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Without a trace
Seven-year-old Saud Bugti's father was picked up by secret police on a
street corner in Karachi last November. No one has heard from him since.
He has joined the ranks of Pakistan's 'disappeared' - victims of the
country's brutal attempts to wage war on both al-Qaida and those who fail
to support the government. But how many innocent people are being caught
up in this? And what is America's connection to the barbaric torture of
suspects?
Friday March 16, 2007
The
Guardian Declan Walsh reports
| They vanish quietly and quickly. Some
are dragged from their beds in front of their terrified families.
Others are hustled off the streets into a waiting van, or yanked
from a bus at a lonely desert junction. A windowless world of sweat
and fear awaits. In dark cells, nameless men bark questions. The men
brandish rubber whips, clenched fists, whirring electric drills,
pictures of Osama bin Laden. The ordeal can last weeks, months or
years.
These are Pakistan's disappeared - men and women who have been
abducted, imprisoned and in some cases tortured by the country's
all-powerful intelligence agencies. The Human Rights Commission of
Pakistan has counted 400 cases since 2002; it estimates hundreds
more people may have been snatched. The phenomenon started with the
great sweeps for al-Qaida suspects after September 11, but has
dramatically increased in recent years, and now those who disappear
include homegrown "enemies of the state" - poets, doctors,
housewives and nuclear scientists, accused of terrorism, treason and
murder. Guilty or innocent, it's hard to know, because not one has
appeared before a court. |

Saud Bugti, 7, whose father
disappeared last November.
Photograph: Declan Walsh |
An angry Pakistani public wants to know why. The
disappearances are increasingly perceived as Pakistan's Guantánamo Bay - a
malignant outgrowth of the "war on terror". This week, the issue moved
centre stage with the showdown between President Pervez Musharraf and
Pakistan's chief justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. Many believe the
judge is being victimised for championing the cases of the disappeared.
"These are Gestapo tactics," says Iqbal Haider, a former minister. "The
more we protest, the more innocent people are being hurt. And what
frightening stories they tell."
For Abid Zaidi it started with a phone call one
afternoon last April. The softly spoken 26-year-old was at work at Karachi
University's department of zoology in a cavernous room of stuffed animals,
sagging skeletons and yellowing name tags. The voice on the phone
instructed him to report to Sadder police station in the city centre.
There, a handful of men were waiting for him: he believes they belonged to
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), the army's powerful spy agency. They
clapped cuffs on his wrists, wrapped a band around his eyes and drove him
to a cell. Then, he says, the torture started.
The men beat him, he says, with a chain, until he collapsed. He was
brought to a military hospital; there doctors brushed off his pleas for
help. Then he was flown to another detention centre, where he was shown
graphic images of torture. "People's skin was being removed with knives
and blades and they were being drilled," he says. "It was really
terrible." Then they hung him upside down from a butcher's hook, his face
dipping into a pool of sewage water.
The interrogators wanted Zaidi to admit his supposed part in the Nishtar
Park bombings. In early April, a suicide bomber had killed 50 people at a
Sunni religious gathering in central Karachi. The officials accused Zaidi,
a prominent young Shia, of orchestrating the massacre. Zaidi tried to
explain he was more interested in zoology than zealotry. They did not
believe him.
In July, an official told him he had been sentenced to hang. Zaidi wrote a
will. "I felt at peace because I knew God was with me," he says. But it
was a ruse. At 4am on the morning of the "execution", having refused to
admit his guilt, a dramatic reprieve was announced. Shortly afterwards, he
underwent a lie detector test and on August 18 he was flown to Karachi.
The blindfold was lifted. Zaidi was driven through the city. The car
stopped, a man handed him 200 rupees (£1.80) and pushed the car door open.
"He said, 'Don't open your eyes,'" says Zaidi. When the engine noise had
receded, he found himself standing at a bus stop near Karachi University.
He got down on his knees and prayed. Then he phoned his brother to take
him home.
Zaidi's account cannot be verified because, officially speaking, he was
never in government custody. However a senior police officer familiar with
the case describes it as a major embarrassment. "That boy was picked up by
a young officer," says the official, who asks not to be named. "[The
police] knew it was the wrong guy. But they refused to listen."
