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Us State Department Report on Pakistan
Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices -
2005
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
March 8, 2006
Pakistan is a federal
republic with a population of approximately 163 million. The head of
state is President and Chief of Army Staff Pervez Musharraf who assumed
power after overthrowing the civilian government in 1999. The head of
government is Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, whom the national assembly
elected over opposition parties' objections in 2004. Domestic and
international observers found the 2002national assembly elections, the
most recent national elections, deeply flawed. The civilian authorities
maintained control of the security forces; however, there were instances
when local police acted independently of government authority.
The government's human
rights record was poor, and serious problems remained. The following
human rights problems were reported:
- restrictions on citizens'
right to change their government
- extrajudicial killings,
torture, and rape
- poor prison conditions,
arbitrary arrest, and lengthy pretrial detention
- violations of due process
and privacy rights
- lack of judicial
independence
- harassment, intimidation,
and arrest of journalists
- limits on freedom of
association, religion, and movement
- imprisonment of political
leaders
- corruption
- legal and societal
discrimination against women
- child abuse
- trafficking in women and
children, and child prostitution
- discrimination against
persons with disabilities
- indentured, bonded, and
child labor
- restriction of worker
rights
The government took
significant steps to combat trafficking in persons. Its Anti-Trafficking
Unit (ATU) was fully functional and resulted in increased arrests and
prosecutions of human traffickers. Cooperative efforts between the
military, ATU, and international organizations prevented any increase in
human trafficking resulting from the October 8 earthquake. Training
efforts within the security forces greatly improved treatment of
trafficking victims.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for
the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From:
a.
Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
Security forces
extrajudicially killed individuals associated with criminal and
political groups in staged encounters and during abuse in custody. Human
rights monitors reported 189 instances of encounter killings.
Police said that many of
these deaths occurred when suspects attempted to escape, resisted
arrest, or committed suicide; however, family members and the press said
that many of these deaths were staged. For example, on January 25, Abu
Bakar Panwhar died in police custody at the police station in Mirpurkhas,
Sindh, after being detained on theft charges. Following protests by the
Sindh People's Students Federation and the Pakistan People's Party
Parliamentarians (PPPP), the police filed murder charges against officer
Mohammad Rafiq Siyal, senior inspector Khamiso Khan, assistant senior
inspector Ghulam Shabbir Dasti, and police constable Mohammad Aslam. An
investigation continued at year's end.
On March 5, Samiullah
Kalhoro, the vice chairman of the Jeay Sindh Muttahida Mahaz,
died after sustaining serious injuries from torture he received while in
police custody in Hala. Police maintained Kalhoro was never detained.
There was no investigation at year's end.
On April 25, Sufi
Muhammad Aslam died in police custody after being arrested in connection
with a murder case in which Aslam was guarantor of the suspect's bail at
his shop in Lakhodare village on the outskirts of Lahore. According to
Aslam's son, when Aslam demanded to see the arrest warrant, police beat
him. Aslam lost consciousness en route to the police station and was
taken to Ali Medical Center and later to Shalimar hospital, where police
claimed Ali died of natural causes. Despite protests from relatives,
they brought no charges against police.
On May 20, police in
Madni Bahauddin, Punjab, arrested local Islamic cleric Naeem Mehmood
Qadri. The following day police informed his family that a truck crushed
and killed Qadri; however, following a September 8th court-ordered
exhumation of his body, authorities confirmed that Qadri was beaten. At
year's end, a judge charged the five police constables with murder.
On September 26, Ghulam
Raza died in police custody at the Thari Mirwah police station after
being detained by police in Khairpur, Punjab. Police detained Raza on
charges of stealing a motorcycle, but they failed to file proper arrest
documents. While the police claimed Raza committed suicide, relatives
asserted that police killed Raza. At year's end authorities arrested
assistant senior inspector Ghulam Abdul Ghafoor in connection with the
case.
A government inquiry
into the 2004 deaths of three Pakistan People's Party (PPP) workers in
Attock concluded that there was no evidence of police or district
government involvement.
There were no
developments in the 2004 death-in-custody cases of Nazakat Khan and Syed
Qutbuddin Shah or the 2004 killing of Tabassum Javed Kalyar.
The government
frequently investigated police officials for extrajudicial killings;
however, failure to discipline and prosecute consistently and lengthy
trial delays contributed to a culture of impunity.
Continued clashes
between security forces and terrorists in the Federally Administered
Tribal Areas (FATA) resulted in nine civilian deaths during the year.
On March 17, in Dera
Bugti, Balochistan, Frontier Corps personnel shelled the militant leader
Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti's residential compound, killing 67 civilians and
wounding 55.
On December 31, in Pikal,
Balochistan, security forces killed 10 and injured 43 civilians during a
helicopter assault on militants linked with Nawab Akbar Khan Bughti.
Related security force shelling of militant positions in the town of
Dera Bugti, Balochistan, on December 30 and 31 resulted in 38 injured
civilians. Baloch nationalists claimed that a security force assault on
militants linked to Nawab Khai Bax Marri in Kohlu District also resulted
in civilian deaths and injuries, but no figures were available.
There were reports of
politically motivated killings perpetrated by political factions. During
local elections held onAugust 18 and 25, arguments between competing
candidate groups resulted in violent confrontations at polling places
nationwide, leaving at least 55 dead and hundreds injured (see section
3).
Politically motivated
killings occurred during the year. For example, on January 2, unknown
assailants killed former parliamentarian Syed Manzoor Hussain Shahand
and his three aides in an ambush on the Grand Trunk Road near Theekarian
Morr in Punjab. Police blamed a long standing feud with political
rivals. On January 7, unknown assailants on a motorcycle in Karachi
killed Baloch nationalist leader Anwar Bhaijan. On March 20, unknown
assailants shot and killed Ahsan Aziz, a Pakistan Muslim League (PML)
activist, in a Karachi park. On April 11, in Karachi, unknown motorcycle
gunmen killed Shorab Goth, a Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) activist.
Attacks on houses of
worship and religious gatherings linked to sectarian, religious
extremist, and terrorist groups resulted in the deaths of nearly 75
persons (see section 2.c.). On March 19, a bomb explosion in Jhal Magsi
district at the shrine to Pir Syed Rakheel Shah during Shi'a and Brailvi
ceremonies commemorating the saint's death killed more than 40 persons
and wounded more than 100. The government blamed the attack on the
terrorist group Lashkar-e-Janghvi. On May 27, a suicide bomber attacked
the Bari Imam Shrine outside Islamabad during Shi'a and Brailvi
ceremonies, killing 20 and wounding over 100 on the anniversary of the
saint's death. On May 30, a suicide bomber and 3 armed accomplices,
allegedly affiliated with Lashkar-e-Janghvi, attacked a Shi'a mosque in
Karachi, killing 5 and injuring at least 30. Prompted by the mosque
attack, rioters took to the streets in Karachi. The mob killed six
persons when they burned a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant. On
September 22, members of Lashkar-e-Jangvi detonated 2 simultaneous bombs
in Lahore that killed 6 persons and wounded 26 others.
On June 4, a Karachi
antiterrorism court convicted Gul Hasan of murder and sentenced him to
death for the May suicide bombing of a Shi'a mosque. There were no
developments in any of the cases of 2004 attacks on houses of worship.
Religious extremist
organizations killed and attempted to kill government officials and
Islamic religious figures from opposing sects (see section 2.c.).
The trial of members of
the Jandullah group implicated in attacks on foreigners and government
officials in 2004 continued at year's end. There were no developments in
the other 2004 cases of murder of government officials and religious
figures or terrorist attacks on foreign targets.
Foreign terrorists and
their local tribal allies attacked and killed military personnel,
government officials, and progovernment tribal chiefs in the FATA. For
example, on January 22, unidentified gunmen shot and killed Mohammad
Ibrahim Khan Mehsud, senior vice president of the tribal peace committee
in Makeen, South Waziristan, at his home in Tauda Cheena. On May 29,
militants killed former federal minister and progovernment tribal leader
Faridullah Khan, his cousin, and a bodyguard after attacking his vehicle
in South Waziristan. On July 22, unidentified gunmen shot and killed Mir
Zalam Khan, the progovernment chief of the Ahmadzai Wazir tribe, after
attacking his vehicle in Wana, South Waziristan. His two brothers and a
nephew also died in the attack.
Honor killings continued
to be a problem, with women as the principal victims. Local human rights
organizations documented 1,211 cases during the year, and many more
likely went unreported (see section 5).
January 18 shelling
across the line of control in Kashmir, the country's border with India,
did not result in any casualties.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of
politically motivated disappearances; however, police and security
forces held prisoners incommunicado and refused to provide information
on their whereabouts, particularly in terrorism and national security
cases. For example, on June 4, intelligence agencies in Swat allegedly
detained sisters Arifa Baloch and Saba Baloch on suspicion of receiving
terrorist training from their uncle Gul Hasan, a member of
Lashkar-e-Janghvi. On August 22, the Interior Ministry denied any
knowledge of their whereabouts to the Peshawar High Court; however, on
September 20, Gul Hamdana, the sisters' relative who had been missing
for three months reappeared, claiming that intelligence agencies held
her incommunicado in the same location as the sisters, who remained
under detention. In January security agencies released a Dutch national
detained at Lahore University in 2004. There was no new information
available on a British national who disappeared at the same time as the
Dutch national.
