Pakistan police detain second civil rights leader critical of army
Mohsin Dawar, a sitting parliamentarian, has been detained by Pakistani authorities (Farooq NAEEM)
Islamabad (AFP) – Pakistani authorities on Tuesday detained a senior member of a civil rights movement as he protested the detention of his group’s charismatic leader one day earlier, a police official said.
Mohsin Dawar, a sitting parliamentarian, was leading a demonstration in Islamabad of around 100 members of the Pashtun Protection Movement (PTM), which accuses the army of abuses.
He along with around 25 of those with him “were taken into the custody”, a spokesman for the Islamabad police, Zia Bajwa, told AFP.
Amnesty International issued a statement calling for them to be freed. “Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly, as recognized in Pakistan’s constitution and international law,” the group’s South Asia arm tweeted.
The PTM had been protesting the arrest of Manzoor Pashteen, the former veterinary student who now leads the protest movement.
In videos posted on social media police can be seen apparently dragging Dawar into a van outside the Islamabad Press Club.
Dawar was also detained for months last year for allegedly inciting violent clashes with security forces during another protest.
The PTM have pressured the military since 2018 with calls to end alleged abuses by security forces targeting ethnic Pashtuns in the restive tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan.
The area, once plagued by militancy and unrest, is where Washington believes Pakistan is providing safe haven to militant groups including the Afghan Taliban and Haqqani Network.
The army has carried out many operations in the region, and security across Pakistan has dramatically improved in recent years.
The military maintains a heavy presence there, however, and the PTM has tapped into festering anger over alleged abuses against Pashtuns — including enforced disappearances and targeted killings.
The movement remains peaceful, but has been notable for its direct verbal attacks on the armed forces in a country where such criticism is largely seen as a red line.
A far-reaching media blackout has kept news and images of peaceful PTM rallies off TV screens and front pages nationwide.
Pashteen’s arrest was widely reported by international media on Monday, and both Amnesty and Human Rights Watch have issued statements calling for his release.
He is facing charges including sedition and incitement against the state’s institutions.
The Islamabad protest was one of several in major Pakistani cities Tuesday protesting his detention.
In the southwestern city of Quetta around 3,000 supporters of PTM and other opposition parties demonstrated, while other smaller protests took place in Karachi as well as several cities in the northwest.
Pashtuns are a fiercely independent ethnic group that straddles both sides of the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
They account for roughly 15 percent of Pakistan’s population, with a majority of the 30 million-strong group living in the northwest.
Disclaimer: Validity of the above story is for 7 Days from original date of publishing. Source: AFP.