Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

RIGHTS GROUP SAYS PAK POLICE KILL THOUSANDS OF SUSPECTS

- Agence FrancePres­se letters@hindustant­imes.com n

Human Rights Watch on Monday accused Pakistan’s police of routinely carrying out extra-judicial killings, torture and arbitrary arrests, and called on Islamabad to implement urgent reforms of its under-resourced forces.

The findings were contained in a new report based on interviews with more than 30 police officers and 50 victims or witnesses of abuse across three of the country’s four provinces.

In addition to noting habitual rights violations -- including more than 2,000 so-called “encounter” killings in 2015, which are often believed to have been staged -- the report said police often found themselves in thrall to powerful individual­s who subvert the law for their own purposes.

“Pakistan faces grave security challenges that can be best handled by a rights-respecting, accountabl­e police force,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

“Instead, law enforcemen­t has been left to a police force filled with disgruntle­d, corrupt and tired officers who commit abuses with impunity, making Pakistanis less safe, not more,” Adams said.

In the biggest city Karachi, encounter killings have surged since 2013 as paramilita­ry forces and police have stepped up raids against Taliban militants, criminals and armed political activists.

The report found that those from marginalis­ed groups -- refugees, the poor, religious minorities, and the landless -- are at particular risk of violent police abuse.

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