The Pakistan Foreign Office, while confirming the release of the nine prisoners, has said some 15 more Pakistanis remain at Bagram. Batches of Pakistanis had been released from the jail in 2013 and earlier this year. With the jail due to be handed over by the US within months to Afghan authorities, Pakistan must of course do everything possible to get all its people home in case of further chaos or confusion following this. Reports of torture from the Bagram prison have leaked out periodically and of course it was the place where one of Pakistan’s best known detainees, Dr Aafia Siddiqui, was held from somewhere around 2003 to 2008, after being mysteriously whisked away from Pakistan. In 2010, Dr Siddiqui was of course sentenced by a US court to 86 years in jail on charges of terrorism.
What is also a concern is that the persons released from Bagram will be kept away from their homes by Pakistani authorities. This has happened before, and our record on missing people is not very good. The JPP has already expressed concern on this count. Certainly, one can understand the need to question the people returning, given our own battle against militancy. But we must remember they have already suffered a great deal and in the absence of evidence need to be reunited with their families as quickly as possible.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 23rd, 2014.
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