Tuesday, December 15, 2020
News

Pakistan rights worker 'intimidated' in alleged house raid

   SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Islamabad | Saturday, Apr 21 2018 IST
Activists have raised concern over the security of rights workers in Pakistan following a "burglary-style raid" on the house of the editor of an annual report on the country's state of human rights, a Al Jazeera report said on Saturday.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) said in a statement that two armed men broke into the house of Maryam Hasan in Lahore on Thursday, just days after the release of the critical report she had edited.

The men "took away her laptop, two hard drives and two mobile phones, as well as some jewellery and cash," HRCP said in a statement on Friday.

The non-profit rights group added that the burglars told Hasan that they had also come the previous day, but left since she was not home at the time.

According to HRCP, the alleged perpetrators questioned Hasan about her profession and "intimidated" her in a "roundabout manner".

"HRCP suspects that the two suave raiders were no ordinary thieves and calls on the government of Punjab to apprehend the culprits and establish their identity, " the statement read.

IA Rahman, HRCP spokesman, said it is "clearly evident that the thieves wanted to intimidate Hasan".

"Their purpose was not just to commit burglary," Rahman told Al Jazeera in a phone interview from Lahore.

"Even from the things that they took, it shows that they had some other motive.

"Ordinary thieves are not interested in laptops and hard drives," he added. "The reports were all in there."Rahman said he could not confirm if a police report had been filed on the matter as yet.

In its report, which was published on Monday, HRCP highlighted the "grim markers" of the state of human rights in the country in 2017.

In its yearly review, HRCP questioned Pakistan's commitment to protecting human rights in the country, despite being elected to the United Nations Human Rights Council for the 2018-2020 term.

The watchdog reported an increase in enforced disappearances, blasphemy-related violence and attacks on religious minorities in the past year.

He said that "most" human rights violations that occur in Pakistan "are committed by the government institutions".

"So, you can't solve the problem, because the government itself is responsible for those violations," he told Al Jazeera in a phone interview from Lahore.

HRCP was established in 1987, with the aim of monitoring human rights violations and addressing them through lobbying, court interventions and public campaigns.

UNi XC-SNU 1250

-- (UNI) -- C-1-1-DL0442-1336350.Xml

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE WORLD NEWS
US sanctions Turkey over purchase of S-4...
Bangladesh team arrives in Kolkata for V...
Maryam Nawaz expresses displeasure over ...
Turkey announces 4-day curfew over New Y...
Africa can teach world about mass vaccin...
Israel to start phase 2 of COVID-19 vacc...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Man held for embezzlement of Rs 2 cr fro...
Focus on infrastructure among 12 FICCI s...
The power of validation helps people cop...
UP govt to SC: Documents found from Kapp...
Navy's indigenous advanced frigate 'Himg...
Pegasus row echoes in SC in challenge to...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
10 Indian juniors qualify for World... 
Kapil Wadhawan's fresh offer for DH... 
New Zealand move to third in World ... 
Govt is dead, says Odisha farmer, s... 
Hyderabad wary of motivated East Be... 
Domestic game in SA called off afte... 
BJP plans to expand domination in N... 
Erratic Mumbai fail to crack open 1...