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Asylum seeking Pakistani blogger claims he was "tortured".

Shud not have released him
Why was he released in the first place, they should have cut his time huge and other vital parts before even releasing to him. Now he will be a British version of tareq fateh.
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"Abduction is 10 percent of the horror. The other 90 percent begins after you're released"

- Waqas Goraya (Saeed's cousin).​
 
A perfect liar playing victim card. Intelligence Agencies do not believe in torturing tactics. They've better ways to extract information from such goons.
 
A perfect liar playing victim card. Intelligence Agencies do not believe in torturing tactics. They've better ways to extract information from such goons.
Goraya speculated that the purpose of their experience was intimidation, not information.

Another drama for a western passport, best suited for anti-Pakistan blogs to do their self fellatio
Where is the line between constructive criticism of Pakistan and being anti-Pakistani? @S.Y.A
 
Goraya speculated that the purpose of their experience was intimidation, not information.

Where is the line between constructive criticism of Pakistan and being anti-Pakistani? @S.Y.A
When it gets mixed with parading anything critical of Pakistan as the gospel truth and even finding ills where there are none
There is no fine line, its inherent spite
 
Pakistan blogger Aasim Saeed says he was tortured

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Image captionAasim Saeed says he was taken to a secret detention facility and beaten

A Pakistani blogger who went missing earlier this year has applied for asylum in Britain after alleging he was tortured by a "state intelligence agency" during his disappearance.

Aasim Saeed was one of a group of five liberal social media activists who were abducted in Pakistan in January 2017 before being released after several weeks. The Pakistani military has repeatedly denied any involvement in the case.

Mr Saeed told the BBC that prior to his abduction he had been involved in running a Facebook page critical of Pakistan's military establishment, called Mochi, "because since the inception of Pakistan they've always been ruling us directly or indirectly".

Pakistan has been ruled by the military for nearly half of its 70 years.

Mr Saeed was working in Singapore but visiting Pakistan for his brother's wedding in January 2017 when he says a number of men in plain clothes arrived at his house and ordered him into a car.

"'Do you know why you've been picked up?' they asked. I said, 'I have no idea'. Then he started to slap me. They said, 'Let's talk about Mochi'."

Mr Saeed told the BBC he had been ordered to hand over the passwords to his email accounts and mobile phone before being taken to a secret detention facility where he was held alongside men he believed to be "religious terrorists."

The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reported that 728 people were forcibly "disappeared" in 2016. Pakistan's intelligence services have been accused of "disappearing" social and ethnic nationalist activists, as well as those accused of links to militant groups, instead of producing them in court.

Authorities in Pakistan have often said the security services are unfairly blamed for disappearances and that the number of missing people is inflated.

Few first-hand accounts have ever emerged of what happens to those in detention. Mr Saeed alleges he was beaten with a leather strap.

"I don't remember what happened, I fell down and someone was holding my neck in his feet, and the other guy kept beating and beating and beating."

He describes his arms and back being left "shades of purple, blue and back".

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Image copyrightARIF ALI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Image captionPakistani rights activists wave pictures of missing bloggers during a January 2017 protest in Lahore
At another detention facility which he believes to be near the capital Islamabad, Mr Saeed says he was made to undergo polygraph tests whilst being repeatedly questioned about links to the Indian intelligence service, the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).

"Have you ever been associated with RAW? Who is your handler? Have you ever received money from RAW?"

He denies any links to any foreign intelligence services and says interrogators also analysed his Facebook posts and questioned him about why he was "critical of the army".

In May 2017 Human Rights Watch raised concerns that the Pakistani government was "clamping down on internet dissent at the expense of fundamental rights".

Protests were held across cities in Pakistan by other liberal activists calling for the release of Mr Saeed and the other "missing bloggers", as they came to be known. Mr Saeed, though, says he believed while in detention that he would be killed, because normally "missing persons don't go home".

Whilst pressure was building on the Pakistani authorities to provide information about the whereabouts of the bloggers, a counter-campaign was begun by right-wing religious clerics and TV anchors accusing them of having committed blasphemy.

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Image copyrightAAMIR QURESHI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Image captionReligious students and activists have previously demanded the removal of all "blasphemous" content from social media
Blasphemy is legally punishable by death in Pakistan and a number of those accused of it have been murdered by lynch mobs.

Mr Saeed returned home after several weeks in detention. He told the BBC it was only then that he realised he had been accused of blasphemy. He denies any involvement in writing blasphemous material.

One of the other missing bloggers has alleged the blasphemy allegations were an attempt "to shut us down - to threaten our families - to build pressure on us".

Mr Saeed returned to Singapore shortly after being released and arrived in the UK in September to visit friends. He told the BBC he had then decided to apply for asylum as the terms of his employment visa in Singapore meant he had no guarantee he would be allowed to keep living there if he ever lost his job, and his life would be in danger if he returned to Pakistan.

Nonetheless, Mr Saeed told the BBC he did not regret his activism, as "people have to stand up".



I am just wondering why indian actor "Om Puri" Killed and by whom?
 
That hatta katta miscreant is claiming to be tortured. Nice trend to get western passport, a job as an expert on Pakistan matters and prosperous life for himself and kids in western country.
 
I'm slightly confused by the Pakistani replies all over the pages calling for this guys skin. Are you saying that any non-violent voice, comment, or blog against the military should result in severe torture and incarceration?

Another drama for a western passport, best suited for anti-Pakistan blogs to do their self fellatio
Where do you think he went when he went missing for weeks in Pakistan?
 
I'm slightly confused by the Pakistani replies all over the pages calling for this guys skin. Are you saying that any non-violent voice, comment, or blog against the military should result in severe torture and incarceration?


Where do you think he went when he went missing for weeks in Pakistan?

There is a difference between critique and paid propoganda- essentially those known to be on payroll of foriegn elements working against Pakistan online.

This case however is one of trying to rabble rouse in order to get a normally unqualified and mediocre person who does not deserve priority on better opportunities a ticket to a life abroad.

Ethically No different than a student going abroad for marine engineering and then committing visa fraud to extend his stay as a fryer for a fast food joint.
 

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