The scandal of enforced disappearances has lingered on our horizon for almost two decades. What began as a 'practice' in the context of the semi-Balochistan nationalist insurgency has by now spread to virtually the whole country. The pattern has been that in cases taken up by the CIED or even the superior courts, the law enforcement agencies baldly deny knowledge of the whereabouts of the missing persons. The CIED and the courts have failed not just to have their production orders implemented, they have also failed to penetrate the cocoon of impunity in which these agencies have wrapped themselves and order them to investigate and get to the bottom of the matter. The CIED reports it has dealt with 5,290 cases till July 2018, of which 3,519 had been 'disposed of' by August 31 while 1,830 cases are still pending. From the proceedings before the SC, it seems quite clear that what the CIED classifies as 'disposed of' does not always satisfy the victim families. While the number of missing persons has been a bone of contention between the authorities and the families, human rights advocates and others, it needs to be stated that whatever the correct number of cases that fall within the category of 'missing' (i.e. 'disappeared'), even one enforced disappearance is a case of one too many that blights so many lives and casts the country in negative light. As the weeping mother of a son missing for nine years tearfully told the SC, if her son was guilty of something, let him be tried according to the law. This reflects the agony of families left without closure as to the whereabouts and condition of their loved ones. The CIED, with the backing of the SC, must ensure the authorities either produce the missing or conduct supervised investigations to discover their whereabouts and state.
The scandal of enforced disappearances has lingered on our horizon for almost two decades. What began as a 'practice' in the context of the semi-Balochistan nationalist insurgency has by now spread to virtually the whole country. The pattern has been that in cases taken up by the CIED or even the superior courts, the law enforcement agencies baldly deny knowledge of the whereabouts of the missing persons. The CIED and the courts have failed not just to have their production orders implemented, they have also failed to penetrate the cocoon of impunity in which these agencies have wrapped themselves and order them to investigate and get to the bottom of the matter. The CIED reports it has dealt with 5,290 cases till July 2018, of which 3,519 had been 'disposed of' by August 31 while 1,830 cases are still pending. From the proceedings before the SC, it seems quite clear that what the CIED classifies as 'disposed of' does not always satisfy the victim families. While the number of missing persons has been a bone of contention between the authorities and the families, human rights advocates and others, it needs to be stated that whatever the correct number of cases that fall within the category of 'missing' (i.e. 'disappeared'), even one enforced disappearance is a case of one too many that blights so many lives and casts the country in negative light. As the weeping mother of a son missing for nine years tearfully told the SC, if her son was guilty of something, let him be tried according to the law. This reflects the agony of families left without closure as to the whereabouts and condition of their loved ones. The CIED, with the backing of the SC, must ensure the authorities either produce the missing or conduct supervised investigations to discover their whereabouts and state.