sustainable Development
Articles 1,2,4
The Parties should protect the climate system for the benefit of present and future
generations of humankind, on the basis of equity and in accordance with their
common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities.
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
Article 3 – Principles
Promote and cooperate in education, training and public awareness related to
climate change and encourage the widest participation in this process, including
that of non-governmental organisations.
Article 4(1)(i) – Commitments
Environment 293
public health and livelihood impacts continues to be debated. Failures
in these domains are typically explained by the lack of financial, human,
and technical resources allocated for environmental management and
enforcement of existing regulations.
The new ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party brands itself as holding
a firm commitment to ‘green growth’, with an ambition to move on a
rapid growth trajectory by advocating large-scale water infrastructure
projects, tree plantation drives, and climate finance efforts. The Prime
Minister officially launched the ‘Clean Green Pakistan Movement’ on 13
October 2018, which is to include solid waste management, sanitation,
and provision of clean drinking water across the country.
While there are marked differences from the previous government’s
‘Green Pakistan Programme’ in both approach and scale of projects
being promoted, critics argue that the current government’s proposals
may prove to be a continuation of the failure of previous governments
to address the underlying causes of environmental health challenges
facing the country.
Climate change
Pakistan became the hottest place on earth in April when the
temperature crossed 50 degrees Celsius in Nawabshah, the highest ever
recorded anywhere for that month, prompting the Met Office director to
acknowledge that ‘climate change overall is affecting the temperature in
the country’.
Although Pakistan is responsible for less than one percent of the
total accumulated greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the country
reaffirmed its commitment to playing its part in addressing the global
climate crisis by signing the Paris Agreement in 2016. The country’s
pledge to make voluntary mitigation and adaption efforts submitted
per the Paris Agreement involves reducing up to 20% of its 2030
projected greenhouse gas emissions, which it expects to grow by 300%
to accommodate the new fossil energy projects and growth in industrial
development outlined in Pakistan’s development ‘Vision 2025’. While
this emissions target is subject to the availability of international grants
to meet the cumulative abatement costs, the Minister of Climate Change
(MoCC) stated at the 2018 UN climate summit that it may be revised
entirely before the UN climate meeting in December 2019, where he will
serve as the Vice President and rapporteur.
Pakistan is among the top ten countries most affected by climate change,
with wide-ranging impacts on the population and economy due to
extreme weather events over the last two decades, according to the 2019
Global Climate Risk Index published by Germanwatch.
In 2018 the country experienced intensified drought in Balochistan,
Environment 295
According to the Action on Climate Today Institutional Review on the
MoCC, published in December 2017, the MoCC cannot become fully
functional without a functioning Authority. The review goes on to
reference concerns regarding lack of clarity in functions of different
parts of the climate division, and observes that MoCC’s resources are
largely being eaten up in foreign tours.
The Advisor to the Prime Minister on Climate Change has initiated
meetings with the Asia Development Bank regarding financing for
climate mitigation and adaption projects, and stated in September
2018 that Pakistan had spent Rs14 billion on climate change so far, and
expected to spend US$37 million from the Green Development Fund to
monitor melting glaciers.
Deforestation
The MoCC is facilitating the 10 Billion Tsunami Tree Plantation Project
in coordination with the Forest Department and EPD in the provinces,
with an aim to plant 10 billion trees, mostly in cities, over five years.
According to the Prime Minister, the initiative was designed to reduce
soil erosion resulting from glacial melt and to address the smog/
climate issues, hailing KP’s Billion Tree Programme as a successful
model for the national programme to follow. However, researchers
questioned whether these tree drives would sequester enough carbon
to offset Pakistan’s growing emissions, and also questioned the uneven
impacts. For instance, the study by Usman Ashraf on KP’s afforestation
programme (Political Ecology of Afforestation in Pakistan) found that an
unfair advantage was given to land-owning groups to access carbon
credits, while Gujjar shepherds and other landless people who depended
on the land for grazing were evicted and thus further marginalised.
The practice of illicit timber trade continues, despite forest policies. In
April and again in August, social activists and elders from different
parts of Swat alleged that the provincial government and the forest
department had failed to monitor and control illegal cutting of forests in
the district, mostly conducted at night-time.
Swat was once again in the news in September when locals complained
that officials of the forest department were felling mature trees along the
roadsides at the same time as the government launched the billion tree
plantation drive across the country.
Trees are also under threat from urban planning. The Supreme Court
in April summoned the secretary of the Balochistan communication
and works department after rejecting the department’s report justifying
chopping of trees to extend a link road.
In September, the Supreme Court took up a petition moved by the
ECO Watch Trust highlighting the alarming state of forests throughout
Environment 297
Diminishing freshwater supplies and increasing demands of an exploding population are
rapidly reducing per capital water availability
Environment 299
A Defence ministry official assured the commission that, in accordance
with their directives, untreated sewage discharge into storm-water
drains would be diverted to a treatment plant within four months.
The Sindh chief secretary subsequently informed the commission that a
task force had been formed to minimise marine pollution.
While commenting in September on the government’s efforts to improve
waste management system and harbour conditions in Karachi, experts
said a comprehensive strategy including incentives to industries opting
for environment-friendly processes was required to tackle the growing
marine pollution that had jeopardised the survival of many species and
contaminated the food chain. They also emphasised the urgent need
to strengthen the capacity of officials dealing with environment and
implement relevant rules and regulations.
