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Pakistan 's Human Rights Report 2010

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Varad

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Report paints bleak picture of human rights in Pakistan


The state of human rights in 2010 remained bleak as thousands of people were killed in violent incidents, deprived of education, health and housing facilities, targeted due to extremism and growing intolerance and displaced due to floods says the annual report, “State of Human Rights in 2010” released by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan on Thursday.

The highlights of the report are:

Law and order

• As many as 12,580 people were murdered, while 581 kidnappings for ransom and 16,977 cases of abduction were also reported.

• There were 37,088 cases of vehicle theft or snatching. Police recovered 60,884 illegal weapons.

• US drones strikes were responsible for 957 extra-legal killings.

• 338 people were killed in police encounters. Only 28 ‘suspects’ were injured and captured alive.

• At least 174 people were rescued from illegal police detention.

• 1,159 people were killed in 67 suicide attacks. The fatalities included 1,041 civilians. 2,542 people were killed and 5,062 injured in terrorist attacks.

• 237 political activists and 301 other civilians were killed in targeted killings in Karachi. 81 people were killed in Lyari gang wars.

• 118 people were killed and 40 injured in 117 targeted killings in Balochistan.

Women

• Domestic Violence (Prevention and Protection) Bill lapsed because it could not be submitted to the Senate in time.

• Protection against Harassment of Women at Workplace Act 2010 adopted.

• 791 women were killed in the name of honour.

• 2,903 women were raped

• 719 women committed suicide and 414 attempted suicide but their lives were saved.

Children

• Around 10 million children were affected by the massive floods, 2.5 million of them younger than 5.

• 1,154 juveniles were detained in the prisons across the country.

• 170 juveniles committed suicide across Pakistan and another 76 attempted suicide

Labour

• Over one million child labourers between the ages of 10 to 14 were working in the country.

• At least 2,294 labourers were freed from debt bondage in Sindh alone

• 5.3 million jobs were lost or affected by flooding in Pakistan.

Education

• Pakistan’s literacy rate was recorded at 57% in 2010

• Floods damaged more than 10,000 schools in the country.

• 2010 was declared “national literacy year”, but the budgetary allocation for education for 2010-2011, was a meagre 2percent of the GDP.

• 163 attacks were reported on educational institutions

• Militants killed 22 teachers in Balochistan between January 2008 and October 2010.

• Academic certificates of 54 parliamentarians were declared forged.

Health

• Public sector expenditure on health in 2010 was projected to be 0.54 percent of the GDP, down 27 percent over the previous year.

• At least 4,000 Pakistani doctors accepted jobs abroad, creating a vacuum in many hospitals in Pakistan.

• One woman died every 30 minutes in Pakistan due to pre- neo- or post-natal problems. 1,047,948 cases of tuberculosis were registered in the country. There were over 18 million registered hepatitis patients. Over 1.6 million malaria cases were reported annually. 143 cases of polio were reported in the country. There were more than seven million diabetics and as many as 1.5 million people were blind. There were 150,000 thalassemia patients. Over 7,000 patients were infected with the dengue virus and 31 people died of the disease. 114,000 patients of swine flu were reported in 2010. 97,400 HIV/AIDS cases had been diagnosed, while only 5,000 AIDS patients had been registered.

2,399 people committed suicide in the country and another 1,174 attempted suicide mainly because of stress, domestic disputes, financial problems or unemployment, etc. Law and law-making

• The parliament achieved a signal success by adopting the 18th Amendment Act

• Although 30 Acts were passed in 2010 the government had difficulties in expediting legislation.

Jails and prisoners

• Continued award of death sentence pushed the death row population to around 8,000, with nearly 6,000 death penalty convicts in the Punjab alone.

• The authorised capacity of the country’s 91 prisons was 42,617 persons but 75,586 prisoners were detained there. The number of prisoners at 55 prisons was in excess of sanctioned capacity.

• Of the 12,980 detainees in jails across Sindh, 10,306 were under-trial, while 33,809 of the 51,902 detainees in the prisons of Punjab were under-trial.

• 72 prisoners died in prisons across the country and another 157 were injured.

• Around 7,000 Pakistanis remained jailed in different countries.

• 356 people were sentenced to death, including seven women and one juvenile.

• 34 new cases of enforced disappearance were reported

Freedom of thought, conscience and religion

• 99 Ahmedis were killed in faith-based violence.

• At least 64 people were charged under the blasphemy law, including Aasia Bibi, a Christian farmhand. Three men, including two Christian brothers, accused of blasphemy were killed in police custody.

• 500 Hindu families from Balochistan migrated to India because of threats to their lives and security.

• 73 members of religious minority communities committed suicide and 21 attempted to take their own lives.