The PPP claimed that in
Sindh members of the ruling PML kidnapped candidates of the
PPP-supported Awam Dost panel to prevent them from filing nomination
papers for local elections. For example in Chachro, Tharparkar District,
PML supporters allegedly kidnapped Moto Meghwar and Gyan Chand Meghwar,
Awam Dost candidates for mayor and deputy mayor of Union Council
Sarangiar along with their supporters. The PML denied that such
kidnappings occurred, and the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP)
claimed that its investigation yielded no evidence to support such
charges. International observers, however, found that the charges likely
were credible.
c.
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The law prohibits
torture and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment; however,
security forces tortured and abused persons. Under provisions of the
Anti-Terrorist Act, coerced confessions are admissible in special
courts, although police did not used this provision to obtain
convictions.
Security force personnel
continued to torture persons in custody throughout the country. Human
rights organizations reported that methods included beating; burning
with cigarettes, whipping the soles of the feet, prolonged isolation,
electric shock, denial of food or sleep, hanging upside down, and forced
spreading of the legs with bar fetters. Security force personnel
reportedly raped women and children during interrogations. The
nongovernmental organization (NGO) Lawyers for Human Rights and Legal
Aid recorded 1,356 cases of torture during the year. Torture
occasionally resulted in death or serious injury (see section 1.a.). In
April Shabbir Hussain, Zafar Abass, and Muhammad Sadiq claimed that
police detained and tortured them on false charges of theft. During
their detention in Hafizabad, Punjab, police allegedly beat them in
front of their accuser, forced them to drink their own urine and eat
mud, and hung them upside down. The Lahore High Court ordered the police
to register cases against the officer involved.
On June 23, police in
Vehari severely beat and stitched together the lips of prisoner Mohammad
Hussain after he argued with a police officer. At year's end authorities
suspended seven policemen for their involvement.
The United Nation's
implicated Pakistani peacekeepers assigned to the United Nations Mission
in the Congo (MONUC) in the organization's sexual abuse scandal. The
government took steps to investigate and punish those reportedly
involved. In March Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported that in August 2004
domestic and foreign security forces secretly abducted and subsequently
tortured two foreign nationals, brothers Zain Afzal and Kashan Afzal, to
extract confessions of involvement in terrorist activities. HRW reported
that authorities released the brothers on April 22 without charge.
There were no
developments in any 2004 cases.
The Hudood Ordinances
provide for harsh Koranic punishments for violations of Shari'a
(Islamic law), including death by stoning and amputation. Authorities
did not use such punishments during the year, as they required a high
standard of evidence.
Prison and Detention
Center Conditions
Prison conditions did
not meet international standards and were extremely poor, except those
for wealthy or influential prisoners. Overcrowding was widespread.
According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP,) there were
89,370 prisoners occupying 87 jails originally built to hold a maximum
of 36,075 persons.
Inadequate food in
prisons led to chronic malnutrition for those unable to supplement their
diet with help from family or friends. Access to medical care was a
problem. Foreign prisoners often remained in prison long after their
sentences were completed because there was no one to pay for deportation
to their home country.
Authorities
routinelyshackled prisoners. The shackles were tight, heavy, and
painful, and reportedly led to gangrene and amputation in several cases.
Police held female
detainees and prisoners separately from male detainees and prisoners.
Child offenders were generally kept in the same prisons as adults,
albeit in separate barracks. Police often did not segregate detainees
from convicted criminals. Mentally ill prisoners usually lacked adequate
care and were not segregated from the general prison population (see
section 5).
There were reports of
prison riots. On May 12, inmates took control of the Sukkur central
jail, holding the assistant superintendent and eight security guards
hostage. The inmates were protesting prison guards' alleged theft of
valuables. Police called in to quell the uprising fired on the inmates,
killing 1 prisoner and injuring 26. The Punjab unspector general of
prisons ordered a probe into the incident. On June 24, inmates at the
Sargodha jail took two assistant superintendents and four warders
hostage to protest mistreatment. In the ensuing clash, nine inmates and
one guard suffered injuries. One of the inmates later died from injuries
sustained during the riot.
Authorities established
special women's police stations with all female staff in response to
complaints of custodial abuse of women, including rape. The government's
National Commission on the Status of Women claimed the stations did not
function effectively in large part due to a lack of resources. Court
orders and regulations prohibit male police from interacting with female
suspects, but male police often detained and interrogated women at
regular stations. According to women's rights NGOs, there were
approximately 3,389 women in jail nationwide at year's end.
The Supreme Court
indefinitely suspended a December 2004 Lahore High Court ruling that
struck down the Juvenile Justice System Ordinance as unconstitutional.
The ordinance is a separate procedural code for juveniles that provides
numerous protections for juvenile offenders not found in the normal
penal code. Authorities subjected children in prison to the same harsh
conditions, judicial delay, and mistreatment as the adult population.
Local NGOs estimated that 3,430 children were in prison at year's end.
Child offenders could alternatively be sent to one of two residential
reform schools in Karachi and Bahawalpur until they reached the age of
majority. Abuse and torture reportedly also occurred at these
facilities. Nutrition and education were inadequate. Family members were
forced to pay bribes to visit children or bring them food. Facility
staff reportedly trafficked drugs to children incarcerated in these
institutions.
Landlords in Sindh and
tribes in rural areas operated illegalprivate jails.
The government permitted
visits to prisoners and detainees by human rights monitors, family
members, and lawyers with some restrictions (see section 1.d.). Visits
by local human rights monitors occurred during the year; however, the
government denied the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
access to alleged terrorist detainees.
d.
Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
The law prohibits
arbitrary arrest and detention; however, the authorities did not always
comply with the law.
Role of the Police and
Security Apparatus
Police have primary
internal security responsibilities. Under the Police Order (Second
Amendment) Ordinance promulgated on July 23, control of the police falls
under elected local district chief executives known as nazims.
Paramilitary forces such as the Rangers, the Frontier Corps and the
Frontier Constabulary, and the Islamabad Capital Territory Police fall
under the Ministry of the Interior. Provincial governments control the
paramilitary forces when they assist in law and order operations. During
some religious holidays, the government deployed the regular army in
sensitive areas to help maintain public order.
Police force
effectiveness varied greatly by district, ranging from reasonably good
to completely ineffective. Some members of the police force committed
numerous serious human rights abuses. Failure to punish abuses, however,
created a climate of impunity. Police and prison officials frequently
used the threat of abuse to extort money from prisoners and their
families. The inspector general, district police officer, district nazim,
provincial interior or chief ministers, federal interior or prime
minister, or the courts can order internal investigations into abuses
and order administrative sanctions. Executive branch and police
officials can recommend and the courts can order criminal prosecution.
Police failed in some instances to protect members of religious
minorities--particularly Christians, Ahmadis, and Shi'as--from societal
attacks (see sections 2.c. and 5).
Corruption within the
police was rampant. Police charged fees to register genuine complaints
and accepted money for registering false complaints. Bribes to avoid
charges were commonplace. Persons paid police to humiliate their
opponents and avenge their personal grievances. Corruption was most
prominent amongst station house officers (SHO), some of whom reportedly
operated arrest for ransom operations and established unsanctioned
stations to increase illicit revenue collection.
The government initiated
regular training and retraining of police at all levels, both in
technical skills and human rights. President Musharraf reissued and
amended the 2002 Police Order on July 23, which transfers oversight
responsibility of police from provinces to districts and establishes the
district-level chief executive as principal supervisor. The order also
calls for the immediate establishment of local oversight bodies that
have been stalled since 2002. The government argued that these reforms
would make police more responsive to the local community. Opponents
charged that they would politicize the police force.
Arrest and Detention
A First Information
Report (FIR) is the legal basis for all arrests. Police may issue FIRs
provided complainants offer reasonable proof that a crime was committed.
A FIR allows police to detain a named suspect for 24 hours, after which
only a magistrate can order detention for an additional 14 days, and
then only if police show such detention is material to the
investigation. In practice the authorities did not fully observe these
limits on detention. FIRs were frequently issued without supporting
evidence as part of harassment or intimidation. Police routinely did not
seek magistrate approval for investigative detention and often held
detainees without charge until a court challenged them. Incommunicado
detention occurred (see section 1.c.). When asked, magistrates usually
approved investigative detention without reference to its necessity. In
cases of insufficient evidence, police and magistrates colluded to
continue detention beyond the 14-day period provided in the law through
the issuance of new FIRs. The police sometimes detained individuals
arbitrarily without charge or on false charges to extort payment for
their release. Some women continued to be detained arbitrarily and were
sexually abused (see sections 1.c. and 5). Police also detained
relatives of wanted criminals to compel suspects to surrender (see
section 1.f.). Courts appointed attorneys for indigents only in capital
cases. In some cases persons had to pay bribes to see a prisoner.
Foreign diplomats could meet with prisoners when they appear in court
and may meet with citizens of their countries in prison visits. Local
human rights activists reported few restrictions to their access to
prisons.
The district
coordinating officer may order preventive detention for up to 90 days;
however, human rights monitors reported instances in which prisoners
were held in preventive detention for up to 6 months. Human rights
organizations charged that a number of individuals alleged to
beaffiliated with terrorist organizations were held in preventive
detention indefinitely. A magistrate may permit continued detention for
up to 14 days if necessary to complete the investigation. In corruption
cases, the National Accountability Board (NAB) may hold suspects
indefinitely, provided judicial concurrence is granted every 15 days
(see section 1.e.).