Air Pollution
The previous three winters have been marked by a thick, smelly haze
around major urban centres across the Punjab, where 65 percent of
industrial units are located, according to WWF-Pakistan’s 2018 report,
Review of Existing Environmental Laws and Regulations in Pakistan.
As winter average temperatures are rising due to climate change, the
prevalence of fog (and its polluted variant, ‘smog’) are beginning to
decrease. Although less visible smog does not mean the air pollution
crisis has been addressed, the current Punjab Environment Secretary and
Climate Minister have recently taken credit for the fewer days of winter
smog, saying that their government has succeeded in implementing
parts of the Punjab Clean Action Air Plan. The Punjab government
says it banned burning crop stubble and solid waste, shut down brick
kilns until they upgraded their technology to be more efficient and less
polluting, and collected Rs50 lakh in fines to penalise owners of vehicles
that were not in compliance with the fuel efficiency standards.
While some of the guidelines of the Action Plan have been adhered
to in partial terms, many have been completely neglected, such as the
‘mandatory inspection regime for all vehicles’, which was to come into
effect in January 2018 but has yet to be operationalised. Citizens have
taken to social media and speaking to news outlets to highlight frequent
observations of illegal practices continuing unabated, particularly in
Cantonment areas that do not have to adhere to provincial environmental
regulations.
The Punjab EPD’s own air quality data indicates that most of the year
many of Pakistan’s major urban hubs are being choked by hazardous
air quality. In 2018, Air Visual data ranked Lahore among the top 10
most polluted cities in the world throughout the year, and among the
top three most polluted cities for nearly half of the year.
350 Hazardous
Hazardous
300
250
Very Unhealthy
Unhealthy
150 Unhealthy
100
50
0
Gujranwala Lahore Faisalabad Bahawalpur Peshawar Rawalpindi Islamabad Karachi
Source: Pakistan Air Quality Initiative Based on US-EPA Air Quality Index
Environment 301
Commentators have pointed out that the skewed emphasis by regulatory
agencies, in cutting emissions from the smallest rather than largest
sources of pollution, highlighted the aversion of regulatory agencies
to acknowledge important class dimensions and power structures
entangled in pollution production. For instance, the Smog Policy actions
have emphasised changes by farmers and brick kilns rather than on
cement and other highly polluting industries, coal-fired power plants,
and transport and freight emissions.
A World Bank agreement of $200 million for Punjab Green Development
was made in 2017, which would finance building regulatory capacity
in the EPA and make investments in green technology in the polluting
industries. The funds have yet to be disbursed. The government also
plans to issue green bonds through the State Bank of Pakistan and the
International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank.
Fossil fuels
Going against the global trend to replace fossil fuels with renewable
energy such as solar and wind, Pakistan’s is forging ahead with the
building of coal-fired plants. Thar coal will fuel nine of the 17 proposed
CPEC power plants. Citizens may well be divided over this issue. Much
of the energy to be generated is intended to alleviate the power crisis in
the country, which has disrupted the economy and frustrated industry
and households alike.
Officials have given assurances that the project’s operations will comply
with national and international environmental laws, and will use the
most efficient technology available to minimise pollution.
None of this allays the concerns of environmentalists. The coal being
mined in Thar is lignite, known for its poor energy efficiency and high
carbon dioxide emissions. Lignite-fired power plants are considered the
largest single source of greenhouse gas emissions. The mining of coal,
and the process of burning it for power, are water-intensive activities.
Villagers of the area have already reported the diversion of underground
rivers, and the dumping of waste, which has changed their pastures into
a salt lake. Their predicament is unlikely to end, as the power project will
consume a huge amount of groundwater, already scarce in the country.
Reinforcing concerns expressed by experts about the capacity of the
Sindh Environmental Protection Agency (Sepa) to control violations, it
was reported in May that the Port Qasim Authority (PQA) had allowed
major coal handling operations within its jurisdiction with complete
disregard for public health and environmental safety, and without
waiting for a decision by Sepa on the project’s Environmental Impact
Assessment (EIA) report. It was apparently the third time that Sepa had
expressed reservations over the project’s ‘deficiencies’.
Environment 303
Punjab government were quoted as having said the Solar Power
Project had incurred a massive loss on the national exchequer,
with analysts raising objections over the cost of the project and the
electricity being produced in the solar park.
This coincided with the Sindh government’s announcement (at the
17th World Wind Energy Conference) that it would soon launch
a US$100 million solar power project in the province with the
assistance of the World Bank to benefit residents of off-grid rural
areas.
Overview
The environmental issues, policy, and practices appear to indicate
continued lip-service highlighting government and private sector efforts
in environmental stewardship with limited follow-through. There
are severe issues of accountability, in part due to overlap in remit for
environmental management, little awareness by government officials
and regulators about actual environmental policies, and large geographic
spaces of exception where federal and provincial regulations do not
apply. In spite of the serious local and global ecological challenges, the
strategy of environmental regulators seems to be focusing on giving a
positive image by referring to the tree plantation projects and the dam
fund, while shifting blame or pointing to expected future improvements
where lack of implementation and accountability are evident.
Recommendations
• Expedite the implementation of the National Water Policy and
introduce effective mechanisms to ensure compliance across the
regions.
• Enact the National Forestry Policy into law, and encourage provincial
governments to adopt and implement similar policies.
• Allocate adequate budget funds for the environment for complete
and effective implementation, taking into account the full scale of
environmental issues.
