Release abducted Pakistani socialists!

Seven prominent youth and trade union activists have been disappeared in Karachi by the Army and Sindh Rangers, a paramilitary state department notorious for extra-judicial killings. Nobody has been told about their whereabouts so far and no case has been registered against them. Comrades arrested by the Army and Sindh Rangers These activists, all of […]

  • International Marxist Tendency
  • Tue, Apr 24, 2018
Share

Seven prominent youth and trade union activists have been disappeared in Karachi by the Army and Sindh Rangers, a paramilitary state department notorious for extra-judicial killings. Nobody has been told about their whereabouts so far and no case has been registered against them.

Comrades arrested by the Army and Sindh Rangers

These activists, all of them members of Lal Salaam (International Marxist Tendency) were arrested because they joined the solidarity protest of Pashtun Tahafuz (Protection) Movement (PTM) in front of the Karachi Press club. The Pashtun movement has developed to massive proportions, and has seriously rattled the ruling class, which is why they are now cracking down on radical elements, whom they fear will gain an echo within the movement.

The protest was organized and called by the leadership of the PTM as they were being denied the right to hold a peaceful public meeting in Lahore.

We therefore demand the immediate release of these seven activists of the IMT abducted by the Pakistan Army. Their only crime is to have expressed their views about the Pakistani State and supported the PTM in front of the Karachi Press Club today. We also demand that the demands of the PTM should be accepted immediately and state should end its atrocities in the tribal areas and stop supporting Islamic fundamentalism.

Click to jump to the following:

  1. An analysis of the Pashtun movement, and reports on the arrest of our comrades, as well as coverage in the mainstream press.

  2. A petition, calling for the release of our abducted comrades.

  3. A financial appeal for the Pakistan Trade Union Solidarity, through which comrades and supporters can donate money to help with legal fees and so forth.

  4. Information about an international day of action, scheduled for 25 April.

  5. A model letter to be sent to local Pakistani embassies.

  6. A model motion for trade unions and student groups, offering solidarity with Lal Salaam and calling for the release of our comrades.

1) Analysis of the Pashtun movement and reports on abductions

For more information about the Pashtun movement, read Adam Pal’s analysis of the PTM, which has mobilized hundreds-of-thousands of people across the country. It has given voice to some of the most oppressed layers of Pakistan, and has brought tens-of-thousands to public meetings. The state apparatus and the entire ruling class are trembling at the sight of this huge movement, which explains their severe measures against it. The international mass media is also taking notice of the Pashtun movement: the PTM has also received international coverage from the BBC and Al Jazeera.

We published this report on 22 April after six of our leading youth and trade union organisers were apparently abducted by the army, and a further update on 23 April after another of our youth comrades disappeared. We believe these comrades were targeted and disappeared as a result of their participation in the Pashtun movement. Our comrades’ arrest was also covered by the Daily Times, a national, Pakistani newspaper.

2) Sign the petition! Free our comrades!

Please sign this petition calling for the comrades’ immediate release.

3) Donate to support Lal Salaam

Securing freedom for our abducted comrades might require expensive legal proceedings. Please donate to the Pakistan Trade Union Solidarity campaign to assist the comrades in Pakistan with court fees and legal representation.

4) International day of action on 25 April

We are calling on our comrades and supporters to hold an international day of action on Wednesday 25 April, and protest Pakistani embassies all over the world. Demonstrations have already been organised in BritainAustriaSweden and Denmark.

Let’s send an international message the Pakistani state cannot ignore: free our comrades!

5) Model letter – send to Pakistani PM, Minister of the Interior and your local embassy

We call on all our readers and sympathisers to send the following letter to the Pakistani Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior (contact details below). This should also be sent to the Pakistani embassy in your home country.

For further information and to send solidarity messages to the families of the abducted persons, please email contact@pakistansolidarity.org

Prime Minister of Pakistan
Shahis Khakan Abbasi
Email: info@pmo.gov.pk
Address: P.M Secretariat, Constitution Avenue, G-5/2, Islamabad.
Phone: (+92-51) 9222666, 9225404, 9202759, 9206111, 9222666, 9222667, 9222668, 9222669, 9222670

Minister of Interior
Professor Ahsan Iqbal
Email: ahsan.iqbal@pmln.orgbetterpakistan@gmail.com
Address: 4th Floor R-Block,
Pak Secretariat, Islamabad.
Phone: + (92-51) 9212026

——————

To whom it may concern,

We are deeply concerned about the disappearance of seven youth and labour activists, in Karachi on Saturday, after the seven attended a peaceful protest in support of the Pashtun movement.

They are presumed to have been arrested by the Army and Sindh Rangers, a paramilitary state department notorious for extra-judicial killings and we fear for their safety.

Furthermore, we view the disappearances as a very serious attack on the labor and democratic rights of Pakistani working people.

We ask you to investigate this incident and assure us that these activists are safe and well. We also ask you to inform us as to where they are being held and ensure their immediate release, as they have not participated in any form of illegal actions.

Those arrested are:

1) Karim Parhar, leader of PTM and RWF Quetta

2) Attaullah Afridi, Organizer of PYA Karachi

3) Aftab Ashraf, central organizer of RWF

4) Umer Riaz, Organizer of PYA Islamabad

5) Zain ul Abideen, Central Organizer of PYA

6) Muhammad Gulbaz, Organizer of RWF Kashmir

7) Bilawal Baloch, Deputy General Secretary of PYA

Sincerely,

6) Pass this motion at trade union branches and student groups

The following model motion should be raised at all trade union branches and congresses; as well as student unions and groups.

Condemn the abduction of unionists and student leaders by Pakistani state

Seven student leaders and trade unionists were abducted on Sunday 22 April 2018 by the army and security forces of Pakistan. These student leaders were travelling from Karachi to Lahore by train, along with other students and workers. They had recently attended a solidarity event in Karachi to show their support for oppressed Pashtuns, and to condemn state brutality in the northern Pakistani regions. The disappeared individuals include: Attaullah Afridi (student and youth organiser); Umer Riaz (student and youth organiser); Zain ul Abideen (student and youth organiser); Karim Parhar (trade unionist); Aftab Ashraf (trade unionist); Muhammad Gulbaz (trade unionist); Bilawal Baloch (student and youth organiser).

For many, the years workers and youth of the Pashtun region have been brutalised in the name of ‘security’. The people living in the Pashtun regions face threats to their lives from army, military drones and Islamist fundamentalists. Earlier this year, the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM) started when a Pashtun youth, Naqeeb Ullah Mehsud, was killed in Karachi by a notorious police officer, Rao Anwar on 13 January 2018. Naqeeb Ullah Mehsud belonged to the Mehsud tribe of North Waziristan and was a shopkeeper in Karachi when he was abducted and killed under mysterious circumstances. Rao Anwar is famous for land grabbing and the use of extortion and murder to settle personal disputes. According to reports he has killed at least 400 people between 2011 and 2018 but not a single enquiry has been made against him. A student, Mashaal Khan, was also killed by mob lynching by state sponsored Islamic fundamentalists in Pashtun area when he initiated a campaign against high fees, high rents and the vice chancellor’s corruption.

All of the PTM rallies so far have been completely peaceful, with speakers showing their grievances and asking for justice through legal channels. However, state institutions and the secret services are targeting people, including students and workers, who have shown solidarity with the PTM. Against this backdrop, a rally was held in Karachi on 22 April 2018. Different trade unionists and youth leaders made speeches during the rally. When these workers were returning to their homes, state security agencies and Army intercepted their trains and buses, and without showing any warrants or arrest orders, took them to unknown locations. Nobody has been informed about the abductees’ whereabouts so far and no case has been registered against them. This is the usual practice of the police and army in Pakistan. The PTM expresses a huge movement of the masses, which has erupted in Pakistan against these injustices.

This union believes that the people of Pakistan, and especially the Pashtun people, have the full right to express their concerns through free speech, to hold rallies and express their grievances throughout the country in a peaceful manner. Illegal abduction of students by the state authorities should be stopped immediately. The students and workers of [your country] would like to see Pakistan free from Islamist fundamentalism, worker exploitation and oppression for minorities.

This trade union/student union/society:

  • Demands the Prime Minister of Pakistan, Shahid K. Abbasi, Minister of Interior Ahsan Iqbal; and [local embassy] immediately release Karim, Aftab, Gulbaz, Attaullah, Umer, Zain and Baloch from the custody of the army and security forces.

  • Asks the Pakistani government to stop brutalising workers and trade unionists.

  • Shows complete solidarity with the struggling workers and trade unionists in Pakistan, by supporting the Pakistan Trade Union Solidarity campaign.