• 418 people were killed in violence against various Muslim sects. Another 963 were injured.

Freedom of expression

• 20 journalists and media workers lost their lives in attacks and targeted killings.

• By inserting Article 19-A in the constitution through the 18th Amendment, Pakistan formally recognised the citizens’ right to information.

• Journalists faced difficult economic conditions as many employers did not pay their salaries or substantially delayed payment of salaries to them.

Freedom of assembly

In 72 incidents of the use of force against protesters by police, 34 people lost their lives and another 300 suffered injuries.

Political participation

• Less than 50 percent members of the National Assembly actively took part in the proceedings.

• Violence, led to the death of over 750 people in target killings in Karachi alone.

• Women parliamentarians remained the most active legislators, introducing nine private members’ bills in the 3rd parliamentary year.

• The provincial governments did not hold local government elections in 2010,.

Housing

• 30 million people in the country were either homeless or had been accommodated by their relatives.

• More than 50 percent of the urban population lived in slums in the county. Between 600 to 800 slums sheltered about 7.6 million people in Karachi.

• Nearly 1.9 million houses were destroyed or severely damaged in the floods.

• 173 people were killed and 241 injured in collapse of buildings countrywide.

Environment

• 22,000 people in Pakistan lost their lives every year on account of air particulate pollution.

• Solid waste collection agencies only cleared 50 percent of the waste generated.

• Over 400 million gallons of untreated industrial water from Karachi was being discharged into the sea daily.

Refugees

• 109,383 registered Afghan refugees returned to Afghanistan, while another 1.6 million registered Afghan refugees remained in Pakistan.

• Nearly 7 million people were forced from their homes in the floods

• There were around 1.3 million conflict-displaced in the country.

• At least 400 children went missing during the flood emergency.

Report paints bleak picture of human rights in Pakistan
 
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Thank you for caring about human rights in Pakistan but you should be more worried about this:


Separatists, terrorists involved in human rights abuses in India: US​

WASHINGTON: Separatists and terrorists in the Indian states of Jammu and Kashmir and northeast along with the Maoists committed serious human rights abuses, an official US report said, even as it slammed the government for extra-judicial killings.

"Separatist insurgents and terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir, the northeastern states and the Naxalite belt committed numerous serious abuses, including killing armed forces personnel, police, government officials, and civilians," said the US state department's Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2010.

"Insurgents engaged in widespread torture, rape, beheadings, kidnapping, and extortion. The number of incidents, however, declined compared with the previous year," said the Congressional-mandated annual report released by secretary of state Hillary Clinton.

According to the India section of the report, there were numerous reports that the government and its agents committed arbitrary or unlawful killings, including extra-judicial killings of suspected criminals and insurgents, especially in areas of conflict such as Jammu and Kashmir, the northeastern states, and the Naxalite belt.

The report, which provides encyclopedic detail on human rights conditions in over 190 countries for 2010, said Indian government made no progress in holding officials accountable for abuses that occurred during the period of the Punjab counterinsurgency between 1984 and 1994.

It said civil society activists continued to express concern about the Gujarat government's alleged failure to arrest those responsible for communal violence in 2002 that resulted in the killing of more than 1,200 persons, the majority of whom were Muslim.

"Unlike in previous years (2008 and 2009), there were no instances of officials using anti-terrorism legislation to justify excessive use of force. However, indiscriminate use of force by BSF was a problem," it said.

The state department report claimed corruption "existed at all levels of government and police," with "delays in obtaining legal redress for past attacks against minorities."

The law in some states restricted religious conversion, but there were no reports of convictions under these restrictions.

It also claimed that violence associated with caste bias occurred. "Domestic violence, child marriage, bonded labour, dowry-related deaths, honour crimes, and female feticide remained serious problems," the report said.

Separatists, terrorists involved in human rights abuses in India: US - Times Of India


India state forces commit human rights abuses in IHK: US​

* State Dept says there were numerous reports that govt, its agents committed arbitrary or unlawful killings, especially in areas of conflict such as Jammu and Kashmir
WASHINGTON: The United States on Friday faulted Indian security forces for committing gross human rights violations – from killings to torture – in Indian-held Kashmir (IHK) and other conflict-hit regions.

“There were numerous reports that the government and its agents committed arbitrary or unlawful killings, including the extra-judicial killings of suspected criminals and terrorists, especially in areas of conflict such as Jammu and Kashmir, the North Eastern States, and the Naxalite belt, where non-governmental forces also committed such killings,” the US State Department said in the annual 2010 assessment of the state of human rights around the world.

According to the Institute for Conflict Management, as of October 17, there were 1,616 fatalities in the country – including members of security forces, individuals classified by the government as terrorists, and civilians – which represented a decrease from 2,231 fatalities in 2009.

