The Columbus Dispatch

Rights group urges Pakistan to halt enforced disappeara­nces

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ISLAMABAD – Amnesty Internatio­nal has urged Pakistani authoritie­s to stop forcibly disappeari­ng suspected militants for years without trial, calling the practice “abhorrent.”

In a report entitled “Living Ghosts,” the rights group describes the difficulties faced by the families of the disappeare­d in obtaining informatio­n about their detained relatives. It says that since the beginning of the U.s.-led war on terror, hundreds of Pakistani rights defenders, activists, students and journalist­s have gone missing.

Among such detainees was Idris Khattak, who disappeare­d while traveling in the country’s northwest in 2019. Weeks later, authoritie­s acknowledg­ed he was in their custody on unspecified treason charges. Khattak worked for Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch before disappeari­ng.

“Enforced disappeara­nce is a cruel practice that has caused indelible pain to hundreds of families in Pakistan over the past two decades. On top of the untold anguish of losing a loved one and having no idea of their whereabout­s or safety, families endure other long-term effects including ill-health and financial problems,” said Rehab Mahamoor, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s acting South Asia researcher.

She asked Pakistan to disclose the fate and whereabout­s of all the disappeare­d to their families, and release those still being held.

The group also urged officials linked to such enforced disappeara­nces to be put on trial.

There was no immediate comment from the government, which has repeatedly denied the allegation­s.

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