The rights of the individual are not automatically suspended once they enter police custody contrary to what many may wish to believe. Individuals may be deprived of their liberty for a variety of lawful indeed essential reasons, but the humanitarian imperatives still apply. The report to President Mamnoon Hussain by the NCHRP exposes the woeful inadequacies of lockups with many lacking the basics. Life-safety codes are absent in many cases and there is little or no attempt to assess the detainee in respect of their mental health, history of suicidal events or attempts at self-harm and their previous criminal history. There is little or no surveillance via CCTV and overall the NCHRP notes the lack of standard operating procedures (SOPs) for the management of police lockups.
None of the deficits detailed in the report come as any surprise and as ever it is everybody else’s fault than the responsible agency or entity. A senior police official in Sindh blamed the home department for not keeping the police stations repaired as necessary and there may be truth in that, but the wider issue relates to decay in the fabric of human rights provision that is symptomatic of a national malaise and not just relative to police lockups. Is it fixable? Yes? Expensive? Not particularly. Going to happen? Probably not.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 29th, 2018.
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