This is a shocking picture.
I too was shocked to see it right on the top half of the front page of Dawn (29 December, 2006). I was even more shocked to read the details of this incident that took place in Rawalpindi:
Police broke up a protest demonstration organised by family members and relatives of missing persons, badly beating and arresting several of them after they tried to march to the GHQ to present a memorandum to the Vice-Chief of the Army Staff. More than a hundred people, mostly women and children belonging to the families of the disappeared, arrived in groups to the square in front of the Flashman’s Hotel. According to the organisers of the protest, the participants had planned to peacefully march to the GHQ to register their concern over the detention of their loved-ones, who they say, have been in the custody of the army and secret agencies for the last several years.
Eyewitnesses said the trouble began when a heavy contingent of police, led by SP Yasin Farooq, SP Muhammad Azam and DSP Rana Shahid, pushed some of the protesters inside the hotel’s boundary wall, shoving and manhandling them badly. After some time more protesters arrived and started shouting slogans against the police. Those who had been detained inside the hotel also came out to join them. This led to skirmishes between police and the protesters. According to the eyewitnesses, the protest took a turn for the worse when the police stripped a young man, Mohammad bin Masood, the son of missing Masood Janjua. The witnesses said even then the police continued to drag him, finally throwing him into a police van.
The incident enraged other protesters, especially the man’s young sister, who started crying and flagellating herself. The police also shoved aside the father of a missing man and later arrested him. After having failed to march to the GHQ, the protesters blocked the Mall Road for about three hours. Police and protesters fought running battles for some time. Scared by police highhandedness and arrests, a young girl and a small child lost consciousness and fell on the road, the eyewitnesses said.
Unbowed and determined, the protesters refused to leave the place, end the protest and open the road until the arrested men were released. Later, on an assurance from SP Azam that the detained men would be released, the protesters dispersed peacefully. However, the younger brother of detained Mohammad bin Masood told Dawn by telephone that his brother had not been released by the police. The eyewitnesses said that besides an old man and Mohammad bin Masood, several women had been detained and not released till late in the evening.
The report of the incident in The News, adds the following:
Placard-holding women and children held a demonstration close to Flashmans Hotel here. But the police force stopped the procession going beyond Flashmans Hotel. “We planned a ‘freedom walk’ and wanted to hand over a letter to the vice chief of army staff in the General Headquarters (GHQ),� said Amina Masood, whose husband Masood Ahmed Janjua has been missing since July 30, 2005. Masood is among at least 105 persons missing from all over the country during the last five to six years. The SSPs, SHOs and dozens of constables from various police stations of Rawalpindi were deployed at the roadsides and tried their best to disperse the procession that lasted nearly two hours.
A handful of policewomen were also present at the rally and helped their male colleagues once the protesting women tried to walk towards the GHQ. “Do we belong to the same country,� questioned one aggrieved woman from an SHO when she was stopped. “Do we have arms in our hand? Why are you stopping us?� she shouted. The women shouted slogans and demanded the release of their males before Eid-ul-Azha. Some of the women and their children were even crying. In an unfortunate incident that could easily have been avoided by the security personnel a young man, Mohammad bin Masood, son of Masood Ahmed, was dragged into a police van and forcibly driven away from the scene.
The shame here is not on the young man without his shalwar. It is on the police for allowing this to happen. And in some ways it is all our shame.
My first reaction on seeing the picture was that maybe the young man’s shalwar fell off in the scuffle. The News story calls it “unfortunate incident that could easily have been avoided”; Dawn, however, suggests that he was “stripped.” In either case, the indignity inflicted on the young man is reprehensible. Even more reprehensible is that 105 individuals are ‘missing’ without their families having any news of them.
Here at ATP we try to be as fair and even-handed as possible. We have praised the police in a number of posts when it has done well (here and here). We try to highlight what is blatantly wrong (here and here) when we see it. Silly attempts to spread lies is one thing; disappearances are quite another. They do not do anyone any good and cause irreparable harm to the reputation of the country, and to all of us. To those who worry about Pakistan’s image internationally, we have asked before, and we ask again: Who is giving Pakistan a bad name?
But this is not about ‘image.’ This is about the reality of disappearances. If these people have committed crimes, then let them be charged and presented in courts. And if they are not, then the guilt and the crime is not theirs, but of whoever holds them.

A handful of policewomen were also present at the rally and helped their male colleagues once the protesting women tried to walk towards the GHQ. “Do we belong to the same country,� questioned one aggrieved woman from an SHO when she was stopped. “Do we have arms in our hand? Why are you stopping us?� she shouted. The women shouted slogans and demanded the release of their males before Eid-ul-Azha. Some of the women and their children were even crying. In an unfortunate incident that could easily have been avoided by the security personnel a young man, Mohammad bin Masood, son of Masood Ahmed, was dragged into a police van and forcibly driven away from the scene.



















































Mr Abizaib!
i can see u rationalising one wrong with the other!2 wrongs wont make a right!!this is a minor issue as it does not concern u!but it cud have been us!ironic to see ur reply!one dictator came with islam an this is one with opposite thout!playing with nations ideology!an yet u say we are awake right?there are issues but who will let u settle them as if ull go out the same that happend to the poor man will be ur plight!i can assure u on this!Dictators arent our solution,democracy no matter how corrupt like with our nieghbours is the solution!
People disapperaing in Pakistan is a serious issue and a big problem and our countries agencies like the infamous ISI and MI are behind it and definately Musharraf knows where these people are and what happened to them. This protest should countinue, and people have right to know.
There are no good and bad dictators, only dictators.
Daktar, yep – thats exactly what I am saying except its not OK but it JUST happens to be like this. Whatelse is so right or righteous about Pakistan or Pakistani citizens, politicians and what not that this incident should for some reason stand-out?
My condemnation is not going to make any difference, nor I owe anyone a word of it. There has been plenty of it already.
Dear Abizaib, so you are saying that because this is also done elsewhere in the world and because it has been done in the past in Pakistan, therefore it is OK that this happened!
I do not find a word on condemnation for the act of dishonor (no matter who is responsible) in your comment.
First of all this incident is not unique to Pakistan, nor Musharraf’s Government. To say this and people disappearances happens only under Musharraf is an issue of selective memory for those who obviously are not very fond of him. This also opportunes them to use Musharraf as a punching bag for taking their anger out at him.
These kind of incidents are not personally ordered by Musharraf. Someone here rightly said it, its a reflection of the society you live in – this is who we are on daily basis with our children, wives, students etc. etc.
Someone mentioned that Musharraf coming to power was unconstitutional, but this person forgets to mention how constitutional is it by the then Prime Minister to not allow a commercial airline with civilians, mostly students land in Pakistan and order it to leave the territory with a possibility of landing in India and handing your senior most Army Chief to enemy in enemy’s territory. Wouldn’t that be a moment of Pakistan’s glory and dignity?? Ofcourse no mention about that – selective memory.
Also someone mentioned after Saddam its Mushi’s turn. I am sure this person is a proud Pakistani and will have no issues with outsiders running Pakistan’s affairs and selectively killing its leaders.
And Mr. Ghalib, the nations eyes have been open for a while, speak for yourself and wake up… This was relatively a minor incident, there are lot bigger issues and things happening that should be the real focus.
There are tons of video footages available on YOUTUBE and GOOGLE VIDEO on Police brutality in “civilized” and “democratic” western countries including US and UK. A simple search on those sites will render this info for you immediately… Go knock yourself out!