The law stipulates that
detainees must be brought to trial within 30 days of their arrest. Under
both the Hudood and standard criminal codes, there were bailable and
non-bailable offenses. Bail pending trial is required for bailable
offenses and permitted at a court's discretion for non-bailable offenses
with sentences of less than 10 years. In practice judges denied bail at
the request of police, the community, or on payment of bribes. In many
cases trials did not start until six months after the filing of charges,
and in some cases individuals remained in pretrial detention for periods
longer than the maximum sentence for the crime for which they were
charged. Human rights NGOs estimated that 45 to 50 percent of the prison
population was awaiting trial.
As in previous years the
government used preventive detention, mass arrests, and excessive force
to quell or prevent protests, political rallies, or civil unrest (see
section 2.b.).
Several dozen Mohajir
Quami Movement-Haqiqi (MQM-H) activists, arrested between 1999 and 2003,
remained in custody at year's end, some without charge.
According to human
rights monitors, 33 percent of the female prison population was awaiting
trial on adultery related offenses under the Hudood Ordinances. Most of
these cases were filed without supporting evidence, trials often took
years, and bail was routinely denied.
Special rules apply to
cases brought by the NAB or before antiterrorist courts. Suspects in NAB
cases may be detained for 15 days without charge (renewable with
judicial concurrence) and, prior to being charged, are not allowed
access to counsel. Accountability courts may not grant bail; the NAB
chairman has sole power to decide if and when to release detainees.
Antiterrorist courts do not grant bail if the court has reasonable
grounds to believe that the accused is guilty. Security forces may
without reference to the courts restrict the activities of terrorist
suspects, seize their assets, and detain them for up to a year without
charges.
On June 9, the
government assigned a security detail to Mukhtiar Mai (aka Mukhtaran
Bibi), at her request. Ms. Mukhtiar was concerned for her safety
following the court ordered release of five men convicted in her 2002
gang rape that a village council had ordered because of an alleged
infraction committed by her brother. Human rights groups claimed that
when the government learned Ms. Mukhtiar wished to travel abroad to
speak publicly of her experience, the protection detail controlled her
movements and communication,such that she was under virtual house
arrest. Ms. Mukhtiar was temporarily placed on the Exit Control List (ECL),
which barred her from leaving the country. By year's end the government
removed her name from the ECL, allowing travel outside of the country
(see sections 1.e., 1.f., 2.a., 2.d., and 5).
e.
Denial of Fair Public Trial
The law provides for an
independent judiciary; however, in practice the judiciary remained
subject to executive branch influence at all levels. Lower courts
remained corrupt, inefficient, and subject to pressure from prominent
religious and political figures. The politicized nature of judicial
promotions enhanced the government's control over the court system.
Unfulfilled judgeships and inefficient court procedures resulted in
severe backlogs at both trial and appellate levels. In nonpolitical
cases, the high courts and Supreme Court were generally considered
credible.
There are several court
systems with overlapping and sometimes competing jurisdictions:
criminal, civil and personal status, terrorism, commercial, family; and
military.
Trial Procedures
The civil, criminal, and
family court systems provide for an open trial, the presumption of
innocence, cross-examination by an attorney, and appeal of sentences.
There are no jury trials. Due to the limited number of judges, heavy
backlog of cases, lengthy court procedures, and political pressures,
cases routinely took years, and defendants had to make frequent court
appearances. Cases start over when an attorney changes.
The Anti-Terrorist Act
allows the government to use special streamlined courts to try violent
crimes, terrorist activities, acts or speech designed to foment
religious hatred, and crimes against the state. Cases brought before
these courts are to be decided within seven working days, but judges are
free to extend the period as required. Under normal procedures, the high
and supreme courts hear appeals from these courts. Human rights
activists have criticized this expedited parallel system, charging it is
more vulnerable to political manipulation.
Special accountability
courts try corruption cases (see section 1.d.), including defaults on
government loans by wealthy debtors, brought by the NAB. The NAB has not
targeted genuine business failures or small defaulters. Accountability
courts are expected to try cases within 30 days. In accountability
cases, there is a presumption of guilt.
Despite government
claims that NAB cases pursued independently of an individual's political
affiliation, opposition politicians were more likely to be prosecuted
(see section 1.d.). The NAB prosecuted no serving members of the
military or judiciary.
At the trial level,
ordinary criminal courts hear cases involving violations of the Hudood
ordinances, which criminalize nonmarital rape (see section 5),
extramarital sex, gambling, alcohol, and property offenses. The Hudood
ordinances set strict standards of evidence, which discriminate between
men and women and Muslims and non-Muslims, for cases in which Koranic
punishments are to be applied (see sections 1.c. and 5). For Hudood
cases involving the lesser secular penalties, different weight is given
to male and female testimony in matters involving financial obligations
or future commitments.
The Supreme Court's
March 14 ruling in the Mukhtiar Bibi gang rape case refined appellate
proceedings in Hudood cases. The law terms the Federal Shariat Court the
court of first appeal in all Hudood cases that result in a sentence of
more than two years. The Supreme Court, however, determined that in
cases where a provincial high court decides to hear an appeal in a
Hudood case, even in error, the Federal Shariat Court lacks authority to
review the provincial high court's decision. The Shari'a bench of the
Supreme Court is the final court of appeal for federal shariat court
cases. The March 14 ruling, however, allows the full Supreme Court to
bypass the Shari'a bench and assume jurisdiction in such appellate cases
in its own right. The Federal Shariat Court may overturn legislation
that it judges to be inconsistent with Islamic tenants, but such cases
are appealed to the Shari'a bench of the Supreme Court and under the new
rules may ultimately be finally heard by the full Supreme Court.
The law allows for the
victim or his/her family to pardon criminal defendants in exchange for
monetary restitution (diyat) or physical restitution (qisas).
While diyat was invoked, particularly in the North West Frontier
Province (NWFP) and in honor cases in Sindh, qisas have never
been used.
The FATA have a separate
legal system, the Frontier Crimes Regulation, which recognizes the
doctrine of collective responsibility. Authorities are empowered to
detain fellow members of a fugitive's tribe or to blockade a fugitive's
village, pending his surrender or punishment by his own tribe. Tribal
leaders are responsible for justice in the FATA. They conduct hearings
according to Islamic law and tribal custom. The accused have no right to
legal representation, bail, or appeal. The usual penalties consisted of
fines. Federal civil servants assigned to tribal agencies oversee
proceedings and may impose prison terms of up to 14 years.
Feudal landlords in
Sindh and Punjab and tribal leaders in Pashtun and Baloch areas
continued to hold jirgas in defiance of the established legal system.
Such jirgas, particularly prevalent in rural areas, settled feuds and
imposed tribal penalties on perceived wrongdoers that could include
fines, imprisonment, or even the death sentence. In Pashtun areas, such
jirgas were held under the outlines of the Pashtun Tribal Code. Under
this code, a man, his family, and his tribe are obligated to take
revenge for wrongs--either real or perceived--to redeem their honor.
Frequently these disputes arose over women and land and often resulted
in violence (see section 5). At year's end the Supreme Court was in the
process of hearing an appeal of the death sentence imposed on five
suspects in the 2002 gang rape of Mukhtiar Bibi in Meerwalla (see
section 5).
Political Prisoners
Some political groups
claimed their members were marked for arrest based on their political
affiliation (see sections 1.c. and 1.d.). Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz
(PML-N) leader Javed Hashmi remained in jail, having been convicted on
sedition charges in 2004. Appeals were ongoing at year's end.
f. Arbitrary
Interference With Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The law requires
court-issued search warrants for property but not persons, in most
cases; however, police routinely ignored this requirement and at times
stole items during searches. Police were seldom punished for illegal
entry. In cases being pursued under the Anti-Terrorist Act, security
forces were allowed to search and seize property related to the case
without a warrant.
The government
maintained several domestic intelligence services that monitored
politicians, political activists, suspected terrorists, and suspected
foreign intelligence agents. Despite a supreme court order, credible
reports indicated that the authorities routinely used wiretaps and
intercepted and opened mail without the requisite court approval.
In accordance with the
Anti-Terrorist Act, the government banned the activities of and
membership in several religious extremist and terrorist groups. However,
many of the groups that the government banned still remained active.
While the government
generally did not interfere with the right to marry, local officials on
occasion assisted influential families to prevent marriages the families
opposed. The government also failed to prosecute vigorously cases in
which families punished members (generally women) for marrying or
seeking a divorce against the wishes of other family members. Upon
conversion to Islam, women's marriages performed under the rites of
their previous religion were considered dissolved, while the marriages
of men who converted remained intact (see section 2.c.).
In some cases,
authorities detained relatives to force a family member who was the
recipient of an arrest warrant to surrender (see section 1.d.).
Section 2
Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech
and Press
The lawprovides for
freedom of speech and of the press, and citizens generally were free to
discuss public issues; however, journalists were intimidated and others
practiced self-censorship.
There were numerous
English and Urdu daily and weekly newspapers and magazines. All were
independent. The Ministry of Information controls and manages the
country's primary wire service, the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP),
which is the official carrier of government and international news to
the local media. The few small privately owned wire services practiced
self-censorship. Foreign magazines and newspapers were available, and
many maintained in-country correspondents who operated freely.
