Pakistan’s watchdog condemns human rights record, pointing to extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances
Hundreds of people are believed to die each year at the hands of security forces under pressure to crack down on kidnapping, murder and gang violence in Karachi

Pakistan’s leading watchdog slammed the nation’s deteriorating human rights record in a report released on Monday, highlighting extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances across the turbulent country.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) report noted that deaths linked to terrorism continued to decline in 2017 but warned of an uptick in violence against so-called soft targets.
“A study shows more Pakistanis died in incidents described as ‘encounters’ than in gun violence or in suicide attacks,” HRCP said, pointing to research showing 495 people died in what law enforcement called shoot-outs.
The issue of encounter killings has made headlines for months in Pakistan following the death in January of Naqeebullah Mehsud – a young social media star and ethnic Pashtun – by police in Karachi, who claimed he was a militant.
Hundreds of people are believed to die each year at the hands of security forces under pressure to crack down on kidnapping, murder and gang violence in the chaotic port city.
We won’t see any end of these disappearances until all those involved are prosecuted
Thousands of ethnic Pashtuns have rallied across the country since Mehsud’s death, calling for an end to such killings and for investigations into enforced disappearances or cases of alleged abductions by Pakistan’s security agencies.