HRCP Activities
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) carried out activities
across Pakistan in 2018 to raise public awareness of fundamental
freedoms, advocate the protection of human rights and lobby with
policymakers for measures to check human rights abuses. Peaceful
means of activism, including demonstrations, rallies, consultations,
campaigns, training workshops, fact-finding missions, press statements
and public meetings were used to support and protect people’s rights,
irrespective of their gender, religion, sect, race, domicile, age or social
status. Those abandoned by the justice system were provided advice
and referred onward for legal aid.
HRCP has continued to campaign for the implementation of the
landmark Supreme Court judgement of 2014 – the Justice Tassaduq
Jillani judgement – concerning the protection of religious minorities’
rights. In collaboration with activists working on minorities’ rights,
HRCP filed a petition in the Supreme Court in January 2018 to push for
the judgement to be implemented. Taking cognizance of the matter, the
Supreme Court has set up a one-person commission that is empowered
to issue directions for the implementation of the judgement.
Seminars, focus group discussions and training workshops were
organised across the country on broad human rights themes.
Consultations were held to engage with a range of communities on
different human rights issues.
Apart from general human rights themes, this year’s themes included
the water rights of women water bearers in Sindh, ‘honour’ crimes
in southern Punjab, the rights of ethnic minorities, and measures to
mainstream the former Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)
with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP). A series of digital security workshops
was organised for human rights defenders (HRDs) to help them secure
their presence online and in the field.
Campaigns and rallies were organised simultaneously at the HRCP
secretariat and chapter and taskforce offices to highlight the state’s
pledges to international human rights conventions and covenants.
HRCP also launched a ’16 Days of Activism’ campaign against gender-
based violence throughout Pakistan.
HRCP conducted various fact-finding missions on gross human rights
307
violations, including the alleged torture of a young Christian boy (Sajid
Masih) by the authorities in Lahore, and the desecration of a Jamaat-i-
Ahmaddiya site of worship in Sialkot. HRCP’s fact-finding team also
visited Gilgit-Baltistan to assess the current human rights situation. In
response to numerous complaints from journalists and media houses,
HRCP carried out an independent fact-finding exercise to assess the
extent and nature of curbs on freedom of expression across Pakistan.
In addition, a number of HRCP fact-finding teams investigated the
enforced disappearance of people in Karachi, particularly among the
Shia community.
A breakdown of HRCP’s main activities in 2018 is as follows:
Workshops/seminars/meetings/press briefings
• 3 January, Karachi: Meeting with the Joint Action Forum to plan a
demonstration in support of missing persons in Sindh.
• 5 January, Hyderabad: Meeting with small sugarcane growers and
farmers to show labour rights solidarity with them.
• 8 January, Hyderabad: Sindh Education Day celebrated at the
Hyderabad Press Club.
• 10 January, Hyderabad: Meeting with the Progressive Writers
Association on the role of writers and artists in creating awareness
of human rights.
• 12 January, Karachi: Meeting with the Pearl Continental Workers
Association on their labour rights.
• 15 January, Karachi: Meeting with NGOs to condemn academic
Hasan Zafar Arif’s alleged murder.
• 16 January, Karachi: Meeting with civil society organisations (CSOs)
on enforced disappearances in Sindh.
• 19–21 January Karachi: 100-poster exhibition by K. B. Abro on
freedom of movement (organised with T2F).
• 24 January, Karachi: Meeting with members of the Mehsud tribe on
the alleged extrajudicial murder of Naqeebullah Mehsud.
• 26 January, Karachi: Joint workshop with the DSF on the student
unions of 1971.
• 8 February, Hyderabad: Meeting on recently reported ‘fake’ police
encounters.
• 12 February, Hyderabad and Karachi: Memorial meeting to pay
tribute to the late Asma Jahangir.
• 13 February, Hyderabad: Memorial gathering, candlelight vigil and
poetry reading in memory of Asma Jahangir.
Appendix I 309
• 5 May, Karachi: Consultative meeting with the Bangladeshi
community.
• 7 May, Hyderabad: Launch of Our Asma Jahangir, a compilation of
Sindhi, English and Urdu essays, edited by Zulfiqar Halepoto.
• 8 May, Quetta: Consultation on women’s rights and gender equality.
• 9 May, Quetta: Consultation on the representation of religious
minorities and women in local government.
• 10 May, Quetta: Screening on the UDHR at Government Girls’
Degree College, Quetta.
• 15 May, Islamabad: Consultation on the nature of violence against
women and girls from refugee and IDP communities in (former)
FATA, KP and Gilgit-Baltistan.
• 18 May, Hyderabad: Meeting to condemn the delay in investigating
an alleged murder attempt on rights activist Punhal Sariyo.
• 23 May, Hyderabad: Meeting of the Human Rights Coordination
Committee – comprising CSOs and concerned citizens – to discuss
human rights violations and enforced disappearances.
• 26 May, Quetta. Consultation on minorities’ rights with a view to
curbing sectarian killings.
• 26 May, Quetta: Launch of State of Human Rights in 2017 at the Quetta
Press Club.
• 5 June, Hyderabad: Awareness-raising session on the use of
degradable plastic products, to commemorate World Environment
Day.
• 6 June, Karachi: Awareness session on the UDHR for students of the
Social Work Department at Federal Urdu University.
• 8 June, Karachi: Lecture on child rights and street children.