Newspapers were free to
criticize the government, and most did. Condemnation of government
policies and harsh criticism of political leaders and military
operations were common. However, the government engaged in retribution
against some papers critical of it or its policies. On May 21, the
government banned federal government advertising in Nawa-I-Waqt
and The Nation. Provincial and local governments were free to
advertise in those papers and did. The ban was lifted on August 22. In
June the Sindh provincial government banned provincial government
advertising in papers run by the Dawn Group, owing to its critical
coverage of a financial scandal involving the chief minister.
The government directly
owned and controlled Pakistan Television and Radio Pakistan, the only
free national electronic broadcasters. The semiprivate Shalimar
Television Network, in which the government held majority ownership,
expanded its broadcast range during the year. All three reflected
government views in news coverage. Private cable and satellite channels
Geo, ARY, Indus, and Khyber all broadcast domestic news coverage and
were critical of the government. Cable and satellite television with
numerous international news stations was generally affordable. Private
radio stations existed in major cities, but their licenses prohibited
news programming. Some channels evaded this restriction through talk
shows, although they were careful to avoid most domestic political
discussions. International radio broadcasts, including from the BBC and
the Voice of America, were available.
The government arrested,
harassed, and intimidated journalists during the year. For example, on
July 18, military police detained European documentary filmmakers Leon
Flamholc, David Flamholc, and Tahir Shah in Peshawar on charges of
filming military installations. On August 3, following questioning,
Pakistani officials deported all three, who denied filming any military
installations and claimed that the military treated them inhumanely
during their confinement, denying them contact with their embassies and
families. On July 24, police detained Rashid Channa, a senior reporter
with the Star in Karachi, ostensibly on the orders of the Sindh
chief minister and held him for more than 12 hours. Channa had written
several stories critical of the chief minister and his cabinet.
On March 25, a special
antiterrorism Court in Quetta cleared journalist Khawar Mehdi Rizvi of
all charges connected with his 2004 arrest. There were no other updates
in 2004 cases.
Militant and extremist
groups also killed, harassed, and physically assaulted journalists. For
example, on January 19, a group of 30 Islamist youths attacked the
offices of the Jang group of newspapers and the Geo TV offices in
Karachi, damaging furniture, equipment, and vehicles and injuring a
security guard. The youth were ostensibly angered by an interview with
Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres published in Jang, as
well as a Geo TV talk show on sexuality. On February 7, militants
ambushed and killed journalists Amir Nawab Khan and Allah Noor Wazir
near Wana, South Waziristan, and woundedjournalist Anwar Shakir. On
December 5, unknown assailants kidnapped journalist Hayatullah Khan from
North Waziristan. Khan remained missing at year's end (see section
1.d.).
Unlike in previous years, the government did not directly or indirectly
censor the media. Media outlets, however, continued to practice
self-censorship.
Although visa
restrictions on Indian journalists have beenrelaxed, on July 22,
immigration authorities denied entry to Indian journalist Harider Baweja
at Lahore International Airport despite her possession of a valid visa.
She claimed that immigration officials told her that she was on a
blacklist. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied this assertion.
The Anti-Terrorist Act
prohibits the possession or distribution of material designed to foment
sectarian hatred or material obtained from banned organizations. As part
of the government's crackdown on extremists, President Musharraf ordered
police to take action against radical publications. For example, on July
15, police in Karachi arrested two managers of the extremist weekly
Zarab-e-Islam and vendors of the extremist weekly Zarb-e-Momen,
banned publications which openly support terrorist groups. On July 19,
Karachi police banned the extremist weekly papers Friday Special,
Wajood, and Ghazi, and the extremist daily newspaper
Ummat, and arrested Wajood's editor and Friday Special's
deputy editor for promoting extremist views. All those arrested in
the Karachi raids were released on bail but faced charges under the
Anti-Terrorist Act at year's end.
Court rulings mandate
the death sentence for anyone blaspheming against the "prophets." The
law provides for life imprisonment for desecrating the Koran and up to
10 years in prison for insulting another's religious beliefs with the
intent to outrage religious feelings (see section 2.c.). On August 7,
the Punjab provincial government ordered two Ahmadi printing presses in
Jhang, Punjab, shut down. Police took the editor of the Ahmaddiya
community magazine al-Fazl, Sami Khan, into protective custody
and later released him. The move followed complaints from a local
Islamic leader that the publications insulted the religious sentiments
of Muslims. The provincial Home Department ultimately gave permission
for the presses to reopen. Foreign books must pass government censors
before being reprinted. Books and magazines may be imported freely but
are subject to censorship for objectionable sexual or religious content.
Obscene literature, a
category broadly defined by the government, was subject to seizure.
Television stations broadcast dramas and documentaries on previously
taboo subjects, including corruption, social privilege, narcotics,
violence against women, and female inequality; however, some sensitive
series were canceled before their broadcast.
Unlike in previous
years, there were no reports that the government limited access to the
Internet.
The government generally
did not restrict academic freedom; however, the atmosphere of violence
and intolerance fostered by student organizations, typically tied to
political parties, continued to limit academic freedom. On some
university campuses, well-armed groups of students,most commonly
associated with the All Pakistan Mohajir Students Organization (APMSO)
(affiliated with the MQM) and the Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT)(affiliated
with the JI), had clashes with and intimidated other students,
instructors, and administrators over issues such as language, syllabus
content, examination policies, grades, doctrines, and dress. These
groups frequently facilitated cheating on examinations, interfered with
the hiring of staff, influenced those admitted to the universities, and
sometimes also influenced the use of funds of the institutions. Such
influence generally was achieved through a combination of protest
rallies, control of the campus media, and threats of mass violence. In
response, university authorities banned political activity on many
campuses, but with limited effect. For example, on February 14 and 15,
the APMSO and the IJT engaged in violent fights at the S.M. Arts and
Commerce College in Karachi. At least eight students were injured in the
riots. Police ultimately intervened, arresting as many as 36 students.
On September 28, the APMSO and IJT engaged in violent fights at the
Government City College in Gulberg, Karachi. Police injured at least 11
students in the violence.
b. Freedom of
Peaceful Assembly and Association
The law provides for
freedom "to assemble peacefully and without arms subject to any
reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the interest of public order,"
and freedom ofassociation, and the government generally observed these
rights, but with some restrictions.
Freedom of Assembly
While the government
allowed numerous opposition rallies and demonstrations to proceed during
the year, it refused permits for processions in urban areas. Ahmadis
have been prohibited from holding any conferences or gatherings since
1984 (see section 2.c.).
Police sometimes used
preventive detention and excessive force against demonstrators. In April
the government utilized mass preventive detention to prevent a planned
PPP procession in Lahore to mark the return of Asif Ali Zardari, husband
of Benazir Bhutto, from a trip to Dubai. Between April 14 and 16, police
detained approximately 10 thousand PPP office-holders, leaders, and
activists who attempted to make their way to Lahore for the planned
procession. On April 16, upon arrival in Lahore police officials
escorted Zardari from the commercial aircraft on which he was traveling
to his residence, effectively preventing the PPP from carrying out its
reception and procession. Following statements from PPP leaders that
they were planning a new procession for April 21, police in Lahore and
Faisalabad placed 200 activists in preventive detention. Police released
all those detained within one month of their arrest. On May 15, Lahore
police forcibly dispersed participants in a mixed-gender marathon that
the HRCP and the Joint Action Committee for People's Rights had
organized. The marathon was supposed to protest the Islamist disruption
of a similar event in Gujranwala. Police temporarily detained between 40
and 50 participants in the event. Many arrested suffered minor injuries.
The government claimed that it prohibited the marathon to prevent
violence from Islamist extremists. On May 21,following negotiations
between the organizers and the government, the event proceeded.
Extremists also
disrupted public gatherings. On April 3, several hundred activists
affiliated with the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (a coalition of Islamist
political parties) used petrol bombs, clubs, and bricks to attack
participants, organizers, spectators, and police at a mixed-gender
marathon in Gujranwala with. The activists torched 19 vehicles and
smashed windows in the stadium and adjacent buildings. Police used
batons, tear gas, and firing in the air to restore order. The clash
resulted in injuries to 15 persons. Police registered cases against more
than 100 activists affiliated with the MMA, including Maulana Qazi
Hamidullah, a member of the national assembly.
Unlike in previous
years, the authorities did not restrict the domestic movements of
leaders of religious political parties.
Freedom of
Association
The law provides for the
right of association subject to restriction by government ordinance and
law. NGOs were required to register with the government under the 1960
Cooperative Societies and Companies Ordinance. No prominent NGO reported
problems with the government over registrations during the year. Some
continued to operate without registering and were not prosecuted.
c.
Freedom of Religion
The law states that
adequate provisions shall be made for minorities to profess and practice
their religions freely; however, the government limited freedom of
religion. Islam is the state religion, and the constitution requires
that laws be consistent with Islam. All citizens were subject to certain
provisions of Shari'a, such as the blasphemy laws. Reprisals and threats
of reprisals against suspected converts from Islam occurred. Members of
religious minorities were subject to violence and harassment, and police
at times refused to prevent such actions or charge persons who committed
them. The president and the prime minister must be Muslim. The prime
minister, federal ministers, and ministers of state, as well as elected
members of the senate and national assembly (including non-Muslims),
must take an oath to "strive to preserve the Islamic ideology, which is
the basis for the creation of Pakistan" (see section 3).
Religious groups must be
approved and registered; there were no reports that the government
refused to register any group.