The ISI is the most powerful arm of Pakistan's intelligence establishment,
commonly referred to as "the agencies". Founded by a British army officer
in 1948 and headquartered at an anonymous concrete block in Islamabad, the
ISI is famed and feared in equal part. Its influence soared during the
1980s, when it smuggled vast amounts of American-funded weapons to
mujahideen guerrillas fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan. More recently,
it has organised guerrilla groups fighting Indian troops in
Indian-controlled Kashmir. The other major agencies in Pakistan are
Military Intelligence and the civilian Intelligence Bureau, and all three
of these major agencies have variously been accused of rigging elections,
extra-judicial assassinations and other dirty tricks.
But until 9/11, disappearances were rare. Then, in late 2001, as al-Qaida
fugitives fled from Afghanistan into Pakistan, Musharraf ordered that the
agencies show full cooperation to the FBI, CIA and other US security
agencies. In return, the Americans would give them equipment, expertise
and money.
Suddenly, Pakistan's agencies had sophisticated devices to trace mobile
phones, bug houses and telephone calls, and monitor large volumes of email
traffic. "Whatever it took to improve the Pakistanis' technical ability to
find al-Qaida fighters, we were there to help them," says Michael Scheuer,
a former head of the CIA's Osama bin Laden unit. An official with an
American organisation says he once received a startling demonstration of
the ISI's new capabilities. Driving down a street inside a van with ISI
operatives, he could monitor phone conversations taking place in every
house they passed. "It was very impressive, and really quite spooky," he
says.
The al-Qaida hunt became a matter of considerable pride for President
Bush's close friend, the president of Pakistan. "We have captured 672 and
handed over 369 to the United States. We have earned bounties totalling
millions of dollars," wrote Musharraf in his autobiography last year. (The
boast sparked outrage at home in Pakistan and was scrubbed from later
Urdu-language versions of his book.) Prize captures included the alleged
9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Muhammed, who has apparently confessed to a
string of terror plots after four years as a captive, and Abu Faraj al
Libbi, another alleged bin Laden lieutenant. But certain innocents were
also swept up in the dragnet.
Brothers Zain and Kashan Afzal, for example, were detained and beaten many
times over eight months by Pakistani agents convinced they belonged to al-Qaida.
Zain, now 25, remembers that, in between the thrashings, the "FBI wallahs"
- a woman and two men - would come to visit. "They showed me a picture of
Osama and asked if I knew him," he says at his home in Karachi. "I told
them I had only seen him on television." As American citizens - the
brothers were born in the US, where their father lives - they might have
expected better treatment. Instead, they got threats. "The Americans said
if we did not tell them everything, they would send us to Guantánamo Bay,"
says Zain.
Like many of the disappeared, the Afzals had a colourful past that drew
the attention of the agencies. According to a well-informed source, their
names appeared on a list of potential recruits found on a laptop belonging
to Naeem Noor Khan, an al-Qaida computer expert arrested weeks earlier, in
July 2004. They were also questioned about a visit they had made to the
lawless tribal belt of Waziristan. But whatever they had done, it was
clearly not enough to warrant prosecution by either Pakistan or the US. In
April 2005, they were brought to Lahore airport, handed a pair of airplane
tickets in other people's names, and set free.
The physical damage has healed - Zain suffered a burst eardrum - but the
mental scars remain. "He hears voices in the night coming to take him away
again," says his wife Sara. The couple agreed to meet the Guardian and
give their first newspaper interview in an attempt to press their case for
a new American passport. Despite numerous entreaties, the US consulate in
Karachi has stonewalled requests to re-issue their passports, which were
confiscated during their arrest. "I am scared because of what has
happened," says Sara. "Pakistan is not a reliable country, you know." A US
embassy spokeswoman in Islamabad declines to comment on their case.
The truth is that the American government still quietly supports the
disappearances of al-Qaida suspects, says Ali Dayan Hasan of Human Rights
Watch, which has documented many cases. "The abuse has become even more
brazen because of US complicity," he says. He claims that American
officials are regular visitors to ISI safehouses in Islamabad, Lahore and
Rawalpindi where torture has occurred. They have supervised interrogations
from behind one-way mirrors, he says. In FBI internal documents, he says,
torture is referred to as "locally acceptable forms of interrogation".
For some detainees the safehouses are the back door to the mysterious
world of CIA "black sites" - secret prisons in Afghanistan, eastern Europe
and across the Arab world where torture is allegedly rife. Marwan Jabour,
a Palestinian who was picked up in 2004, recently gave an extraordinarily
detailed account of life in this system. After being tortured by ISI
agents in Lahore - they strapped a rubber band around his penis - he said
he was moved to a "villa" in Islamabad where he was questioned by US
officials. "It seemed to me that this place was controlled by Americans.