• 8 June, Islamabad: Consultation to assess the recently passed bill
merging FATA with KP from a human rights perspective.
• 12 June, Karachi: Joint meeting with NGO Interfaith Harmony to
share concerns over the sudden increase in cases of violence against
religious minorities.
• 13 June, Islamabad: Overview of the human rights situation in
Gilgit-Baltistan presented to a delegation from the Australian High
Commission.
• 14 June, Hyderabad: Talk on the recovery of missing persons (in
conjunction with other CSOs).
• 21 June, Karachi: Screening on the UDHR and BBC documentary
Appendix I 311
Baltistan’s youth from a human rights perspective.
• 27 July, Lahore: Launch of fact-finding report Curbs on Freedom of
Expression in Pakistan at the Lahore Press Club.
• 19 July, Karachi: Meeting with EU observers in connection with the
upcoming elections.
• 20 July, Karachi: Meeting with CSOs to discuss pre-election activities
and observations.
• 23 July, Karachi: Discussion on the constitutional framework of
the upcoming elections (in collaboration with other civil society
organisations) at T2F.
• 24 July, Islamabad: Joint press conference with Bytes for All and
the Peace and Justice Network on reports that cellular and Internet
services were to be disrupted on election day.
• 27 July, Karachi: Meeting with CSOs and journalists to discuss the
shrinking space for freedom of expression in Pakistan.
• 1 August, Multan: Dialogue on human rights issues in southern
Punjab and the role of human rights activists and civil society.
• 3 August, Hyderabad: Debate to discuss pre-election and post-
election observations.
• 4 August, Karachi: Meeting with media persons to discuss press
freedom and freedom of expression.
• 11 August, Karachi: Karachi-based HRCP Council members’
meeting to discuss the current human rights situation.
• 12 August, Hyderabad: Joint meeting with the Minority Rights
Forum on creating inter-faith harmony.
• 17 August, Karachi: Seminar on women’s participation in
mainstream politics.
• 29 August, Islamabad: Press conference and launch of Curbs on
Freedom of Expression in Pakistan (fact-finding report).
• 30 August, Quetta: Press conference at the Quetta Press Club to
mark International Day in Support of the Victims of Enforced
Disappearances.
• 4 September, Gilgit: Consultative meeting with the Advocacy Forum
on gender discrimination to plan joint awareness sessions for local
communities.
• 10 September, Islamabad: Meeting at the US Embassy to discuss the
current human rights situation in Pakistan.
• 22 September, Islamabad: Digital security training workshop for
Appendix I 313
• 19 November, Sukkur: Digital security training workshop for HRDs
from interior Sindh.
• 20 November, Karachi: Interactive session with children, teachers
and HRDs on child abuse in schools, to mark International Children’s
Day.
• 20 November, Lahore: Consultation on children’s rights to observe
International Children’s Day.
• 20 November, Gilgit: Seminar on the awareness and prevention of
child sexual abuse in schools.
• 20 November, Hyderabad: Seminar on the awareness and prevention
of child sexual abuse in schools.
• 20 November, Peshawar: Seminar on the awareness and prevention
of child sexual abuse in schools.
• 20 November, Islamabad: Seminar on the awareness and prevention
of child sexual abuse in schools.
• 20 November, Quetta: Seminar on the awareness and prevention of
child sexual abuse in schools.
• 20 November, Islamabad: Stall set up at Friedrich-Naumann-
Stiftung für die Freiheit’s 60th anniversary celebrations in Pakistan
as a partner organisation to showcase its work.
• 20 November, Multan: Seminar on the awareness and prevention of
child sexual abuse in schools.
• 22 November, Peshawar: Digital security training workshop for
HRDs from KP.
• 26 November, Karachi: A meeting on the impact of large dams in
Pakistan, with special reference to Sindh.
• 1 December, Karachi: Meeting with the Urban Resource Centre and
PILER to discuss the anti-encroachment drive at Empress Market in
Karachi.
• 1 December, Lahore: Seminar on gender-based violence as part of
HRCP’s ‘16 Days of Activism’.
• 3–4 December, Lahore: Workshop on peace education for democratic
societies.
• 6 December, Peshawar: Workshop on ending gender-based violence.
• 7 December, Islamabad: Video screening and discussion on gender-
based violence.
• 7 December, Quetta: Video screening and discussion on gender-
based violence.
Appendix I 315
UDHR.
• 21 December, Karachi: Screening of I. A. Rehman’s lecture on
Pakistan’s human rights record to mark the 70th anniversary of the
UDHR.
• 23 December, Gilgit: Screening of I. A. Rehman’s lecture on Pakistan’s
human rights record to mark the 70th anniversary of the UDHR.
• 25 December, Gilgit: Consultation on the rights of differently-abled
persons.
• 26 December, Multan: Consultation on the rights of differently-
abled persons.
• 27 December, Quetta: Consultation on the rights of differently-abled
persons.
• 28 December, Karachi: Presentation on sexual harassment organised
for lady health workers.
• 28 December, Islamabad: Digital security training workshop for
HRDs from Gilgit-Baltistan.
• 29 December, Islamabad: Digital security training workshop for
HRCP staff from Lahore, Islamabad and Gilgit.
• 30 December, Hyderabad: Screening of I. A. Rehman’s lecture on
Pakistan’s human rights record to mark the 70th anniversary of the
UDHR.
All chapter offices held regular members’ meetings every month to
discuss human rights and current affairs.
