PAKISTAN: The brother of a rape victim has been found murdered three months after his arrest

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION - URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME

Urgent Appeal Case: AHRC-UAC-093-2010
ISSUES: Administration of justice, Enforced disappearances and abductions, Extrajudicial killings, Violence against women,

Dear friends, 

The Asian Human Rights Commission has received information that the body of a young man has been found three months after his arrest in the midst of a campaign for legal redress for his sister, who was gang raped in 2007. Sabir Soomro supported his teenage sister throughout a badly and unprofessionally tried rape case, resisting a number of settlement offers from the suspects before they were acquitted in May. He faced harassment and false murder charges – being remanded for nine months for the murder of his wife, who is alive – before being rearrested in March. His body was found on 26 June, the UN international day against torture. His sister and parents took the corpse to the house of the provincial governor but have been stopped from demonstrating by police. No inquiry has yet been announced. 

CASE NARRATIVE: 

As covered in previous urgent appeals and statements (STM-075-2009 , UAC-032-2009) the case of Kainat Soomro led to public outrage after the 13-year-old gang rape victim was cross examined lasciviously, and in front of a large public audience last year. In the years leading up to the trial her family was forced to leave their home town due to threats, and had fought hard to get the case into the legal system after police refused to register the First Information Report (FIR). 

Pressure from the public and the media saw it taken up, but although complaints about court conduct had judge Nizar Ali Khawja removed from the case, and despite strong evidence and medical reports, the suspects were acquitted on 6 May 2010 by Dadu session judge Mr. Fahim Ahmed Siddiqui. 

During the trial Kainat’s brother Sabir was accused of murdering his wife and was arrested with his younger brother. The case was filed by the alleged rapists and others connected with them, including Sabir’s father-in-law, Ali Hasan Buledi. We are told that Sabir and Daud Soomro were detained from 25 June until February 2010, when his wife was able to appear in court. The judge of the additional session court III (Dadu district) required that she submit an affidavit claiming that she had not been murdered, and the young men were then released. 

Sabir took up his sister’s campaign again, but within a month he was arrested at the Dadu district court in front of his mother and others by the assistant sub inspector of investigation, Mr. Shams Uddin Khoso, and head constable Saman alias Lahoti of Shahdadkot in Qamber, Sindh, on the pretext of robbery charges. We are told that a group of men connected with the suspects – Ali Hasan Buledi and his son, Asad Buledi, with Manthar Buledi and Salim Ansari – were present and allowed to assist with the arrest. We are also reliably informed that the Meharh police, under whose jurisdiction the court falls, had not been informed of the operation as is required by law, and that neither the Qamber nor the Dadu police accepted the complaint of Sabir’s father. Although the judge trying Kainat’s case was informed of the illegal arrest, he reportedly did not take or command any action. 

Sabir Soomro was discovered dead on 26 June 2010 more that 1000km away in Balochistan, near Khuzdar, which is the home town of Ali Hasan Buledi and others believed to have been supporting the rape suspects. Rather than assist the family members and open an immediate inquiry into Sabir’s illegal public arrest, his disappearance and murder, we are told that the local authorities have vested more energy into preventing their protests and their mourning procession to the governor’s house. A credible investigation must now be swiftly launched into the suspect behavior of the judiciary and law enforcement officers involved in the case, particularly focusing on their ties to the alleged perpetrators. Any reluctance to investigate such strong indicators of corruption would be a further gross miscarriage of justice in Dadu, Sindh, and higher government officials must consider themselves accountable. 

SUGGESTED ACTION: 

Please write to the authorities listed below calling for a strong transparent investigation to be opened into the murder of Sabir Soomro and the actions taken by the Dadu and Qamber police and judiciary in this case, with particular focus on their relations with the alleged perpetrators of the rape. 

The AHRC has written to the UN special rapporteurs on extrajudicial and summary executions, the independence of judges and lawyers, and on Violence against women, its causes and consequences, and on the situation of human rights defenders, calling for their prompt intervention.

