This practice highlights just how helpless the poor and disenfranchised are at the hands of the wealthy and the influential in Pakistan. The common man’s perceptions about the approachability and efficiency of the police can be judged by various surveys and reports, including one most recently by Transparency International Pakistan, which all say that law-enforcement agencies, and particularly the police, are seen by most Pakistanis as corrupt institutions and which perhaps is why most of us tend to shy away from them when we need to report a crime.
Without any belief in the impartiality of law and order, the public takes the law into its own hands. Illegal imprisonment and private jails are an outcome of this phenomenon. Despite the chief justice’s recent comments on the ability of the judiciary to maintain a check on state organs, the common man’s relationship with corrupt law enforcement agencies has not changed, and will be unlikely to change unless a system of accountability is imposed in smaller cities and districts that depend on local influential people to mete out justice. Until that time, impartial action will continue to be taken by those in power, like the individual who chose to imprison the family of ten in Hyderabad.
Published in The Express Tribune September 17th, 2010.
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