Fact-finding missions
• 12 January, Hyderabad: A fact-finding team visited Mithi in the
Tharparkar district to investigate the murder of two Hindu traders
on 5 January 2018.
• 13 January, Karachi: A fact-finding team visited the Rizvi Society,
where they met the families of missing persons from the Shia
community.
• 1–3 February, Lahore: A fact-finding team visited the University of
the Punjab and a local police station to investigate clashes between
two student groups and the ensuing crackdown on Baloch and
Pashtun students.
• 5 February, Karachi: A fact-finding team visited Shargoth in Safoorah
to show solidarity with victims of enforced disappearances in Sindh.
• 28 February, Lahore: A fact-finding team visited Dhir village and
the Shahdara Police Station to probe violent protests against the
Appendix I 317
of six-year-old Zainab in Kasur.
• 12 January, Karachi: Demonstration at the Karachi Press Club in
support of Baloch journalists’ freedom of expression.
• 13 January, Karachi: Protest rally at Rizvia Imam Bargah in solidarity
with missing persons from the Shia community.
• 13 January, Hyderabad: ‘Justice for Zainab’ rally from Sindh
University to the Hyderabad Press Club.
• 16 January, Karachi: Demonstration to condemn the alleged murder
of Dr Hasan Zafar Arif.
• 18 January, Karachi: Demonstration at the Karachi Press Club
against the extrajudicial murder of Naqeebullah Mehsud.
• 5 February, Karachi: Demonstration at Shargoth in support of three
missing persons in Sindh.
• 10 February, Hyderabad: Joint camp at the Hyderabad Press Club in
solidarity with the fisherfolk community against the occupation of
wetlands in Sindh.
• 1 April, Karachi: Camp at the Karachi Press Club in solidarity with
missing persons Khadim Arejo, Hidayat Lohar, Ayob and Aziz
Tonio.
• 30 April, Hyderabad: Joint rally to mark International Labour Day.
• 30 April, Quetta: An HRCP team visited the Hazara community’s
hunger strike camp at the Quetta Press Club against the killing of
Hazaras in Quetta.
• 1 May, Hyderabad: Token hunger strike organised jointly with the
Women Democratic Front at the Hyderabad Press Club to express
solidarity with the Hazara community.
• 15 June, Karachi: One-day hunger strike at the Karachi Press Club in
collaboration with the Sindh Missing Persons Committee.
• 26 June, Islamabad: Demonstration at the National Press Club to
mark International Day in Support of Victims of Torture.
• 26 June, Peshawar: Demonstration at the Peshawar Press Club to
mark International Day in Support of Victims of Torture.
• 11 July, Karachi: Protest at the Karachi Press Club against the
assassination of Awami National Party leader Haroon Bilour.
• 18 July, Quetta: Demonstration at the Quetta Press Club after a
suicide attack killed over 130 people at an election gathering in
Mastung.
• 30 August, Karachi: One-day camp at the Karachi Press Club to
Appendix I 319
• Ms Husbana Ghafoor (23 July to 21 September 2018) assisted with
election monitoring and data analysis.
• Ms Hafiza Aqsa Khan (1 July to 31 August 2018) assisted with a
range of administrative and programmatic work, including election
monitoring and data collection.
• Ms Amina Younas (1 July to 31 August 2018) assisted with a range
of administrative and programmatic work, including election
monitoring and data collection.
• Ms Uliya Suleman (5 February to 5 March 2018) prepared an analysis
of complaints received by the Complaints Cell in 2017.
• Sarah Ahsan Khan (15 July to 15 August 2018) carried out research
on harassment in the workplace and contributed to research for
HRCP’s fact-finding report on freedom of expression.
• Shehreen Umair (15 July to 30 August 2018) contributed to research for
HRCP’s fact-finding report on freedom of expression and campaign for
International Day in Support of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances.
Zoya Mirza (2 July to 31 August 2018) prepared a report comparing
the manifestos of political parties in Pakistan and assisted with
election monitoring.
• Rashid Ghafoor (1 October to 31 December 2018) carried out research
on the implementation of laws against ‘honour’ killings and rape in
Punjab.
Publications
HRCP released the following publications in 2018:
• State of Human Rights in 2017 (annual report)
• Curbs on Freedom of Expression in Pakistan (fact-finding report)
• A Meaningful Democracy: Mainstreaming the Rights of Women and
Religious Minorities (project publication)
• Joint FIDH and HRCP briefing note on key human rights issues in
2018 (e-publication)
• A Call to Preserve Kalash Rights and Culture (consultation report)
• Minorities Still Waiting for justice: Strategies for Better Implementation
(consultation report)
HRCP Stands
The legacy of Asma Jahangir
12 February 2018: The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan
(HR CP) was devastated at the unexpected and sudden passing away
of its co-founder Asma Jahangir: exemplary lawyer, human rights
ico n, pro-democracy champion, friend and mentor par excellence,
and a brave comrade of the poor and the disadvantaged. It stated that
Asm a Jahangir’s unique and outstanding contribution to the human
rights discourse was acknowledged by friend and foe alike, nationally
and globally and further said that it had not known a braver and more
tireless human rights defender.
16 March 2018: Tribute was paid to HRCP co-founder Asma Jahangir in
a joint statement with FIDH and 21 other civil society organisations. The
statement said her passing represented a terrible loss, and all who fought
for human rights would have needed her compassion, her inspiration,
and her courage to be around for decades to come. She would remain
a s ource of inspiration for all, including for the young generation of
human rights defenders, and a source of energy to continue the collective
endeavour to which she had so generously contributed.
