Five months after Chetan
Kumar disappeared, his family is now in a state of anxiety. They do not
know where he is, whether he's dead or alive. They have not heard about
him, or from him, and they do not even know whether he is in
Pakistan or not.
"My father, my uncle Rupu,
and I were sitting in our drawing room," says Chetan's son, Suresh, a
student of
Sindh
University, "when suddenly eight men burst inside. This was July
seventeenth, at about 6:45 pm. They started asking my father questions.
They asked him his name, and when he affirmed that his name was Chetan,
they started kicking and punching him, and roughly pushed him outside the
house. When I tried to stop them, they did the same to me."
In the same area of
Umerkot lived another man called Gordhan das alias Bhagat. He was in his
fifties and had cordial relations with everyone he knew, according to his
daughter-in-law Anita. Her husband and Bhagat's son Om Parkash says that
he and his father had been sitting at the barber's shop for some time,
when four men in a white double door vehicle, with blue lights on top,
stopped in front of him. They asked him his name and said that they
belonged to a "law enforcing secret investigation agency" and that Gordhan
was required for investigation. They forcibly dragged Bhagat into the car,
and then covered his face with a black cloth. According to them, the men
warned everyone around, that if anyone attempted to lodge and FIR, their
fate would be the same.
The illegal confinement of
G.M Bhagat and Chetan Kumar is not something out of the ordinary.
Umerkot's people have often sent in their complaints to the HRCP saying
that they are completely unprotected. Their complaints reveal that there
is religious discrimination in the district, along with these occasional
incidents, by supposed law enforcement agencies, but none of these
elements, which intimidate the people of this region, are held accountable
in any way.
"My father worked in a
brick company called 'Super Shine'," says Suresh, anger slowly rising,
making his voice waver, "he had a perfectly clean record, and there was
simply nothing that he did because of which he was picked up like this.
Each time I think of him, I remember that evening when those men dragged
him off in their double-door, white government vehicle. I managed to note
down the number plate code; that's how I know it was a government car. It
was GS-0162. When we went to the Umerkot Police Station to file an FIR,
they refused, because they did not want to tamper with what the 'agencies'
did."
Neither Suresh, nor
Parkas, know anything about their fathers' disappearance. But they have
signed a petition and make a move in court. In his written statement given
to the court as well as they HRCP, Suresh has drawn attention to the fact
that Chetan was arrested in 2001, as well, in false charges concerning a
Tando Adam railway track bomb blast. For this he was kept in custody for
four years before he was acquitted by the High Court.
Amarnath, a council member
of the HRCP, an advocate, and the president of the Hindu Panchayat, is
dealing with this case. He revealed the investigation of the HRCP Fact
Finding Report. According to the report, the police of Umerkot have given
the impression that the missing men had actually been picked up by "Wing
303 of the Field Investigation Unit". The Head Constable or ' moharrar' of
the Umerkot Police Station thinks that Chetan could have been picked up in
connection with the
Mumbai blasts earlier this year by the agencies. These however are
not confirmed facts in any way, for they stand without solid proof. But in
both cases the police refused to file any FIR and they had themselves
suggested that it was the work of "agencies" and that they could not
interfere.
Both the families have
been completely broken by this incident. They are poor, and hardly have
any income coming into their house. Bhagat had earlier lost a son too, in
reaction to an injection. Now his own unwarranted disappearance has caused
his family to fall into severe depression and stress.
Suresh says his
grandfather passed away in 2003, soon after Chetan was arrested, in
connection with the Tando Adam case. His mother is ill, and his family
does not have a breadwinner, as Suresh happens to be the oldest, yet is
still a student.
How is it that the
agencies are being blamed for these cases of missing persons? In
Pakistan, since the past few years, there have been a number of
missing persons who have been picked up by "law enforcement agencies" and
these people have had a clear record. There are men and women who are
included in this list. No one knows their whereabouts, no one knows why
they have been picked up and they seem to have been simply disappearing
into thin air. Where are these people? Who has picked them up? Why is the
government, which poses to be an advocate of security in the country, not
looking into this extremely serious matter? How long is the ordinary man,
going to live his life in fear, and how long will those actually involved
in corruption live in complete security? This issue is not to be taken
lightly. Something has to be done about it.
Through nonviolent
means,
The World Sindhi
Institute works relentlessly
for universal human rights and humanitarian law for the
Sindhis of Sindh, in southeastern Pakistan.