By Farooq Sulehria
HRCP Secretaryand President, LPP Secretary, activists arrested
for mix marathon
A police contingent, on May 14, arrested women and men gathered
to participate in a symbolic race organised by the Human Rights
Commission of Pakistan and the Joint Action Committee for Peoples
Rights in Lahore ´to test the enlightened-moderation´
claims of the government.
Asma Jahangir, the secretaryHRCP, and Iqbal Haider, the chairpersonl,
LPP secretary Farooq Tariq were among those who were brutally
dragged into police vans and held for a couple of hours at local
police stations. The police action against the congregation was
taken on the orders of the Lahore Nazim, Mian Amir Mahmood, who
claimed that he had disallowed the rally after receiving negative
reports from the police. In turn, the police claimed that
it had received information of an impending assault on the mixed
rally by activists of the Shabab-e-Milli, the youth wing of the
Jamaat-e-Islami. But eyewitness reports confirmed that a handful
of such activists arrived on the scene only after the police had
dragged away the women and broken up the event.
Among the others who were briefly detained were Hina Jillani,
Shahtaj Qazilbash, Tahseen Ahmad, Joseph Francis, et al. Asma
Jahangir was roughed up and her clothes were torn in the melee.
One policewoman was heard abusing her: We have orders to
strip you in public and teach you a lesson. Three other
women were slightly injured.
The mixed-run was scheduled on Saturday at 5:00pm from Qadafi
Stadium to Kalama Chowk. When the run started, the police started
chasing the runners and bunging them into vans. Journalists were
abused and shoved aside. The police contingent had gheraoed Ms
Jahangirs office at 5:00pm and sealed it, compelling those
who had gathered in it to exit via the back door and spill over
into the streets. Most of the women were taken to the Race Course
police station where they chanted slogans against the military
and mullah government. Ms Jahangir said she would file a
First Information Report against the policemen who tore her clothes
and manhandled her.
A spokesman for the district government said that it would have
allowed the run if women participants had put on suitable
dress, and that the run was held inside the Qaddafi stadium.
The police action was largely condemned. Daily The News and Daily
Times editorialised their protes.
Daily Times May 16
EDITORIAL: Shameful and sinister sabotage of enlightened
moderation
The abrasive police action in Lahore against the participants
of a mixed race is highly unfortunate. The event was organised
by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and the Joint Action
Committee for Peoples Rights to test the official claim
of enlightened moderation. Like all things good and bad, the incident
raises important questions about the nature of state and society
in Pakistan.
The first question relates to pinning responsibility for the
outrage committed by Lahore police. Who ordered the police to
prevent the runners from running, attacking them in the process
and hurling them into police vans, arresting them
and later releasing them without filing any charges? The Punjab
chief minister, Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi, expressed his shock over
the incident and blamed the city government for mishandling the
situation. The city government spokesperson says city authorities
would have allowed the participants to run if they had been suitably
dressed and had held the race inside Gaddafi Stadium. However,
earlier, the Lahore nazim, Mian Amer Mahmood, had been reported
as saying that the city government had information from the police
that groups like Shabab-e-Milli affiliated with Jamaat-e-Islami
would attack such a gathering if the city government allowed
the race.
We have reason to believe that the city government is now trying
to put a technical spin on the whole episode by referring to suitable
dress etc. Asma Jehangir, the HRCP chairperson, who was
manhandled by the police, told this newspaper that she received
a threatening call on her cell phone from some Ahmad Salman who
claimed to be the president of Shabab-e-Milli. But when Ms Jehangir
returned the call to check its authenticity, the person
at the other end told me that the police had come to his tyre
shop and called me [Ms Jehangir] from there.
It is not difficult to put two and two together. The Punjab government
tried to pass the buck on to the city government. The city government
asked the police how to handle the situation and the police high-ups
told the nazim that if the race took place some Islamist zealots
might attack the rally and there would be hell to pay. Instead
of providing security to the runners against such a threat, the
police sought to prevent them from running because that is the
easy way out.
Our assessment is that the police attitude is related to two
factors: first the police is remarkably inefficient in tackling
those that it most needs to tackle, i.e., the criminal troublemakers;
two, most of its cadres, from the low to the high end of the spectrum,
are themselves conservative and would like nothing better than
to humiliate the liberal elites. Since the liberals
do not carry weapons, as the Islamists and criminal groups do,
the police have nothing to fear in terms of retaliation.
However, Ms Jehangir and Iqbal Haider (former senator and currently
secretary-general of HRCP) have amply proved their point. Enlightened
moderation lives more in rhetoric than reality. It is easier
to crack down on defenceless PPP workers and citizen runners than
it is to handle armed Pashtun cadres of the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal
or thugs from the student wings of religious parties. Mr Mahmood,
the nazim, should blacken his face after this episode rather than
telling people that he disallowed the rally after receiving
negative reports from the police. Incidentally,
as Ms Jehangir also told a foreign TV channel, the threat came
from the police rather than Islamist zealots. Indeed, it almost
seems like the few Shabab-e-Milli activists that did turn up after
the police had taken care of the citizens were probably there
to authenticate the nazims claim that the rally was in danger
of being disrupted. This is more shameful than sinister. It is
possible that the police raised the bogey so it could handle the
situation as it ultimately did.
While Mr Mahmood comes out as the main offender, the CM cannot
escape responsibility either. The local government-provincial
government dichotomy is most evident where they are held by different
political denominations as in Karachi. But in Lahore that
situation does not obtain and therefore tracing the whole thing
back to the CM is neither difficult nor fantastic.
Similarly, the question of where and who to strike must be very
clear. If a rally is under threat of attack, the polices
job is to protect the congregation and ensure its security and
even try and capture the vigilantes rather than request the organisers
of a lawful event to call it off. By that criterion, General Pervez
Musharraf should be strapped to his sofa at home instead of being
allowed to run all over the country and inconvenience everyone
by his extraordinary security arrangements.
General Pervez Musharraf is the grand patriarch of this political
dispensation and the sole conceptualiser of enlightened
moderation. If he is genuinely upset with what his minions
are doing down the line to sabotage his agenda, he should do something
about it. The HRCP et al have announced a bigger mixed race a
week or so down the line. This time the Punjab government should
give it all the security it needs and actively encourage it. *
Daily The News , May 15
Another marathon overreaction
First the police charged peaceful demonstrations by journalists
in Lahore and Islamabad, and now they've attacked the citizens'
groups running in a mixed-gender marathon meant to highlight the
issue of violence against women.
While it can be argued that this public event organized in Lahore
on Saturday by the Human Rights Commission and other NGOs defied
the imposition of Section 144, which forbids public gatherings,
there is no excuse or justification for the administration's heavy-handed
reaction to this breach of a law whose violation is hardly a criminal
offence.
As a couple of hundred men and women gathered on the Gulberg
Main Boulevard to start the run, they were heavily outnumbered
by the police. The would-be runners, who included well-known lawyers
and human rights activists such as Asma Jahangir, Hina Jillani
and Iqbal Haider, had barely covered ten yards when the police
violently baton-charged them. Several were injured; some 30 were
arrested and dragged off to the nearest police station, but released
later. According to the police, several of those arrested included
people who were planning to disrupt the marathon.
The doublespeak of the ruling establishment is clear in its encouragement
of the law enforcing agencies' use of force against those who
stand precisely for the "soft image" of a liberal and
progressive Pakistan that the government wants to project. Meanwhile,
those from the religious right are allowed to physically attack
and intimidate the citizenry with impunity, as happened during
the recent Gujranwala and Sargodha marathons.
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