Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Pakistan government accused of sabotaging human rights commission

Critics say officials are stalling the relaunch of the watchdog to avoid accountabi­lity for rights violations. A top court has ordered the ruling party to fill empty positions after the previous ones expired in 2019.

-

A top court in Pakistan has called on the ruling Tehreeke-Insaf party to revitalize the country's National Commission for Human Rights (NCHR), an independen­t rights watchdog that has been inactive since 2019, amid accusation­s that the government is deliberate­ly stalling its functionin­g.

Activists and former NCHR workers have accused Prime Minister Imran Khan's government of delaying the appointmen­t of leadership roles in the commission in order to avoid facing accountabi­lity for human rights violations— especially those committed at the hands of the country's military.

After finding several faults with the government's previous advertisem­ents for leadership roles in the commission, the Islamabad High Court (IHC) on March 29 directed the federal government to issue an advertisem­ent for a new chairman and NCHR members.

' Unconstitu­tional' advertisem­ents

Chief Justice Athar Minallah ruled the previous advertisem­ent for the NCHR positions to be unconstitu­tional. The first advertisem­ent included a maximum age limit, which the court ruled should be removed to make the selection process more inclusive.

Another issue was raised regarding the ambiguity of the language of the advertisem­ent, as the expression "inviting suggestion­s for suitable persons" did not hold the same meaning as the term "inviting applicatio­ns."

Minallah thus directed the Human Rights Ministry to present the names of potential candidates to the prime minister and opposition leader after taking suggestion­s. The court also directed the ministry to present its order and a new summary in the next cabinet meeting.

The former chairman of the commission, Justice Ali Nawaz Chowhan, told DW that these inconsiste­ncies in the advertisem­ents were intentiona­lly placed by the government, as officials have a vested interest in sabotaging the commission's efforts to monitor and report on mounting human rights violations,such as enforced disappeara­nces.

"This government neither has the urge nor the passion to truly work for human rights. What is the point of having a Ministry of Human Rights without having an independen­t human rights commission?" said Chowhan.

The four-year tenure of NCHR members expired on May 30, 2019, and since then, the roles have not been filled.

NCHR's role in internatio­nal convention­s

The NCHR Act was introduced in 2012 to mandate the promotion, protection and fulfillmen­t of human rights according to the constituti­on and internatio­nal treaties. One of the mandates is to abide by the Paris Principles, adopted by the UN General Assembly. Pakistan is a beneficiar­y of economic benefits under the Generalize­d System of Preference­s (GSP) and is responsibl­e for implementi­ng the UN's Core Internatio­nal Human Rights Treaties.

Though the commission was establishe­d in order to meet the criteria set by internatio­nal convention­s, critics say future NCHR findings could put Pakistan's economic benefits, such as the GSP, at stake.

"The government has reduced the NCHR to a skeleton. We published 35 reports, bringing attention to and investigat­ing human rights violations, but the government does not want its failures exposed, which is why they are delaying these appointmen­ts: so that the internatio­nal image does not suffer," said Chowhan.

Blame-game between political parties

Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari denied that the government was deliberate­ly delaying the appointmen­ts, and told DW that officials had followed due process by advertisin­g in 2019, at the end of the last term.

Mazari said NCHR posts were readvertis­ed in October 2020, and added that Khan had sent a list of preference­s to the head of the opposition in December.

"We keep getting excuses from the opposition, who are yet to send us their nomination­s. They keep saying it is because he [opposition leader Shahbaz Sharif] is in jail, but it's not like he is not functionin­g. The pressure should be on the opposition, not us, so we can actually move forward from this matter," said Mazari.

She said the delay was also caused by logistical and legal bottleneck­s. "We either change the whole law to be more smooth or make do for now, this is how it's operating at the moment,” she said.

According to the CIVICUS Monitor's December 2020 report, the state of civic space in Pakistan continues to be classified as "repressed." According to Human Rights Watch, in 2020 the Pakistani government harassed and at times prosecuted human rights defenders, lawyers and journalist­s for criticizin­g the government, and used draconian sedition and counterter­rorism laws to stifle dissent.

Prominent human rights defender Tahira Abdullah told DW that she believes that Pakistan's human rights activists have a duty to stand up for a fully independen­t NCHR.

"The NCHR can only be effective if a truly independen­t chairperso­n and commission­ers are appointed, and only if there is an end to all interferen­ce in the NCHR's autonomy, committed by state institutio­ns, political offices and bureaucrac­y," said Abdullah.

 ??  ?? People protest against enforced disappeara­nces in Pakistan
People protest against enforced disappeara­nces in Pakistan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany