Los Angeles Times

Pakistani activist who criticized military is held

Pashtun leader sought accountabi­lity for abuses. Rights groups decry his arrest as a bid to stifle dissent.

- By Zulfiqar Ali Ali is a special correspond­ent.

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — Pakistani authoritie­s on Monday arrested a young and charismati­c rights activist from the Pashtun community, the nation’s largest minority group, who has been a thorn in the government’s side because of his repeated critiques of brutality, censorship and extrajudic­ial killings.

The activist, Manzoor Ahmad Pashteen, leads the Pashtun Protection Movement, widely known as PTM. For the last two years, the movement has leveled fierce criticisms against the country’s powerful police and military.

Pashteen was arrested in the northern provincial capital of Peshawar on charges of sedition and hate speech against the army. A magistrate authorized his detention, in Peshawar Central Prison, for 14 days on a judicial remand. Four of Pashteen’s supporters were also detained.

The alleged offense is that Pashteen declared in a televised program on Jan. 21 that he did not accept the Pakistani Constituti­on because it denied fundamenta­l rights to minorities.

Authoritie­s also accused him of fomenting ethnic divisions in Pakistan and using derogatory language against the state.

Human rights advocates immediatel­y criticized the arrest, saying the government was misusing laws banning sedition, conspiracy, hate speech and intimidati­on to stifle legitimate dissent.

“Using criminal laws to chill free expression and political opposition has no place in a democracy,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

“The Pakistan government should find ways of resolving political disagreeme­nts with dialogue rather than intimidati­on. Peaceful dissent is the essence of democracy and should not be treated as sedition.”

The PTM represents Pashtuns in the often dangerous region previously known as the Federally Administer­ed Tribal Areas, which borders Afghanista­n.

The tribal areas were governed by early 20th century regulation­s — dating to the era of British imperial rule — that allowed collective punishment for communitie­s, including property destructio­n and denial of access to courts. In recent years, the region has come under attacks by the Taliban, government military offensives and U.S. drone strikes.

In May 2018, Pakistan’s parliament passed a constituti­onal amendment merging the tribal areas with the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a — of which Peshawar is the capital — and extending constituti­onal protection­s to the former tribal areas.

Asserting the constituti­onal rights of Pashtun people, the movement has organized protests against the government to demand accountabi­lity for extrajudic­ial killings, enforced disappeara­nces and casualties from land mines.

The authoritie­s have cracked down on Pashteen’s followers, using arbitrary arrests and intimidati­on as instrument­s of coercion.

Amnesty Internatio­nal called for Pashteen’s release.

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