If you were accused of being a terrorist in Punjab over the past two decades, there was about a 75 per cent chance that you would be acquitted. Three out of every four terrorism suspects arrested in the province over the last two decades were set free by the courts, according to data compiled by the provincial government.
Since 1990, there have been 800 incidents of terrorism in Punjab, of which 475 have actually been prosecuted. A total of 2,300 suspects were named in those cases, and about 2,200 arrested. Of those arrested, about 1,650 — or 75% — were acquitted by the courts due to a lack of evidence against them.
(Read: Accountabiliity - Amid increasing terrorism, anti-terrorism courts empty)
Public prosecutors, however, claim that the conviction rate was even lower than those numbers suggest. Chaudhry Muhammad Jahangir, Punjab’s chief public prosecutor, said that “terrorism” cases often included simpler crimes like abduction for ransom, etc, that were classified as terrorism because they were mentioned in the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997. Jahangir said that conviction rates on actual cases of terrorism were even lower.
Jahangir identified three major problems with the prosecution of terrorism cases that led to so many acquittals: lack of witness protection, defective investigations, and lack of forensic and other technology that would aid the investigation process.
Ali Amir Malik, the deputy inspector general of police for investigations, agrees, though he identifies the withdrawal of testimonies by witnesses – who are often threatened and intimidated by terrorist groups – as the primary cause for the low conviction rate.
(Read: Year 2010 for Punjab - Police manages to track only 20% of terrorism cases)
The Punjab public prosecution department has tried to improve its record by assigning a prosecutor with every case being investigated by the police or the counter-terrorism department. Yet the problem appears to be endemic.
For one thing, the government is not able to enforce even the provisions of the anti-terrorism laws that would aid it in the prevention of terrorism. The fourth schedule of the Anti Terrorism Act, for instance, allows the government to place almost draconian controls on the movement of terrorism suspects. Yet Malik Ishaq, a man convicted of killing over 70 people and placed on the fourth schedule of the act, was not only able to violate his curfew, but also to do so brazenly by openly touring in a large caravan across southern Punjab.
(Read: Terrorism tactics)
Both government officials as well as legislators have spoken of the need to amend the act. There now seems to be almost universal consensus on the need for witness protection, for instance, which is currently not accommodated at all in the law.
Several innovative proposals have been suggested to help that matter. Muhammad Azhar Chaudhry, a prosecution lawyer who has worked on such high-profile cases as the Benazir Bhutto assassination, told The Express Tribune that one method that might be used would be to amend the Evidence Act of 1984 to allow witnesses to record statements in front of a wider array of government officials, allowing prosecutors to have written statements before terrorist groups have had the opportunity to bully the witness.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 17th, 2011.
COMMENTS (14)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
@Menon: Yes there is a court above all provincial courts in pakistan. SUPREME COURT!
Why is national crimes prosecuted in provincial courts? Isn't there court that is above all provincial courts in Pakistan? Just asking!
Is it Punjab only ??? ET are you sure??? Anyway in my opinion NO TERRORIST should be set free at any cost. But then there are people in judiciary (both retired and on job) who have sympathy for the rapists and the terrorists!!!!
cruel... u must be guilty until u prove urself innocent...... such pathetic is the judicial system of ours
Flawed? Come on , when the LHC chief justice (ex) can take up the case of Mumtaz Qadri tells a lot about the tinge we have for things.
Terrorists are acquitted, murderers are showered with rose pedals, school girls are beaten with iron rods while the police sit by and do nothing, and non-muslims are routinly slaughtered by mobs as a result of convenient 'blasphemy" allegations. When the lunatics run the asylum, this is what happens.
"one method that might be used would be to amend the Evidence Act of 1984 to allow witnesses to record statements in front of a wider array of government officials"
So the government gets to intimidate witnesses instead. What is the probable result? That prosecutors will pursue frightened people without terror support networks and pressure them to plead guilty to crimes they didn't commit while allowing the real criminals to remain at large. Again, terrorists will be allowed to reign.
In a country where alibis can always be provided by distant cousins eyewitness testimony is useless; one must rely on forensic evidence to assure conviction. Pakistanis should be ashamed that in an age when their military is of high professionalism and wields nuclear weapons.their police by contrast are underpaid, have not mastered how to take fingerprints, and don't know how to properly collect evidence at a crime scene.
You can thank Justice Khosa for Ishaq's release, as well as closing down the cases against Jamaat-ud-Dawaa (L-e-T). Not only did Malik Ishaq threaten (and kill) his witnesses, he issued the death threats in open court. He was also inexplicably rewarded with a monthly stipend by the PML-N government while in jail, to which Rana Sanaullah point blank lied with 'it was court ordered'.
--
This monster and his terrorist gangsters have not stayed confined in Punjab, as they've exported their hate and violence all over Pakistan. Sadly he has his fans, and they even had the gall to defend him even on this website.
Feels like every effort is sabotaged in the terrorists' favour. Will never win against militant extremism and radicalization like this...
What do you expect/! "Strategic Assets" have "Strategic Protection"!!!
//Yet Malik Ishaq, a man convicted of killing over 70 people and placed on the fourth schedule of the act, was not only able to violate his curfew, but also to do so brazenly by openly touring in a large caravan across southern Punjab.//
FORGOT Your Earlier reports ? The Punjab government has filed a review petition in the Supreme Court seeking cancellation of the bail of Malik Ishaq, founder of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) militant group who was allegedly involved in the 2009 attack on Sri Lankan cricket team near Liberty Chowk in Lahore besides 43 other cases in which 70 people had been killed mostly belonging to the Shia community.
http://tribune.com.pk/story/271434/attack-on-lankans-sc-moved-against-ishaqs-release/
& what about the rest of the provinces ? PIN POINTING Punjab , Eh ?
Anti-terrorism Act. New Amendments have been proposed The Bottom line of the amendments is that the Burden of Proof lies on the accused. HE will have to prove his innocence. GUILTY UNTIL PROVED INNOCENT.