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.



















































There you go again. Back to your anti-Pakistan agenda. I will tell you who gives Pakistan a bad name, its people like you who lack patriotism and websites like this.
A while back there was a programme called Karachi Kops in UK. Needless to say it horrid even hardened Pakistanis let alone the natives. After the initial shock, Pakistani community showed more disgust at access of press to police stations to record the programme instead of on police brutality itself. Don’t worry we will forget this one too.
My first 2007 Resolution…look at this picture each time I’ll get warm and fuzzy feelings about Pakistan.
Shocking, indignation, resentment what else can we put into this mire of emotions that we might feel upon seeing this pornographic display of our own countrymen tormenting our own citizens. But haven’t we all become desensitized to even worse displays of porn shows, almost on a daily basis. With our own protector, the State of The “Islamic Republic of Pakistan” selling it’s own by the bounty, renting out it’s army and then……well I can go on and on …………but the audience, our countryfolks are all not receptive to it.
On a more practical note the protestors should have known that our “Police Force” inducts the most pathetic and demented, they shouldn’t have expected any humane treatment. The authorities knew about the protest beforehand and should have allowed it to continue peacfully without police interruption. In case of the next protest the following should be observed.
1. Plan the protest with the worst case scenario in mind.
2. Keep an alternate route in mind.
3. Be prepared to use violent force against the Police if necessary (believe me it has worked before and I have seen police wallahs running with their tails in between)
4. After subduing the Polics make sure of even more stringent measures to contain the outburst and resume peacefull protest. (Very difficult but a smart mob management can do it)
5. And last keep changing the person in lead to avoid target capturing.
Alas the third word we live in is within all of us.
Pevaiz Alvi Sir: I simply commented that in the land of pure(Pakistan), there is no hummanity and civil rights; whereas in the land of gora(US), noone can treat you like this….police treats you with alot of respect here…I did not intend to describe any philosiphy, it was a simple comment…if in Pakistan the police can remove my shalwar and beat me with a dandaa on the road, I would rather like to loose the rightful place as a full citizen of the land of pure and faithfuls….there is no “us vs them” mentality, no rocket science, no big philosiphy….I did not use the word “gora” to describe the skin color…
Samdani: If this is done on the behalf of the “goras”, than we should be more shamful I guess….