Khaleej Times

Missing rights activist Salman Haider ‘recovered’ in capital

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islamabad — Prominent academic and human rights activist Salman Haider who went missing from the capital Islamabad earlier this month, just days after four other human rights campaigner­s disappeare­d, has been found, local media reported on Saturday.

The five missing liberal activists, some of whom have posted blogs criticisin­g the political influence of the military and speaking up for the rights of religious minorities, had each gone missing separately since January 4.

Police sources told Geo News channel that Haider, who disappeare­d on January 6, was found late on Friday night.

“Police sources have confirmed that he has been returned and also that his physical condition is okay,” Geo News reported on Saturday, but giving no further details on how Haider was found.

Police sources have confirmed that Salman Haider has been returned and also that his physical condition is okay Geo News

“Police say he was returned to Islamabad last night.”

There was no word on the whereabout­s of the four other missing activists.

It is not known how the five activists went missing, but some rights groups and newspapers have asked whether state or military agencies were in any way involved.

Shortly after the activists disappeara­nces, blasphemy allegation­s against them appeared on social media and in a complaint to police.

Friends, family and supporters of all five men deny they have blasphemed, and have denounced the campaign to press that charge, which could endanger their lives were they to reappear.

Haider has written columns for a popular English-language newspaper and taught at the Fatima Jinnah Women’s University in the city of Rawalpindi.

Last year, Haider wrote a poem about human rights abuses in the Balochista­n province, including a line about his friends’ friends disappeari­ng. He queried whether his friends, or even he himself, will be next to suffer such a fate.

Two of the missing activists, Waqas Goraya and Aasim Saeed, live in the Netherland­s and Singapore. Their relatives said they were taken on January 4 while visiting Pakistan. The fourth activist, Ahmed Raza Naseer, suffers from polio. — Reuters

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