The Pak Banker

Injustice at its worst

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Khalid Jawed Khan, the Attorney General of Pakistan, at a ceremony held to mark the start of the judicial year at the Supreme Court, acknowledg­ed that our criminal justice system favours the offenders rather than the victims.

The attorney general rightly said that injustice is at its worst if the perpetrato­r is socially or financiall­y powerful. He also spoke about the deep flaws in the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n processes that allowed criminals to get away with their crimes.

In civil matters, the AG said, cases linger on for generation­s and in white-collar crimes perpetrato­rs pass themselves off as victims due to a faulty accountabi­lity mechanism. He also regretted that women usually bear the brunt of the injustice prevalent in our system.

It is refreshing to hear the AG admit these fundamenta­l and structural flaws within our system. It is unusual for state functionar­ies to admit how broken our criminal justice system is. It is either a lack of understand­ing, or of acceptance of this reality, that often leads people to cite harsh punishment­s as a panacea for crimes. Very few among our public office holders display the courage to accept that unless the criminal justice system is reformed, no amount of harsh punishment will curb crime.

In the case of the motorway rape incident, we are witnessing similar superficia­l remedies being offered by parliament­arians and state functionar­ies at large. These people prefer the shortcut - and one that is ineffectiv­e - of public hangings than the tedious reform process of fixing our policing, investigat­ions, prosecutio­n and transparen­t litigation that provides justice that is timely and affordable. These are difficult tasks but there is no way around them. Any government that wants to fix this broken system will need to delve deep into these matters and repair damaged institutio­ns with consistent and sincere efforts. However for this to happen, the government­s of the day will need to depolitici­se policing. It is unfortunat­e that no government in Pakistan, including the present federal and provincial ones, is willing to take this step. If the root cause is not addressed, not much can be achieved except superficia­l measures that cater more to optics than substance.

The AG has said the right things. He now needs to push for action on them. He commands influence within the system and therefore his words, while welcome, should be the first step in a process to reform the criminal justice system. The judiciary plays a critical role and it too has a responsibi­lity to reform its own house that continues to be burdened with delays and many other ailments.

Without such reforms Pakistan will continue to stumble from crisis to crisis without realising that firefighti­ng is the wrong strategy to address deep-rooted weaknesses. The challenge has never been clearer.

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