The law declares the
Ahmadi community, which considers itself a Muslim sect, to be a
non-Muslim minority. Ahmadis, who claimed their population was
approximately 2 million, were prohibited by law from engaging in any
Muslim practices, including using Muslim greetings, referring to their
places of worship as mosques, reciting Islamic prayers, and
participating in the Hajj or Ramadan fast. Ahmadis are prohibited from
proselytizing, holding gatherings, or distributing literature.
Government forms, including passport applications and voter registration
documents, require anyone wishing to be listed as a Muslim to denounce
the founder of the Ahmadi faith. In March the government reinstated the
religion column for machine readable passports (see section 2.d.).
Ahmadis were frequently discriminated against in government hiring and
in admission to government schools.
Complaints under the
blasphemy laws, which prohibit derogatory statements or action against
Islam, the Koran, or the prophets, were used to settle business or
personal disputes and harass religious minorities or reform-minded
Muslims. Most complaints were filed against the majority Sunni Muslim
community. Most blasphemy cases were ultimately dismissed at the
appellate level; however, the accused often remained in jail for years
awaiting a final verdict. Trial courts were reluctant to release on bail
or acquit blasphemy defendants for fear of violence from religious
extremist groups. On January 4, President Musharraf signed a bill into
law revising the complaint process and requiring senior police officials
to review such cases in an effort to eliminate spurious charges. During
the year there were 3 persons convicted and 5 acquitted under the
blasphemy laws and another 67 ongoing cases.
All religious groups
experienced bureaucratic delays and requests for bribes when attempting
to build houses of worship or obtain land. The government prevented
Ahmadis from building houses of worship.
Islamiyyat
(Islamic studies) is compulsory for all Muslim students in state-run
schools. Students of other faiths are exempt from such classes; however,
in practice teachers induced many non-Muslim students to complete
Islamic studies.
The Hindu community
faced harassment and demands for bribes from security forces,
particularly during tense periods in the relationship between Pakistan
and India.
Societal Abuses and
Discrimination
Sectarian violence
between Sunni and Shi'a extremists continued during the year. Attacks on
mosques and religious gatherings resulted in nearly 75 deaths (see
sections 1.a. and 5).
Christians and Ahmadis
were the targets of religious violence. For example, on March 28, five
gunmen opened fire on Christians leaving Easter services at a church in
Lahore, killing one and injuring seven. The motivation for the attack,
in which the police arrested two assailants, appeared to be a land
dispute between local Muslims and the Christian community. In April
unknown assailants kidnapped and killed Pastor Shamoon Babar and his
Catholic driver, Daniel Emmanuel. Police surmised that the two men had
been tortured and shot several times while bound; their bodies were left
on the Peshawar road. Police suspected that Babar's non religious
business activities were the motivating factor in the crime; however,
the All Pakistan Minorities Alliance (APMA) believed the killings to be
religiously motivated. On October 7, unidentified gunmen opened fire at
an Ahmadi worship service in Mong, Mandi Bahauddin, Punjab, killing 8
and wounding 14 (see section 1.a.).
On November 12,
following allegations that a Christian man had desecrated a Koran, an
angry mob burned five churches and damaged other Christian property in
Sangla Hill, Nankana Sahib District of Punjab. Throughout the evening of
November 11 and into the morning of November 12, local mosques used
their loudspeakers to incite the public to retaliatory action in
response to the alleged desecration. NGOs reported that local officials
took part in the announcements. At year's end 88 of the 200 persons
arrested under terrorism charges for their participation in the violence
remained in police custody.
Ahmadi leaders charged
that militant Sunni mullahs and their followers sometimes staged marches
through the streets of Rabwah, a predominantly Ahmadi town and spiritual
center in central Punjab. Backed by crowds of between 100 and 200
persons, the mullahs reportedly denounced Ahmadis and their founder,
creating a situation that sometimes led to violence. The Ahmadis claimed
that police generally were present during these marches but did not
intervene to prevent violence.
The Ahmadi, Christian,
Hindu, and Shi'a Muslim communities reported significant discrimination
in employment and access to education, including at government
institutions.
Although there were few
Jewish citizens in the country, anti-Semitic sentiments appeared to be
widespread, and the press commonly published anti-Semitic and
anti-Zionist press articles.
For a more detailed
discussion, see the
2005 International Religious Freedom Report.
.
d. Freedom of
Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and
Repatriation
The law provides for
these rights; however, the government limited them in practice. The
government required special permission to enter certain restricted
areas, including parts of the FATA.
The law prohibits travel
to Israel. Government employees and students must obtain "no objection"
certificates before traveling abroad, although this requirement rarely
was enforced against students. Persons on the publicly available ECL are
prohibited from foreign travel. There were approximately 4,300names on
the ECL. While the ECL was intended to prevent those with pending
criminal cases from traveling abroad, no judicial action is required to
add a name to the ECL. Those on the list have the right to appeal for
removal to the Secretary of Interior and the advocate general of the
senior judiciary. Courts have intervened to have opposition leaders
removed from the ECL.
The law prohibits forced
exile; however, former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his brother
Shahbaz Sharif remained in exile abroad, in accordance with his 2000
agreement with the government. On November 7, the government granted
Nawaz Sharif and his immediate family new passports, allowing them to
travel outside Saudi Arabia. Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto
remained in self-imposed exile. She faced a number of corruption and
contempt of court charges should she return to the country.
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)
According to press
reports there were approximately 1.5 million displaced Kashmiris, from
Indian-held Kashmir, in the country. Under the law, Kashmiris are
entitled to the same rights as citizens.
Protection of Refugees
The law does not provide
for the granting of asylum or refugee status in accordance with the 1951
UN Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol;
however, the government has a system to protect refugees. The government
provided protection against refoulement, the return of persons to
a country where they feared persecution. Since 1979 the government has
provided temporary protection to millions of refugees from neighboring
Afghanistan. According to a UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)/government
survey completed during the year, approximately 3 million Afghan
refugees remained in country. The government continued to work closely
with the UNHCR to provide support to this population. The government
cooperated with UNHCR in the voluntary repatriation of 365,575 Afghan
refugees during the year.
Police in some cases
demanded bribes from Afghan refugees. There were credible reports that
members of the intelligence community harassed refugees during their
search for al-Qa'ida. Some female refugees who accepted jobs with NGOs
reported harassment from Taliban sympathizers in their own community.
Refugees faced societal discrimination and abuse from local communities,
which resented economic competition, and blamed refugees for high crime
rates. Single women, female-headed households, and children working on
the streets were particularly vulnerable to abuse. Approximately 300
thousand Biharis, Urdu-speaking non-Bengali Muslims from Bangladesh,
continued to campaign for resettlement in the country.
Section 3
Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their
Government
The law provides
citizens with the right to change their government; however, this right
was restricted in practice. President Musharraf has controlled the
government since 1999 and dominated the PML federal coalition
government.
Elections and
Political Participation
Domestic and
international observers found the 2002 national assembly elections, the
most recent national elections, and the August local elections deeply
flawed.
Chief of Army Staff
General Pervez Musharraf assumed the presidency by decree in 2001
following his overthrow of the elected government of Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif in 1999. The Supreme Court later sanctioned the coup;
however, it directed Musharraf to restore elected government within
three years. In 2002 President Musharraf held a nationwide referendum on
a 5 year extension of his presidency and claimed to have received a 97.5
percent vote in favor of the referendum. However, independent observers
found evidence of widespread fraud and coerced voting. The Supreme Court
ruled that the referendum was constitutional; however, the court allowed
the results to be revisited by an elected parliament. In 2003 the
national assembly affirmed Musharraf as president until 2007.
Elections were held for
the national and provincial assemblies in 2002. Musharraf's Legal
Framework Order (LFO) created a number of new candidate eligibility
prerequisites. International and domestic observers found the elections
deeply flawed, identifying serious problems in the election framework
and tampering with results in certain districts. After a number of floor
crossings, which the opposition claim were induced, the PML formed a
governing coalition in concert with the MQM, smaller parties, and
dissident groups from opposition parties. The February 2003 indirect
senate elections resulted in a majority for the governing coalition. In
December 2003 the parliament incorporated a large part of the LFO into
the 1973 constitution as its 17th Amendment. The amendment affirms
Musharraf's presidency until 2007 and exempts him from a prohibition on
holding two offices of state until the end of 2004, thereby allowing him
to continue as chief of army staff. The amendment allows the president
to dissolve parliament but requires him to obtain the consent of the
Supreme Court within 30 days. Opposition parties said the amended
constitution legitimizes the powerful role of the military in politics
and transfers significant powers from the prime ministership to the
previously ceremonial presidency. In October 2004 the national assembly,
over objections from all opposition parties, approved a bill extending
Musharraf's exemption to hold two offices through 2007. In December 2004
Musharraf announced that he would continue as chief of army staff.
The national assembly
and the cabinet functioned normally during the year. In August 2004 the
national assembly elected the PML candidate, former Finance Minister
Shaukat Aziz, as prime minister, although all opposition parties
boycotted the vote because their candidate, PML-N leader Javed Hashmi,
was not allowed to appear at the assembly, having been convicted of
sedition. Opposition parties criticized Aziz's election to the national
assembly, claiming his two by-election victories to the assembly on
August 18 were fraudulent. Domestic and international observers found
irregularities but concluded the elections were generally free, fair,
and credible.