19 March 2018: In an oral joint statement for the outcome of the
Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of Pakistan at the 37th session of the
UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, FIDH and HRCP regretted that
the government of Pakistan had missed yet another opportunity to show
its commitment to address key human rights issues. They said that,
despite having accepted nearly 60% of the recommendations it received,
the government apparently lacked the political will to address the most
serious human rights violations, such as enforced disappearances, the
per secution of religious minorities, the use of the death penalty, and
extrajudicial killings. FIDH and HRCP urged the Pakistani government
to immediately begin the implementation of the recommendations that
it did not accept and that were consistent with its obligations under
human rights treaties to which Pakistan was a state party.
5 A pril 2018: HRCP announced the Asma Jahangir Convention, held
in conjunction with Shirkatgah, the Aurat Foundation, the South Asian
Free Media Association (SAFMA), Simorgh and South Asia Partnership
Pak istan (SAP-PK), was intended not only to honour the late Asma
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Jahangir, but also to discuss how members of civil society could pick
up the mantle. HRCP said that it was critical that old partnerships were
reinforced and new ones built among the different groups and causes to
which Ms Jahangir had devoted her life: from lawyers, women’s rights
activists and journalists to the peasants’ movement, workers’ rights and
the rights of religious minorities—among countless others.
7 April 2018. HRCP expressed its grave concern at the vacuum created
by the passing away of its co-founder, Asma Jahangir. In a statement
HRCP said that, while Ms Jahangir’s passing was a major setback to
the human rights movement, it was critical that her work continued
with renewed determination. Her matchless contribution to protecting
human rights, women’s equality and the rights of religious minorities,
workers and peasants across Pakistan should not be in vain.
1 June 2018: A decision by the Lahore School of Economics to initiate
a postgraduate course in human rights and development – inspired
by the late Asma Jahangir, HRCP’s co-founder – as part of its MPhil
Development Studies programme, was welcomed by HRCP.
14 October 2018: HRCP issued a statement on the successful conclusion
of the Asma Jahangir Conference 2018, with the central theme of ‘Justice
for Empowerment’. The conference, hosted by the Asma Jahangir
Foundation and AGHS Legal Aid Cell, featured many distinguished
guest speakers and covered a wide range of sessions focusing on the
protection of fundamental rights, justice for all and impunity for none,
freedom of expression, and challenges to implementing rights legislation.
The organisers committed to holding an annual conference to continue
the mission of Asma Jahangir, who fought for human rights principles,
which she believed transcended all cultures, government agendas and
nations.
19 December 2018: HRCP expressed extreme pride that its co-founder,
Asma Jahangir, had been honoured posthumously with the UN Human
Rights Prize. The prize is awarded every five years for outstanding
achievements in the field of human rights.
The loss of fellow human rights defenders
20 January 2018: HRCP expressed shock and grief at the passing of
Munnu Bhai and lauded his contribution to the democratic dispensation
in Pakistan, particularly during the 1970s and 1980s when Pakistan was
under military rule. HRCP had the privilege of having Munnu Bhai as
a member of its governing body for three years and his counsel was
always greatly valued by the organisation.
6 March 2018: HRCP mourned the death of Muhammad Jan, popularly
known as Jam Saqi, and acknowledged his significant contribution to
the struggle for the rights of the people. It stated that Jam Saqi had also
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289 recommendations it received from UN member states during the
third UPR. Another 117 recommendations were ‘noted’ and four were
rejected. FIDH and HRCP urged the Pakistani government to immediately
begin the process of implementation of the recommendations that it did
not accept and which were consistent with its obligations under human
rights treaties to which Pakistan was a state party. HRCP stated that
the government’s blanket refusal to commit to end the death penalty,
including for juveniles and for offences that do not meet the threshold
of the ‘most serious crimes’, was particularly disappointing because this
practice was in clear violation of Pakistan’s international human rights
obligations.
16 April 2018: In the year that Pakistan was elected to the United
Nations Human Rights Council, which is ‘responsible for the promotion
and protection of all human rights around the globe’, HRCP observed
that the country’s disappointing third Universal Periodic Review was
cause for serious concern. At the launch of its flagship annual report,
State of Human Rights in 2017—dedicated to the late Asma Jahangir—
HRCP stated that Pakistan’s bid to stand tall among the international
defenders of human rights may be well-intentioned, but simply enacting
legislation would not suffice. “The national human rights institutions
need adequate authority, independence and resources to carry out
their mandates effectively. Without that, the only recourse left to the
unrepresented and the disadvantaged is through the activists and
human rights defenders who risk their own freedom to speak out on
their behalf,” it stated.
24 May 2018: HRCP strongly criticised the Government of Gilgit-
Baltistan (GB) Order 2018, saying that it fell considerably short of the
GB people’s expectation of being treated as full citizens of Pakistan.
In its statement, it said, “In claiming to grant the people of GB their
fundamental freedoms, the GB Order has clipped their right to freedom
of association and expression. It has denied any Gilgit-Baltistani the
right to become a chief judge of the Supreme Appellate Court or to have
any say in internal security. Above all, it has disregarded people’s needs
despite continual public pressure in GB to address their problems fairly
and in accordance with local aspirations.”
