An unforgiving Supreme Court has put its foot down — with a scathing warning and a diatribe against the country’s top spy agencies.
Expressing dissatisfaction with the report submitted by the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and the Military Intelligence (MI) in the Adiala jail missing prisoners’ case, the apex court gave out a stern reprimand on Thursday.
“Do not assume in your head that you [ISI and MI] are superior and others [civilians] are inferior,” said Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. “You are not above the law.”
Headed by Chief Justice Chaudhry, the three-member bench said that the spy agencies, in their responses to the court, made no attempt to explain under which laws civilians were picked up and kept in detention for more than a year.
“Who gave you the right to hound people?” thundered the chief justice at the ISI and MI’s counsel, Raja Irshad.
“You are extremely insensitive to the human pain and loss that the families of the missing persons continue to bear because of your actions.
“The allegation that you [ISI and MI] abduct people and their abandoned bodies surface after days is an extremely serious one,” said Chief Justice Chaudhry.
“After reading your poorly-drafted reply, I wondered whether we are working against the country’s interests here. As much as you consider yourself to be loyal to this country, perhaps we are more loyal than you.”
Underscoring the controversial role of the agencies in Balochistan, where hundreds of men have gone missing, the chief justice said: “You’re an arsonist. You have set Balochistan on fire.
“We asked you time and again and you avoided the truth. Are we here to listen to your stories?
“Even if these people had attacked the General Headquarters (GHQ), it was imperative to produce evidence against them for a fair trial. You are not above the law; you must go by the book.”
The chief justice added that the “insensitive” agencies have become the “biggest violators” of the country’s laws.
The defence counsel said that the authorities in the ISI and MI “are considering this matter seriously as this is a burning issue”.
Pointing out that “foreign elements” were involved in fuelling terrorism in Balochistan, he said that the agencies cannot work with their “eyes closed”. In reply, the chief justice remarked that whatever the agencies do should be done within the parameters of the law.
The court, however, voiced satisfaction over the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) chief secretary’s report on the health conditions of prisoners. The report covered inmate health, improvement in their condition and how they were being accommodated.
Tariq Asad, the lawyer for missing prisoners, was told by the court to invoke the available procedures to secure the release of prisoners and the hearing was adjourned for 14 days.
Seven of the eleven surviving detainees – accused of attacking the General Headquarters and the ISI’s Hamza Camp base – were picked up from the Adiala prison by intelligence agencies after they had been acquitted of the charges by the court.
Four of the 11 detainees died in the custody of the ISI and MI and on February 13 – more than a year and a half after being picked up – seven of them were presented before the Supreme Court after the two agencies were served notices to explain the circumstances behind the deaths of the four prisoners.
The mother of two of the deceased also passed away recently, reportedly due to heart failure after witnessing the condition of her remaining son.
After the hearing Irshad told reporters outside the court that collecting evidence in terrorism cases was very time consuming, which was why the men had been held.
“The phenomena of terrorism is very recent and there is an urgent need for new legislation,” he said.
“When they were in custody, the army did not want to do a fake or mock trial,” he said. (With additional input from AFP)
(Read: Missing persons case)
Published in The Express Tribune, March 2nd, 2012.
COMMENTS (25)
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Law should take its due course !!!
its not a comment directed at one person. on other issue there would be several times more comments then we have now. plus twitter feeds overflowing. on thi there is a strange silence. anyways some comments are up now so i guess it was ET that was sleeping
Mr CJ; have your courts ever convicted anyone?? Your judges are either too corrupt or too scared to convict even a two-bit thug let alone a terrorist. The courts are to be blamed for this mess, had the courts done their job and convicted people who kill thousands in the name of religion then there would have been no need to keep these individuals in secret detention. First go and fix your courts then lecture our ISI about human rights.
@Patriotic
mindsets like Mirza are quite common in our country.. they keep criticizing every action whether good or bad without any logic...and keep supporting as well as praising there party for every wrong step they take... when the whole world can see what PPP has done to this country
No wonder such people are rewarded as MPA, MNA or nazims etc by there parties... :)
If the Courts shows sympathy to terrorists and equate their rights to the peaceful and innocent victims, then they should also take the responsibility of their acts.
Good work SC. May Allah bless you all.
@MAD: I don't label myself one way or another but I suppose someone who does would call me a liberal and I have made a comment speaking positively of the SC for this. At the moment I'm writing this, the awaiting moderation message is gone but the comment isn't here. Its been a few hours, too. So, it will either suddenly appear somewhere in the middle of the current comments with a delay or it won't be there at all. That's how it usually works with my comments it seems. But, I'll end this comment now as I have no idea if it'll make it either, anyways.
@Mirza: You shall appreciate this act of CJ but as usual you are criticizing him.(:
@Mirza:
You will never be happy. At this occasion you are supposed to applaud the CJ.
But these 'suspects' are terrorists, they are killers
Too many enemies infiltrating into Pakistan from Afghanistan. Let ISI do their job.
Bravo Mr Chief Justice. It is about time the heavy handed tactics of these agencies were put to and end. Having occasionally dealt with both agencies on a number of occasions in a professional capacity, I can vouch that they have an insolent, patronizing and condescending attitude towards all people, including those who are serving or have served in the defence forces of Pakistan. I can also say that the intellectual level of most of their employees is below par. There is in fact a joke in the military circles that whoever is rejected from all corps goes into intelligence.
Angry remarks and sermons by the judges won't make any difference. Write them in your judgments, in good English. Remarks are forgotten. Judgements are remembered and quoted in the future cases.
When PCJ says: "As much as you consider yourself to be loyal to this country, perhaps we are more loyal than you.” What more can I say to the Agency's “denial writers”.
it takes two to make a four.
Extraordinary situation requires extraordinary measures an you are in war with fanatics. They do not understand the language of law. What would you do in the absense of compatible laws?
And now when the CJ takes a stand againt the ISI/ MI no comments from our lovely liberals
@Zahid: Agencies are "murderous" but terrorist are pious....because they have sent thousands of innocents to paradise.
For sure God bless you Mr. CJ... We need to rid ourselves of this criminal intelligence agency which has held the country hostage to its whims and wishes. I'ts about time all the Pakistanis stand up and speak against them openly. We are with you Mr. CJ
If it is all ture and some serious steps would be taken then it is the first in the history of the country. Still it is too good to be true. While the rightwing touts are looking for the blood of elected politicians for petty crimes, the real crims like arson, mass murders and high treason are never punished. Even under the NRO the more serious cases are never opened except the ones against top PPP leadership. It is about time that the real crimes and criminals are brought before the people.
While I may not agree with the CJ on all matters, on this issue he deserves a standing ovation. Finally someone at the top has found the guts to put these rascal agencies in their rightful place. All those ISI and MI chiefs should be strung up and made to suffer just like the mother of one of the prisoners who died of a heart attack after seeing the pathetic condition of her son's dead body. Shame be on these agencies. They are the real enemies of Pakistan.
So, institutional shake up occurring in PAK.?
good job!!
Dear Chief Justice, whatever your detractors may say against you, the strong words and stance for the rule of law you have displayed in the missing persons case today...proves that the struggle for an independent judiciary though no where close to being fully achieved, has certainly not been in vain...
God bless you CJ. Indeed you are more loyal to the country then these arrant, insolent and murderous agencies.