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March 29, 2007
The
Daily Dawn
By Our Staff Reporter
PPP Rejects Musharraf’s Claim
on Disappearances
ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) has rejected the
contention of President General Pervez Musharraf that the government was
not involved in the mysterious disappearances of citizens.
In a statement here on Wednesday, PPP spokesman Farhatullah Babar
referred to the president’s address at a public meeting in Rawalpindi
and said Gen Musharraf had tried to absolve the government of any
responsibility, saying that the missing persons had been commandeered by
‘Jihadi’ outfits. He also claimed to welcome the judiciary taking note
of the issue of disappeared persons.
“It is unacceptable that a regime that is obsessed with establishing its
writ against nationalist elements in smaller provinces should abandon
its responsibility to trace citizens allegedly kidnapped by Jihadi
outfits,” he said.
He said Gen Musharraf had been telling to the world that he had banned
the ‘Jihadi’ outfits but to the families of the disappeared, he says he
could not recover their near and dear ones because they had joined hands
with these very ‘Jihadis’.
“It is this double speak that strengthens the suspicion that Musharraf
has been running with the hare and hunting with the hound in the war on
terror,” he added.
Mr Babar said hundreds of nationalist elements had also disappeared in
the provinces of Sindh and Balochistan and asked whether they too had
joined the Jihadi groups.
He said the state agencies had run amok because these were operating
neither under the ambit of law nor under the control of civil and
parliamentary authority. He said when the government took the position
before the courts that it had no control over the operations of agencies
it was an admission that they were a state within the state, he said.
Mr Babar said if General Musharraf was sincere in welcoming the courts
to take up the issue, he should not interfere with the Supreme Court in
taking up the 1996 case involving the use of public money by the ISI to
illegally interfere in national politics. The case if allowed to proceed
can result in judicial review of the legal and constitutional framework
of the working of the state’s agencies, he said.
Under the international law, he said, enforced disappearances of
citizens was a crime against humanity and individuals involved in it
could also be tried at any time in the future. He warned the
perpetrators that they could be held accountable for kidnappings anytime
in future.
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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