President Musharraf
continued to back reforms proposed by the National Reconstruction Bureau
to empower local governments. On August 18 and 25, the country held
direct local elections to choose members and executives for the lowest
tier of local government, the union council. International observers
found serious flaws in the contests in Sindh and Punjab provinces,
principally during the August 25 round. Intimidation of opposition
candidates and supporters, use of state resources to influence the
election, vote-buying, and voting irregularities that appeared to
benefit government-endorsed candidates occurred and likely had an impact
on the results of the August 18 contest in Karachi and the August 25
contests in Sindh and Punjab. On October 6, indirect elections for
executives of reserved minority and women's seats on the tehsil
and district councils occurred. International observers found that all
political parties engaged in attempted intimidation, coercion, and
vote-buying during these contests.
The government permitted
all existing political parties to function. The government forced the
PPP and PML-N to elect in-country leaders other than former prime
ministers Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif by refusing to register any
parties whose leaders had a court conviction. The amended Political
Parties Act bars any person from becoming prime minister for a third
time, effectively eliminating Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif.
The opposition claimed
the government continued to detain two of its leaders, Javed Hashmi and
Yousaf Raza Gilliani, on politically motivated charges during the year.
The government ban on
political party activities in the FATA continued. Candidates were not
allowed to register by political party, and political party rallies were
not allowed. Several political parties campaigned covertly during the
2002 national elections.
Inhabitants of the
northern areas (Gilgit, Hunza, and Baltistan) were not covered under the
constitution and had no representation in the federal legislature. An
appointed civil servant administered these areas; an elected Northern
Areas Council served in an advisory capacity. Members of the Azad Jammu
Kashmir assembly and government are required to claim allegiance to
Pakistan before they can stand in elections. Some Kashmiri political
parties advocating for an independent Kashmir were not allowed to stand
in elections.
There were 73 women in
the 342-seat national assembly, 5 women in the cabinet; and none in the
Supreme Court. Women have 60 reserved seats in the national assembly.
Women also have 128 reserved seats of the 758 seats in provincial
assemblies and one-third of the seats in local councils. In some
districts social and religious conservatives prevented women from
becoming candidates; however, in several districts female candidates
were elected unopposed. Women participated in large numbers in
elections, although some were dissuaded from voting by their families,
religious and tribal leaders, and social customs. The PML and PPP
prohibited their local leaders from entering into agreements that would
prevent women from standing for or voting in the local elections. The
ECP invalidated union council elections in parts of NWFP where women
were not allowed to vote. Provincial chief ministers named women to
serve in their cabinets.
There were 10 minorities
in the 342-seat legislature, 1 on the Supreme Court, and none in the
cabinet. All 10 minority members of the national assembly held reserved
religious minority seats. Such seats are apportioned to parties based on
the overall percentage of elected seats held in parliament. Previous
direct elections for minority seats were abolished. Under the law,
minorities held reserved seats in the provincial assemblies (see section
2.c.). The government required voters to indicate their religion when
registering.
Government Corruption
and Transparency
Corruption among
executive and legislative branch officials remained a problem during the
year, and public perception of corruption was widespread. The National
Accountability Ordinance prohibits those convicted of corruption by the
NAB from holding political office for 10 years (see section 1.d.). The
NAB disproportionately targeted opposition politicians for prosecution
and did not prosecute members of the military.
While fairly restrictive
regarding the information that citizens are entitled to, in 2002 a
Freedom of Information Ordinance became law. The ordinance's
effectiveness was unclear and there were no reports of citizens using
the act to get information declassified during the year.
Section 4 Governmental
Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental Investigation of
Alleged Violations of Human Rights
A wide variety of
domestic and international human rights groups generally operated
without government restriction, investigating and publishing their
findings on human rights cases. They are required to be registered,
although this requirement was not generally enforced. Government
officials often were cooperative and responsive to their views. Human
rights groups reported that they generally had good access to police
stations and prisons. The HRCP continued to investigate human rights
abuses and sponsor discussions on human rights issues during the year.
President Musharraf
criticized domestic women's rights organizations during the year. He
discouraged their efforts to publicize rape and sexual abuse cases with
the international community, claiming that such efforts damaged the
country's international image.
On May 14, police in
Lahore prevented several human rights organizations from holding a
symbolic mixed-gender mini-marathon to highlight violence against women,
as organizers did not have appropriate permits (see section 2.b.). In
the course of arresting those who refused to adhere to police
instructions to disperse, police hit Asma Jahangir, the UN Special
Rapporteur on Human Rights and head of the HRCP, with a baton and tore
off her shirt.
International observers
were permitted to visit the country and travel freely. The government
generally cooperated with international governmental human rights
organizations. The ICRC had a delegation in country.
The Senate and National
Assembly Standing Committees on Law, Justice, and Human Rights held
hearings on a number of issues, including honor crimes, police abuse of
the blasphemy law, and the Hudood Ordinance. While the committees served
as useful fora to raise public awareness of such issues, their final
actions generally adhered to government policy. The Parliamentarians
Commission for Human Rights, an interparty caucus of parliamentarians,
lobbied effectively for reform in key areas.
Section 5
Discrimination, Societal Abuses, and Trafficking in Persons
The law provides for
equality for all citizens and broadly prohibits discrimination based on
race, religion, caste, residence, or place of birth; however, in
practice there was significant discrimination based on these factors.
Women
Domestic violence was a
widespread and serious problem. Husbands frequently beat, and
occasionally killed, their wives, and often newly married women were
abused and harassed by their in-laws. Dowry and family-related disputes
often resulted in death or disfigurement through burning or acid. For
example in Peshawar on May 1, Anwar Khan killed his wife Rashida Bibi
after she refused to allow the sale of their daughter in marriage to an
Afghan national for approximately $836 (PKR 50 thousand). During the
year there were 134 cases of stove deaths, many of these related to
disputes with in-laws.
According to the HRCP,
one out of every two women was the victim of mental or physical
violence. The National Commission on the Status of Women has called for
specific domestic violence legislation. In its absence, abusers may be
charged with assault, but cases rarely were filed. Police and judges
were reluctant to take action in domestic violence cases, viewing it as
a family problem. Battered women were usually returned to their abusive
family members. Women were reluctant to pursue charges because of the
stigma attached to divorce and their economic and psychological
dependence on relatives. Relatives were reluctant to report abuse for
fear of dishonoring the family reputation.
The government
criticized violence against women. Its Crisis Center for Women in
Distress refers abused women to NGOs for assistance. During the year the
NGO Struggle for Change (SUCH), which operated a shelter for abused
women, provided rehabilitation assistance (shelter, employment
counseling, and legal aid) to 49 women. An additional 107 women received
legal or financial assistance from SUCH during the year. Provincial
governments operated shelters for women in distress at the district
level. In some cases, women were abused in the shelters. For example on
August 13, Kanwal fell from the roof of the shelter in Hyderabad while
trying to escape what other shelter residents reported were abusive
conditions. Kanwal died the next day. A preliminary inquiry charged the
night staff of the shelter with neglect for failing to provide adequate
first aid and for failing to summon medical assistance immediately.
Rape, other than by one's spouse, is a criminal offense. One cannot be
prosecuted for marital rape or for rape in cases where a marriage
between the perpetrator and victim has been contracted but not
solemnized. Although rape was widespread, prosecutions were rare. It is
estimated that rape victims reported less than one-third of rape cases
to the police. Police were at times implicated in the crime.
On May 3, police
allegedly abducted Sonia Naz and detained her for 10 to 12 days, during
which time she claimed that the SHO, Jamshed Chishti, raped her on the
orders of Abdullah Khalid, Faisalabad Superintendent of Police for
Investigation. On April 21, the speaker of the national assembly ordered
the arrest of Naz for illegally appearing on the floor of the house to
seek assistance for her husband, who the same police officials had
allegedly harassed in connection with an investigation into stolen
vehicles. The Speaker ultimately withdrew his complaint on October 7.
Police originally refused to file rape charges against the accused, but
following a Supreme Court order, on October 12, they arrested the
officers for rape. After an initial investigation into the rape incident
resulted in conflicting conclusions, including one accusing Naz of
falsifying the rape claim, the Supreme Court established a new
investigation team of more senior officials that began its work on
October 26. Courts cancelled initial bail for Abdullah and Chishti, and
the two men surrendered to police on October 18 and 19 respectively. In
September the Punjab chief minister suspended both from the police
force.
Many rape victims were
pressured to drop charges. Police and prosecutors often threatened to
charge a victim with adultery or fornication if she could not prove the
absence of consent, and there were cases in which rape victims were
jailed on such charges. The standard of proof for rape set out in the
Hudood Ordinances is based on whether the accused is to be subjected to
Koranic or secular punishment. In cases of Koranic punishment, which can
result in public flogging or stoning, the victim must produce four adult
male Muslim witnesses to the rape or a confession from the accused. No
Koranic punishment has ever been applied for rape. The standards of
proof are lower for secular punishment, which can include up to 25 years
in prison and 30 lashes. Such punishment was applied frequently. Courts,
police, and prosecutors at times refused to bring rape cases when
Koranic standards of evidence could not be met.
Police often abused or
threatened the victim, telling her to drop the case, especially when
bribed by the accused. Police requested bribes from some victims prior
to lodging rape charges, and investigations were often superficial.
Medical personnel were generally untrained in collection of rape
evidence and were at times physically or verbally abusive to victims,
accusing them of adultery or fornication. Women accused of adultery or
fornication were forced to submit to medical exams against their will,
even though the law requires their consent. Judges were reluctant to
convict rapists, applied varying standards of proof, and at times
threatened to convict the victim for adultery or fornication rather than
the accused for rape. Families and tribes at times killed rape victims
or encouraged them to commit suicide.
