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April 21,
2007
By
Nasir Iqbal
Court Summons Top
Officials over Disappearances: DAG Accuses Ministry of Non-Compliance
ISLAMABAD: In a step-by-step approach, the Supreme Court on Friday
summoned the secretaries of the defence and interior ministries and the
head of the government’s Crisis Management Cell to appear before it next
week for a hearing in the case of missing persons. The heads of the
intelligence agencies would be called later, the court said.
Heading a three-member bench, Justice Javed Iqbal made known his intention
to call chiefs of intelligence services by observing that the situation
had become very sensitive, but asked to let the court examine the issue
step by step. He then summoned the top government officials and adjourned
the matter till April 27.
The bench has taken up petitions of the Human Rights Commission of
Pakistan and a former PPP senator, Farhatullah Babar, along with
complaints of Amina Masood Janjua, Saqlain Mehdi, Aisha, Abdul Ghaffar,
Amtul Hafiz, Fatima, Mohammad Ikram Alvi, Arif Abbasi and Syed Babar.
On Friday, Deputy Attorney-General Raja Irshad told the court that he
could not ‘render further assistance’ because the interior ministry had
not submitted statements despite assurances.
At the last hearing, the court was assured that its directives to the
federal government to furnish a comprehensive statement on each complaint
and the HRCP petition would be complied with on Friday.
“I have sentiments too, as I am a father, husband and a brother and,
therefore, cannot stand the mental agony of the families of the missing
people,” he said.
The application of Ms Janjua pertains to remaining 10 missing people,
including her husband, out of a list of 43 people whose unexplained
disappearance for two years is believed to have been caused by their
suspected links to Al Qaeda or other militant outfits. The HRCP petition
deals with 141 people who disappeared mainly from Balochistan.
Mr Babar also urged the Supreme Court to ask the government to produce a
copy of the law under which intelligence agencies operated so the issue of
disappeared people could be examined in its correct perspective.
It was necessary, he said, because the parliament had denied even a copy
of the law saying the issue was sensitive.Asma Jehangir, the HRCP chief,
urged the court to summon officials of the intelligence services because,
according to her, people were working under the threats of the agencies.
Ms Janjua recalled that in December, Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad
Chaudhry had directed intelligence services – the Inter Services
Intelligence, the Military Intelligence and the Intelligence Bureau – to
send their representatives to the court and answer questions regarding the
missing. Five hearings had taken place since then without any progress,
she lamented.
“What is the point if this court has no control over these agencies,” she
said, adding that the court was adjourning the matter week after week.
Justice Iqbal, however, assured relatives of missing people that the court
would take every possible step to minimise their grievance. “Your
confidence in the court will never be shattered and betrayed.”
Every institution in Pakistan was answerable to the Supreme Court and
nobody was above the law, Justice Iqbal observed, but said certain jihadi
outfits were also involved in the disappearance as they lured young men by
convincing them to wage a holy war.
Through nonviolent
means,
The World Sindhi
Institute works relentlessly
for universal human rights and humanitarian law for the
Sindhis of Sindh, in southeastern Pakistan.
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