Most encounter killings, in which security forces and police extra-judicially killed alleged criminals or terrorists, occurred in areas of conflict, but the practice reportedly occurred elsewhere in the country as well.

In March, a number of media outlets reported that in response to a Right to Information (RTI) request the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) provided data indicating that 1,224 of the 2,560 police encounter cases reviewed since 1993 had been staged by security forces.

Despite the NHRC’s published recommendations that the Criminal Investigations Department investigate all police encounter deaths, many states did not follow the guidelines and continued to conduct internal reviews only at the discretion of senior officers.

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) reported that on January 21 Manipur security personnel abducted and killed a shop owner in Chekon. Memcha Fazeruddin stated that her husband’s body was returned with 15 bullet holes, but the body was clad in combat dress that was free of any bullet holes, which suggested tampering with the body.

Police claimed that Fazeruddin had been shot in an encounter with troops from the 33 Assam Rifles in Kwakta Khuman and that they had found arms and ammunition on him. In a meeting set up by community members, the Manipur chief minister assured Fezeruddin’s wife that he would give her family compensation and find a suitable job for one of her relatives.

The AHRC stated that the official did not offer to investigate the matter.

On March 14, according to the ACHR, members of the Manipur State Police Commando Unit arrested Chongtham Nanao. The next morning, police informed the local village head that they had recovered a dead body from the location of an alleged exchange of gunfire between police and armed terrorists. Nanao’s relatives later identified his body. The local media stated that a combined team of Thoubal Police Commandos and 21 Assam Rifles were involved in the killing.

In September, the government reinstated the four police officials allegedly involved in the May 2009 killing of Neelofar Jan and Asiya Jan in the Shopian district of Jammu and Kashmir. On June 28, Shakeel Ahmad Ahangar, Neelofar’s husband and Asiya’s brother, filed a petition to reinstate inquiry into the killings of the two women. The petition remained pending before a Srinagar court at year’s end. Relatives and police discovered the bodies of Neelofar and Asiya in a stream, and local residents and examining doctors alleged that Indian security forces gang-raped and killed Neelofar and Asiya. In addition, several government officials stated that police involvement in the killings could not be ruled out. In July 2009, the high court ordered the arrest of four police officers on charges of suppressing and destroying evidence in the case.

In September 2009, the court granted bail to the officers, and the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) took charge of the case from the Special Investigation Team. In December 2009 the CBI submitted its report to the high court, concluding the women died of drowning and ruling out foul play. app

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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I ALSO RECIPROCATE BY THANKING YOU FOR YOUR CONCERNS ON INDIA. LET ME TELL YOU DURING MY DURATION ON PDF I BECOME MORE INTERESTED IN PAKISTAN AND PAKISTANI VIEWS ON ALL TOPICS REGARDING ALL ISSUES. THIS IS THE REASON I POSTED THESE STATS. PLEASE POST ABOUT INDIAN HUMAN RIGHTS ISSUES IN THE INDIAN SECTION.THANK YOU
 
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. LET ME TELL YOU DURING MY DURATION ON PDF I BECOME MORE INTERESTED IN PAKISTAN AND PAKISTANI VIEWS ON ALL TOPICS REGARDING ALL ISSUES.


Yeah and I know why :disagree:
 
. . . . .
>natural disastors
>human rights

You just went FULL RETARD.

human rights
plural of hu·man right
Noun: A right that is believed to belong justifiably to every person.
 
. .
>natural disastors
>human rights

You just went FULL RETARD.

human rights
plural of hu·man right
Noun: A right that is believed to belong justifiably to every person.

Contact the media who published it.
 
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With 17% poverty we r at 30 number? lol u guys must be toppin it.

Yeah and #10 on the failed states index you guys are pro at that as well ;)

Not to mention #1 in animal ****.. I mean wouldn't you guys wanna help out your failed country rather than look at animals doing it? :lol:
 
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Yeah and #10 on the failed states index you guys are pro at that as well ;)

Not to mention #1 in animal ****.. I mean wouldn't you guys wanna help out your failed country rather than look at animals doing it? :lol:

I wonder why retards like this even bother to come out of BR :disagree:
 
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U indian trolls go so low...

BUT..........Funny n ironic....... india is toping tht...... type animal **** in google trends n see india topping the list:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:

HAHAAHAHAHAHHAAHHAAH

OH THE IRONY.

Abt failed state... dogs bark all the time.... doesnt effect us.:tdown:

Highlighting bolded parts of your post and creating it bigger and adding annoying amount of smilies doesn't change the fact that you are #10 of failed states of the world :)
 
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