On January 2 in Sui,
Balochistan, an unknown person broke into the bedroom of and raped Dr.
Shazia Khalid, an employee of the Pakistan Petroleum Company. Dr. Shazia
was unable to identify her rapist, but Baloch nationalist leaders
claimed that frontier corps personnel committed the rape and accused the
government of a cover-up. The government maintained that DNA tests ruled
out thesuspect. In February a tribal jirga determined that Dr.
Shazia's rape had dishonored the tribe and that she should be murdered.
In March Dr. Shazia and her husband departed the country. At year's end
the government made no progress in the investigation.
On March 3, the Lahore
High Court overturned the conviction and death sentence of five of the
six persons convicted in the gang rape of Mukhtiar Bibi and commuted the
sentence of the 6th to 25 years in prison. On March 11, the Federal
Shariat Court stayed the high court ruling and ordered the defendants
released on bail while it reviewed the case. On March 13, the Supreme
Court issued a stay on both the high and shariat court rulings but
allowed the defendants to remain at large. In early June Mukhtiar
announced that she intended to travel overseas to address an
international women's rights conference. In response, the government, on
the order of President Musharraf, placed her on the ECL, pressured her
not to travel, and attempted to block her from obtaining necessary
visas. The prime minister ultimately removed Mukhtiar from the ECL on
June 15, although she did not travel. On June 28, the Supreme Court
decided that it would take jurisdiction of the gang rape case and
ordered the five convicted held without bail for the duration of the
trial. On the same day, the government ordered the eight originally
acquitted in the case held under the Maintenance of Public Order
Ordinance as a threat to Mukhtiar Bibi. In October Mukhtiar traveled
abroad without incident.
Husbands and male family
members often brought spurious adultery and fornication charges against
women under the Hudood Ordinances. Even when courts ultimately dismissed
charges, the accused spent months, sometimes years, in jail and saw her
reputation destroyed. The government's National Commission on the Status
of Women advocated the repeal of the Hudood Ordinances. On January 4,
President Musharraf signed a bill into law that requires senior police
officials to evaluate the merits of adultery and fornication allegations
and requires a court order before a woman can be arrested on such
charges. The percentage of the female prison population awaiting trial
on such Hudood charges declined significantly to approximately33
percent.
Honor killings and
mutilations occurred during the year (see section 1.a.). Women were
often the victims at the hands of their husbands or male relatives. No
accurate statistics exist on the number of honor crimes committed during
the year. However, human rights groups believed that such incidents were
fairly common, with the majority occurring in Sindh. The practice was
also common in Punjab and among tribes in Baluchistan, NWFP, and FATA.
On January 4, President Musharraf signed a bill into law that provides
for additional penalties for all crimes involving honor and restricts
the right of victims or heirs to pardon perpetrators in exchange for
restitution.
For example, on January
22, in Lahore, Riaz shot and killed his niece Aysha Javed after accusing
her of having sexual relations with her neighbor, Mahboob Khan. Riaz
also attacked Mahboob Khan's residence, killing his father Yaqoob Khan
and seriously injuring his two brothers. Police arrested Riaz and two
accomplices, all of whom remained in detention at year's end. On March
21, in Pathan Wah Village, Shikarpur District, Sindh, Yousif shot and
killed his new bride Arbeli two hours after their wedding ceremony. He
accused his wife of having had sexual relations with her cousin, Abdul
Sattar Mirbahar. Yousif and six alleged accomplices remained at large at
year's end.
The estimated 100
thousand Bohra Muslims practiced female genital mutilation (FGM). While
no statistics on the prevalence of FGM among the Bohras existed, the
practice reportedly declined.
Sexual harassment was a
widespread problem. While the Pakistan Penal Code prohibits harassment,
prosecution was rare.
Prostitution was not
legal. Most prostitutes were victims of either domestic or international
trafficking and were held against their will. Police raided brothels
during the year, but many continued to operate underground particularly
in larger cities.
The law prohibits
discrimination on the basis of sex; however, in practice this provision
was not enforced. Women faced discrimination in family law, property
law, and in the judicial system (see section 2.c.). The Hudood
Ordinances create judicial discrimination against women. Women's
testimony in cases involving proposed Koranic punishment was considered
invalid or discounted significantly. In other cases involving property
matters or questions of future obligations, a woman's testimony is equal
to half that of a man's testimony.
Family law provides
protections for women in cases of divorce, including requirements for
maintenance, and lays out clear guidelines for custody of minor children
and their maintenance. Many women were unaware of these legal
protections or unable to obtain legal counsel to enforce them. Divorced
women were often left with no means of support and were ostracized by
their families. While prohibited by law, the practice of buying and
selling brides continued in rural areas. Women are legally free to marry
without family consent, but women who did so were often ostracized or
were the victims of honor crimes.
Inheritance law
discriminates against women. Female children are entitled to only half
the inheritance of male children. Wives inherit only one-eighth of their
husband's estate. Women often received far less than their legal
inheritance entitlement. In rural Sindh landowning families continued
the practice of "Koranic marriages" in an effort to avoid division of
property. Property of women married to the Koran remains under the legal
control of their father or eldest brother, and such women are prohibited
from contact with any male over 14 years of age.
Women faced significant
discrimination in employment and were frequently paid less than men for
similar work. In many rural areas of the country, strong societal
pressure prevented women from working outside the home. Some tribes
continued the traditional practice of sequestering women from all
contact with males other than relatives.
The government's
Ministry for the Advancement of Women lacked sufficient staff and
resources to function effectively. Continuing government inaction in
filling vacant seats on the National Commission for the Status of Women
hampered its efficacy. During visits to New Zealand in June and the
United States in September, President Musharraf criticized domestic and
international women's organizations for highlighting the issue of rape
and violence against women in the country. In an interview with the
Washington Post, the president stated that rape was becoming a
"money making concern," and "a lot of people say that if you want to go
abroad and get a visa from Canada or citizenship and be a millionaire,
get yourself raped." He made similar remarks during a
government-sponsored conference on women's rights in Islamabad in
September.
Numerous women's rights
groups such as the Progressive Women's Association, Struggle for Change,
and Aurat Foundation were active in urban areas. Primary issues of
concern included domestic violence, the Hudood Ordinances, and honor
crimes.
Children
The government does not
demonstrate a strong commitment to children's rights and welfare through
its laws and programs. There is no federal law on compulsory education.
Public education is free; however, fees were charged for books,
supplies, and uniforms. Public schools, particularly beyond the primary
grades, were not available in many rural areas, leading parents to use
the parallel private Islamic school (madrassa) system. In urban
areas many parents sent children to private schools due to the lack of
facilities and poor quality of education offered by the public system.
According to a foreign
aid organization, of the 18 million children between the ages of 5 and
9, only 42 percent were in school. Less than half of children who
enrolled completed more than five years of education. Out of every 100
children who enrolled, only 6 completed grade 12. The national literacy
rate of 38 percent showed a significant gap between males (50 percent)
and females (24 percent) due to historical discrimination against
educating girls. While anecdotal evidence suggested increasing female
participation in education, such discrimination continued, particularly
in rural areas. The UN estimated that 7 thousand of the 12 thousand
schools in the affected areas were destroyed or damaged beyond repair in
the October 8 earthquake.
Madrassas served as an
alternative to the public school system in many areas. Many madrassas
failed to provide an adequate education, focusing solely on Islamic
studies. Graduates were often unable to find employment. A few madrassas,
particularly in the Afghan border area, reportedly continued to teach
religious extremism and violence. The government continued its efforts
to modernize madrassa education during the year. An agreement was
reached with the country's 5 independent madrassa boards to register the
85 percent of madrassas under their control and to introduce a modern
educational curriculum. Government funding has been allocated in the
budget to assist with teacher training.
At the vast majority of
madrassas, students were reasonably well treated. However, press reports
claimed that there were some madrassas where children were confined
illegally, kept in unhealthy conditions, and physically or sexually
abused.
Child health care
services remained seriously inadequate. According to the National
Institute of Child Health Care, more than 70 percent of deaths between
birth and the age of 5 years were caused by easily preventable ailments
such as diarrhea and malnutrition. While boys and girls had equal access
to government facilities, families were more likely to seek medical
assistance for boys. Children were also the most affected by the October
8 earthquake, where the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) estimated that half
of the 73 thousand deaths were children. NGOs estimated that
approximately 2 million children were adversely affected in the NWFP and
the Azad Jammu Kashmir quake zone.
Child abuse was
widespread. According to child rights NGOs, abuse was most common within
families. In rural areas, poor parents sold children as bonded laborers
(see section 6.d.) and at times sold daughters to be raped by landlords.
The legal age of marriage for males is 18, and 16 for females, and there
are no provisions to allow marriages at a lower legal age with parental
consent. No credible statistics were available on the frequency of child
marriage, but NGOs agreed that it was a problem, especially in the Dir
and Swat districts of the NWFP, where the sale or trading of girls as
young as 11 into marriage was reportedly common practice among the
Pashtun subtribes.
Trafficking and
commercial sexual exploitation were problems (see section 5,
Trafficking).
Child labor was a
significant problem (see section 6.d.).
NGOs like Sahil, Sparc,
and Rozan worked on child labor, child sexual abuse, and child
trafficking. NGOs played an important role in providing counseling and
medical services to victims and in raising awareness of these problems.