10 October 2018: HRCP participated in a joint statement issued by the
Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA) and
28 civil society organisations in Asia, condemning the imposition of
the death penalty by the Singaporean authorities on Abdul Wahid Bin
Ismail, Mohsen Bin Na’im, and Zainudin bin Mohamed. All three were
convicted of drug-related offences and were executed on 5 October 2018.
The statement said that, as a network of human rights organisations,
FORUM-ASIA saw the death penalty as a grave violation of the right to
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abuse of blasphemy legislation and the use of violence against religious
minorities.
HRCP strongly urged the state to commit to its willingness to continue
cooperating with the United Nations human rights mechanism, and to
apply both in principle and practice the UPR recommendations it had
‘noted’ as well as ‘supported’.
22 December 2018: The Commission expressed grave concern at the
way in which people’s fundamental right to dignity was being eroded
away, ostensibly in the name of accountability, following the death in
judicial custody of Mian Javed Ahmed, a professor at the University of
Sargodha., who was reportedly in handcuffs even after death. HRCP
stated that the innocence or guilt of those taken into custody by state
institutions such as the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) needed
to be established under the law and with strict and transparent regard
for due process.
HRCP also said that using the Exit Control List as an arbitrary tool
to harass elected parliamentarians and those perceived as political
dissenters would not make for a stronger society—or one more able to
withstand honest criticism. HRCP urged the state to keep in view the
principle that the right to dignity is an inalienable right, and that the
tools and procedures available to maintain the rule or law be used justly
and transparently.
Enforcement of law
12 January 2018: HRCP expressed its grave concern over the brutal rape
and murder of a seven-year old girl in Kasur, the consequent slack in
the police’s investigation and ensuing violence against demonstrators
seeking justice for the child. It called on the provincial governments to
take steps to include these themes in school curricula to make pupils
and their families aware of such sensitive issues and empower them
to protect themselves. It pointed out that the helpline launched by the
Child Protection Bureau Punjab a few years ago was not disseminated in
an effective way. “Mass media should also realise that for such tragedies,
besides responsible and vigorous reporting, adequate follow-up on
reported cases is vital for accountability and as a long-term solution to
such horrific incidents.”
23 January 2018: HRCP expressed grief and anger at the unchecked
shooting of a college principal by a student under the suspicion of
blasphemy in the Shabqadar District of Charsadda. In its statement,
HRCP said: “This killing is yet another shameful reminder of how easy
it still is to manipulate the existing blasphemy laws to avenge personal
grievances. Blasphemy remains a highly sensitive issue and allegations
do not need to be proven before provoking murder. It is regrettable that
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on law enforcement organisations. HRCP further stated that enforced
disappearances were rapidly becoming the norm—an easy and arbitrary
means of intimidating those who do not toe the line—and strongly
condemned any use of extra constitutional means to intimidate and
harass citizens, or to put them in a position that might compromise their
safety.
22 June 2018: The Commission expressed its alarm “at the growing
frequency with which human rights defenders are being targeted. HRCP
calls for a public and transparent investigation of the incident to make it
clear that such callous attempts to intimidate human rights defenders or
their families are unacceptable and unconstitutional. This ugly state of
affairs simply cannot be allowed to continue.” The statement was issued
after reports of continuing harassment and intimidation of blogger and
human rights activist Ahmad Waqas Goraya.
26 June 2018: HRCP urged the state to take measures to implement
the United Nations Convention against Torture (UNCAT)—to which
Pakistan is a signatory—as well as ratify the Optional Protocol to UNCAT
and establish a corresponding national preventative mechanism. It
further emphasised the need to provide law enforcement agencies
greater support in terms of training, resources and access to modern,
scientific methods of investigation. It said, “The right to protection
against cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment applies in
all circumstances, with no exceptions whatsoever. This is fundamental
to what it means to be a civilised state.”
11 July 2018: The suicide attack on an Awami National Party (ANP)
corner meeting in Peshawar, which left at least 20 people dead, among
them senior ANP leader Haroon Bilour, was strongly condemned by
HRCP as a “horrific development in the run-up to the elections”. The
Commission demanded that the state should unequivocally condemn
the use of wanton violence by non-state actors to disrupt the election
process and ensure that adequate protections is given to political
candidates during their campaigns.”
14 July 2018: HRCP expressed serious concern over the emerging
pattern of violence accompanying the run-up to the elections on 25 July,
after a deadly attack on an election gathering in Mastung in which at
least 128 people died and questioned the security measures in place. The
Commission also pointed to the extent to which the attack in Mastung
had been overshadowed by parallel political developments in Punjab.
It said, “The right to assembly and security of person are universal and
must be applied as such. We strongly urge the authorities to make every
effort to ensure that the little time left for the polls remains peaceful and
free of undue influence across the country.”
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enforced disappearances is simply not receiving the public attention it
must. Expressing solidarity with the protesting families of the forcibly
disappeared, HRCP urged the government yet again to take concrete
measures not only to trace and safely recover the forcibly disappeared,
but also to ensure that the perpetrators are punished; and to criminalise
enforced disappearance and ratify the relevant UN conventions in line
with the country’s international obligations and its moral responsibility
to Pakistan’s people.
Fundamental freedoms
6 February 2018: HRCP called upon the federal government to
immediately address the valid and legitimate demands of the protesters
of Waziristan in Islamabad which included the immediate arrest and
prosecution of Rao Anwar, the police official accused of murdering
Naqeebullah Mehsud, investigations into extrajudicial killings in Karachi
and elsewhere in the country, stopping of enforced disappearances and
recovery of missing persons, an end to the collective responsibility
punishments meted out to entire villages, sub-tribes and tribes after any
illegal, militant or criminal activities in Waziristan and FATA and the
clearing of landmines in Waziristan and FATA.