They were in charge," he told Human Rights Watch. "They would say: 'If you
cooperate, we'll let you sleep.'" A female official told him in Arabic,
"Fuck Allah in the ass." One of four fellow Pakistani detainees bore the
marks of severe torture. "You can't imagine how much they were hurting
him," said Jabour, who was released last summer.
In its annual human rights report published last Tuesday, the US State
Department acknowledged the disappearances but skated around the US's own
role. "The country experienced an increase in disappearances of provincial
activists and political opponents," it noted.
In fact, most recent disappearances have nothing to do with al-Qaida. To
quell an insurgency in Baluchistan - a vast western province with massive
oil and gas reserves - the agencies, in particular Military Intelligence,
have rounded up hundreds of suspected rebels in the past two years. Of the
99 abductions registered by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan last
year, 73 were from Baluchistan. Officials believe many more have gone
unreported. Shamsa Toon, a 70-year-old woman, crouches on the pavement
outside Karachi's Press Club clutching a giant photograph of her son,
Gohram Saleh. He has been missing since August 8 2004, she says; this was
the 166th day of her vigil. Her 13-year-old granddaughter is threatening
to commit suicide if there was no news. "He's just a cab driver, not any
rebel," she says, tears streaming down her face. "His only crime is that
he is a Baluch."
Musharraf's officials swat the issue away with blunt denials. "I can say
with authority that these people are not with any agency or government
department," says Brigadier Iqbal Cheema, head of the "crisis management
cell", which spearheads anti-terror operations, at the Interior Ministry.
"Most of these people creating a hue and cry belong to the militant
organisations and have jihadi backgrounds. They are involved in these
activities themselves." But the current confrontation with the chief
justice has brought a renewed focus. Western diplomats are queasy about
such obvious abuses from an ally they claim is "moving towards democracy".
And the death of Hayatullah Khan, a tribal journalist who was found dead
last June after seven months apparently in the custody of the agencies,
has further fuelled the outrage.
Last November, Chaudhry, the chief justice, ordered the agencies to "find"
41 people who had gone missing. Subsequently, half were quietly released.
But the court actions have mostly just underlined the impotence of the
civilian institutions in the face of a powerful military machine. When ISI
lawyers plead that they "cannot locate" certain detainees, the judges can
only fume and bang their benches.
Meanwhile, tearful relatives are left grasping for even a shred of news.
Qazim Bugti, the mayor of Dera Bugti, a small town in Baluchistan, was
picked up last November. His wife Asmat, left behind to look after their
five children, weeps when she talks of her husband's disappearance. "Does
President Musharraf not have children of his own? Would he like to see
them treated like this?" she says in the family's Karachi apartment. She
agrees to speak despite whispered phone warnings to keep quiet: the
agencies do not appreciate publicity.
Several relatives say they have been instructed not to contact the media
or human rights groups. Khalid Khawaja, who led a pressure group on behalf
of some detainees, himself went missing last month. He was reportedly
taken to Attock Fort, a notorious military prison. But the most audacious
disappearance, perhaps, is that of Abdul Rahim Muslim Dost.
During his three years of captivity in Guantánamo Bay, Dost, 37, became
known as the "poet of Guantánamo" for his sharp verse. After his release,
he wrote The Broken Shackles of Guantánamo, and it was published in the
Pashto language last September; it became an instant hit in Peshawar's
bookstalls, selling more than 10,000 copies. It also contained stinging
criticism of the ISI. Weeks later, policemen in a van abducted Dost as he
walked from his local mosque after Friday prayers. His brother,
Badruzzaman Badr - also a former Guantánamo detainee - says, "The book is
the reason behind this. They are angry about what we have written. They
claim to have democracy and freedom of expression in this country, but it
is not real."
When Dost's case came before a local court for the third time in January,
the judges again asked the ISI to produce the missing man. Again there was
no answer. Now Badruzzaman, who has abandoned his gemstone business and no
longer sleeps at home, fears he will be next. "I do not feel safe, they
could arrest me any time. But where can I go?" he says.
Abid Zaidi, the zoology student from Karachi, has also learned the price
of going public. In late October, he travelled to Islamabad to describe
his ordeal before a press conference organised by Amnesty International.
Shortly afterwards he was picked up again, this time by men in uniform.
Zaidi says they were flushed with anger. "They told me: 'Next time, we
will not pick you up. We will kill you'". |