Trafficking in
Persons
The law prohibits
trafficking in persons; however, trafficking was a serious problem. All
forms of trafficking are prohibited under the Prevention and Control of
Human Trafficking, Ordinance 2002, and maximum penalties range from 7 to
14 years' imprisonment plus fines. The government arrested 513 suspected
traffickers and prosecuted 179 under the ordinance during the year. The
Federal Investigation Agency's (FIA) dedicated ATU had primary
responsibility for combating trafficking. An Inter-Ministerial Committee
on Human Trafficking and Smuggling coordinated federal efforts. The
government assisted other countries with international investigations of
trafficking.
Although no accurate
statistics on trafficking existed, the country was a source, transit,
and destination country for trafficked persons. Women and girls were
trafficked from Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Iran, Burma, Nepal, and Central
Asia for forced commercial sexual exploitation and bonded labor in the
country based on erroneous promises of legitimate jobs. In a similar
fashion, men and women were trafficked from the country to the Middle
East to work as bonded laborers or in domestic servitude. Upon arrival,
both groups had passports confiscated and were forced to work to pay off
their transportation debt. Families continued to sell young boys between
ages 3 and 10 for use as camel jockeys in Middle Eastern countries,and
authorities estimated that there were between two to three thousand
child citizens in the UAE being used as camel jockeys. Women and
children from rural areas were trafficked to urban centers for
commercial sexual exploitation and labor. In some cases families sold
these victims into servitude, while in other cases they were kidnapped.
Women were trafficked from East Asian countries and Bangladesh to the
Middle East via the country. Traffickers bribed police and immigration
officials to facilitate passage. During the year authorities prosecuted
governmental officers and arrested FIA inspectors.A complete tally of
such actions was not available.
The government rescued
some kidnapped victims. The Overseas Pakistani Foundation and the Ansar
Burney Welfare Trust repatriated 13,967 citizens trafficked to the
Middle East. Of these, 147 were camel jockeys from the UAE and 10,584
were laborers from Oman. In March the government opened its first model
shelter specifically for trafficking victims. There were 276 additional
district-run emergency centers for women in distress where they were
sheltered and given access to medical treatment, limited legal
representation, and some vocational training. The government provided
temporary residence status to foreign trafficking victims. The FIA and
the International Organization for Migration held training and seminars
on trafficking for government officials and NGOs during the year. The
Interior Minister personally was engaged in such efforts. Very few NGOs
dealt specifically with trafficking; however, many local and provincial
NGOs provided shelter to victims of trafficking and those at risk for
trafficking.
With the establishment
of a dedicated ATU, treatment of trafficking victims improved
significantly. Unlike in previous years, there were no reports of police
treating trafficking victims as criminals or threatening them with
prosecution for adultery or fornication. Foreign victims, particularly
Bangladeshis, faced difficulties in obtaining repatriation to their home
countries. Women trafficked abroad and sexually exploited faced societal
discrimination on their repatriation.
Several NGOs held
workshops on trafficking during the year, and the government and NGOs
worked to publicize the plight of camel jockeys and discourage the
continuation of the practice.
Persons with Disabilities
The government has not
enacted legislation or otherwise mandated access to buildings or
government services for persons with disabilities. Families cared for
the vast majority of persons with physical and mental disabilities.
However, in some cases these individuals were forced into begging, and
organized criminals took much of the proceeds. There is a legal
provision requiring public and private organizations to reserve at least
2 percent of their jobs for qualified persons with disabilities.
Organizations that do not wish to hire persons with disabilities instead
can give a certain amount of money to the government treasury, which
uses funds for persons with disabilities. This obligation was rarely
enforced. The National Council for the Rehabilitation of the Disabled
provided some job placement and loan facilities. Mentally ill prisoners
normally lacked adequate care and were not segregated from the general
prison population (see section 1.c.).
Other
Societal Abuses and Discrimination
Homosexual intercourse
is a criminal offence; however, the government rarely prosecuted cases.
Homosexuals did not
reveal openly their sexual orientation, and there were no allegations
during the year of discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
Those suffering from
HIV/AIDS faced broad societal discrimination. While the government has
launched education and prevention campaigns, these have done little to
protect victims.
The Shi'a, Christian,
Hindu, and Ahmadi communities all faced discrimination and societal
violence (see section 2.c.).
Section 6
Worker Rights
a. The Right of
Association
The Industrial Relations
Ordinance (IRO) provides industrial workers the right to form trade
unions. The Essential Services Maintenance Act (ESMA), which applies to
the security forces, most of the civil service, health care workers, and
safety and security personnel at petroleum companies, airports, and
seaports, was often invoked to limit or ban strikes or curtail
collective bargaining rights. Agricultural workers, nonprofit workers,
and teachers, among others, are not afforded the right to unionize.
According to government estimates, union members were approximately 10
percent of the industrial labor force and 3 percent of the total
estimated work force; however, unions claimed that the number of union
members was underestimated.
b. The Right to
Organize and Bargain Collectively
In those sectors covered
by the IRO, the government allowed unions to conduct their activities
without interference. The IRO protects the right to collective
bargaining subject to restrictions but limits the right of unions to
strike. The IRO allows only one union to serve as the collective
bargaining agent within a given establishment, group of establishments,
or industry. In cases where more than one union exists, the IRO
establishes a secret balloting procedure to determine which union shall
be registered as agent.
Legally required
conciliation proceedings and cooling-off periods constrain the right to
strike, as does the government's authority to end any strike that may
cause "serious hardship to the community," prejudice the national
interest, or has continued for 30 days. The government can and has
prohibited all strikes by public utility services under the IRO. The law
prohibits employers from seeking retribution against leaders of a legal
strike and stipulates fines for offenders. The law does not protect
leaders of illegal strikes.
Several small strikes
occurred during the year. For example in May and June, Pakistan
Telecommunications workers' unions held brief nationwide strikes to
protest privatization of the company. The strikes ceased after
negotiations with the government.
National labor laws
require the government to determine every six months whether collective
bargaining is to be allowed. In cases where collective bargaining was
prohibited, special wage boards decided wage levels. Such boards were
established at the provincial level and were composed of representatives
from industry, labor, and the provincial labor ministry. Unions
generally were dissatisfied with the boards' findings. Disputes were
adjudicated before the National Industrial Relations Commission.
The estimated 12,500
employees working in Pakistan's three Export Processing Zones (EPZs) are
exempted by the ESMA from the protection and right to form trade unions
provided by the IRO. The Export Processing Zone Authority drafts labor
laws within the EPZs.
c. Prohibition of
Forced or Compulsory Labor
The law prohibits forced
or bonded labor, including by children; however, the government did not
enforce these prohibitions effectively. The Bonded Labor System
Abolition Act (BLAA) outlaws bonded labor, cancels all existing bonded
debts, and forbids lawsuits for the recovery of such debts. The act
makes bonded labor by children punishable by up to 5 years in prison and
up to $833 (PKR 50 thousand) in fines.
Realistic statistics on
bonded labor were difficult to obtain. Estimates suggested that 5 to 20
million persons were involved in some form of bonded labor, which was
common in the brick, glass, carpet, and fishing industries. In rural
areas, particularly in the Tharparkar District of Sindh, bonded labor in
the agricultural and construction sectors was fairly widespread. A large
proportion of bonded laborers were low caste Hindus, or Muslim and
Christian descendants of low-caste Hindus. Bonded laborers were often
unable to determine when their debts were fully paid. Those who escaped
often faced retaliation from former employers. Some bonded laborers
returned to their former status after being freed due to a lack of
alternative livelihoods. Although the police arrested violators of the
law against bonded labor, many such individuals bribed the police to
release them. Human rights groups reported that landlords in rural Sindh
maintained as many as 50 private jails housing approximately 4,500
bonded laborers. Ties between such landlords and influential politicians
hampered effective elimination of bonded labor.
d. Prohibition of
Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
The government has
adopted laws and promulgated policies to protect children from
exploitation in the workplace; however, enforcement of child labor laws
was lax, and child labor was a serious problem. The Ministry of Labor
has identified 35 hazardous forms of child labor, including street
vending, surgical instrument manufacturing, deep-sea fishing, leather
manufacturing, brick making, and carpet weaving, among others. Child
labor in agriculture and domestic work was also common.
Forced and bonded labor,
sexual exploitation, and the trafficking of children occurred (see
section 5).
The Employment of
Children Act prohibits the employment of children under age 14 years in
factories, mines, and other hazardous occupations and regulates their
conditions of work. For example no child is allowed to work overtime or
at night; however, there were few child labor inspectors in most
districts, and the inspectors often had little training, insufficient
resources, and were susceptible to corruption. By law inspectors may not
inspect facilities that employ less than 10 persons, where most child
labor occurs.
Hundreds of convictions
were obtained for violations of child labor laws, but low fines levied
by the courts--ranging from an average of $6 (PKR 364) in the NWFP to an
average of $121 (PKR 7,280) in Baluchistan--were not a significant
deterrent. The Employment of Children Act allows for fines of up to $333
(PKR 20 thousand). Penalties often were not imposed on those found to be
violating child labor laws.
The International Labor
Organization -International Program for the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC)
continued programs in the carpet weaving, surgical instrument, rag
picking, and deep-sea fishing industries and launched a Time Bound
Program for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labor. Working
with industries and the government, ILO-IPEC used a combination of
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