14 March 2018: HRCP said the Islamabad High Court’s (IHC) ruling
requiring a declaration of faith for government and semi-government
job applicants was cause for serious concern and should be appealed
by the federal government. It cautioned that the ruling could lead to an
increase in instances of aggression and violence against the Ahmadiyya
community in particular and that the consequences of this ruling could
be deadly for members of this community, given their already precarious
personal safety situation in the country.
30 March 2018: HRCP expressed support for the lady health workers
(LHWs) strike and urged the Punjab government to implement the
notification it issued in 2012, regularising the services of 50,000 LHWs in
the province. It stated that LHWs were critical to Pakistan’s public health
delivery system—many of them working in remote and often difficult
conditions to provide basic healthcare, family planning and vaccination
services in underserved areas.
7 April 2018: In a statement HRCP reiterated the importance of
ensuring an even playing field for all—without interference from any
state agency—and demanded that free and fair elections be held as
scheduled. It further stated that “There must be special efforts to ensure
that both women and religious minorities are able to participate in, and
contest, the elections freely and without fear, pressure or intimidation.
In this context, mobile polling stations could be a way of ensuring that
people who might otherwise be unable to vote, are able to exercise this
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community, HRCP called on the government to investigate the incident
through an independent, high-level probe and to take appropriate
action swiftly: “It is critical that the facts of the case be established
transparently. The beleaguered Ahmadiyya community is already
vulnerable to harassment and violence: the state must take special care
to ensure that the community’s places of worship and sites of religious
significance are protected as far as possible. All religious minorities are
entitled to this protection under the Constitution and the reported mob
vandalism in this case is insupportable.”
16 July 2018: The Commission expressed its grave concern over what it
saw as blatant, aggressive and unabashed attempts to manipulate the
outcome of the upcoming elections, citing examples of the powers a to
security forces: the selective squeezing of political class; the harassment
of candidates; the legitimisation of banned outfits; the emboldening
of militant groups, and the curbs on the print and broadcast media.
HRCP appealed to all citizens to approach the ECP with the necessary
supporting evidence in cases where they felt that any election rules and
laws had been violated.
23 July 2018: HRCP carried out an independent fact-finding exercise
to assess the extent and nature of curbs on freedom of expression
across Pakistan. Based on its findings, HRCP called on the federal and
provincial governments of Pakistan, their administrative branches and
all other state institutions and services to:
• Take due notice of the complaints it has presented
• Take appropriate steps to prohibit and prevent unauthorized,
illegal and unlawful interference with freedom of expression in
the country
• Protect the right of television channel and news publication
owners to function with dignity and in peace.
• There should be no interference in the sale and distribution of
any newspaper, nor should any TV channels be deliberately
displaced.
• The system of issuing ‘press advice’ or press-advice-
like ‘instructions’ on the part of state agencies must cease
immediately.
• All complaints of this nature should be redressed promptly.
• Complete and effective information commissions are set up in
each province to implement the state’s obligations under the
Right of Access to Information Act 2017.
29 August 2018: HRCP strongly urged the government to acknowledge
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especially when this meant articulating ‘uncomfortable’ truths about
curtailed rights and freedoms—should not be branded routinely as
‘anti-state’.
HRCP called on the authorities to remove all restrictions on Ms Ismail’s
freedom of movement and her other rights, and to avoid using the ECL
as an arbitrary and often politically motivated tool to curb the work of
human rights defenders in Pakistan.
Political participation
31 July 2018: HRCP expressed satisfaction that the 2018 general elections
were held on time and remained, by and large, peaceful. However, it
regretted that many lives were lost in violence preceding the elections
and was concerned about the complaints made by several political
parties as well as HRCP’s own observers regarding the management of
post-poll formalities. It referred to numerous reports that vote counting
was poorly handled – with polling agents prevented from observing the
final count in many cases – and the unprecedented delay in results that
cast a shadow over the electoral process. The Commission said these
questions must be diligently addressed to avoid any doubts concerning
the credibility of the elections. It strongly urged the new government
to take serious note of the challenges that continue to beleaguer
Pakistan’s democratic development and to address on a priority
basis the Commission’s overarching concerns including: enforced
disappearances, constraints to freedom of expression and association,
tainted processes of accountability, lack of respect for the separation
of powers, the erosion of independence among institutions, and the
shrinking space open to civil society.
Rights of the Disadvantaged
7 May 2018: HRCP expressed grave concern at the deaths of 29 workers
in Balochistan in separate incidents.
It said: ‘It is unacceptable that workers are not provided adequate
security in regions known to be politically sensitive and thus vulnerable
to such attacks. The responsibility for protecting workers in such a
situation lies squarely with their employers, who must take all possible
steps to ensure that their operations in any given area do not put workers
at unnecessary risk. Where this risk exists, employers are bound to
provide their workers with regular and adequate security.” HRCP also
urged the state and the employers concerned to ensure that the workers’
beneficiaries were compensated fairly.
18 May 2018: HRCP called on the federal and provincial governments
to meet the legitimate demands of the visually impaired protestors who
had been staging a sit-in at Kalma Chowk in Lahore for several days.
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