To support this case, please click here: SEND APPEAL LETTER

SAMPLE LETTER

Dear __________, 

PAKISTAN: The brother of a rape victim has been found murdered three months after his arrest 

Name of victim: 
Mr. Sabir Soomro, son of Nabi Soomro, resident of Meharh, district Dadu, Sindh province 

Names of alleged perpetrators: 
1. Mr. Shamsuddin Khoso, assistant sub inspector of police, Shahdadkot, Qamber, Sindh 
2. Mr. Saman alias Lahoti, police head constable, Shahdadkot, Qamber, Sindh 
3. Ali Hasan Buledi, son of Karim Bux, resident of Meharh, Dadu, Sindh 
4. Asad Buledi, son of Ali Hasan Buledi, resident of Meharh, district Dadu, Sindh province 
5. Salim Ansari, resident of Meharh, Dadu, Sindh 
6. Manthar Buledi, resident of Meharh, Dadu, Sindh 

Date of incident: 26 June 2010 
Place of incident: Khuzdar, Balochistan province 

I understand that the body of a young man has been found three months after his arrest during a campaign for legal redress for his sister, who was gang raped in 2007, and that no inquiry has yet been initiated. 

As previously reported by the Asian Human Rights Commission, the case of Kainat Soomro led to public outrage after the 13-year-old gang rape victim was cross examined lasciviously, and in front of a large public audience last year. During the trial her family was forced to leave their home town due to threats and had fought hard to get the case into the legal system after police refused to register the First Information Report (FIR), assisted by the public and media. 

Although complaints about court conduct had judge Nizar Ali Khawja removed from the case, and despite strong evidence and medical reports, the suspects were acquitted on 6 May 2010 by Dadu session judge Mr. Fahim Ahmed Siddiqui. 

During the trial Ms. Soomro’s brother Sabir was accused of murdering his wife and was arrested with his younger brother. The case was filed by the alleged rapists and others connected with them, including Sabir’s father-in-law. I am told that Sabir and Daud Soomro were detained from 25 June until February 2010, when his wife was able to appear in court. The judge of the additional session court III (Dadu district) required that she submit an affidavit claiming that she had not been murdered, and the young men were then released. 

I am informed that Mr. Soomro took up his sister’s campaign again, but within a month he was arrested at the Dadu district court in front of his mother and others by the assistant sub inspector of investigation, Mr. Shams Uddin Khoso, and head constable Saman alias Lahoti of Shahdadkot in Qamber, Sindh, on the pretext of robbery charges. A group of men connected with the suspects – Ali Hasan Buledi (Sabir’s father-in-law) and his son, Asad Buledi, with Manthar Buledi and Salim Ansari – were present and allowed to assist with the arrest. I am also reliably informed that the Meharh police, under whose jurisdiction the court falls, had not been informed of the operation as is required by law, and that neither the Qamber nor the Dadu police accepted the complaint of Sabir’s father. Although the judge trying Kainat’s case was informed of the illegal arrest, he reportedly did not take or command any action. 

Sabir Soomro was discovered dead on 26 June 2010 more that 1000km away in Balochistan, near Khuzdar, which is the home town of Ali Hasan Buledi and others believed to have been supporting the rape suspects. Yet rather than assist the family members and open an inquiry, the local authorities appear to have vested more energy into preventing their protests and their mourning procession. I demand an explanation for this. 

Please see that an immediate inquiry is launched into the three-month disappearance and murder of Sabir Soomro after his public and illegal arrest by the two named Qamber officers listed above. 

A credible probe must also be carried out into the suspect behavior of the judiciary and the law enforcement officers involved in the case, with particular focus on their ties to the alleged perpetrators, in order that the strong indicators of corruption are examined, and the gross miscarriage of justice in Dadu is righted. 

It is now lamentably beyond doubt that the family members of Ms. Soomro are in critical danger, and pitifully under supported by their legal or law enforcement system. They must be provided with full security by the state. I finally urge a retrial of the flawed rape case of Ms. Soomro in the high court at the expense of the Sindh government and for compensation to be arranged for the bereaved family. 

Yours sincerely, 

—————- 

PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO: 

1. Mr. Syed Yousaf Raza Gilani 
Prime Minister of Pakistan 
Prime Minister House 
Islamabad 
PAKISTAN 
Fax: + 92 51 9221596 
E-mail: secretary@cabinet.gov.pk 

2. Syed Qaim Ali Shah 
Chief Minister 
Karachi, Sindh Province 
PAKISTAN 
Fax: +92 21 920 2000 
E-mail: pppsindh@yahoo.com 

3. Mr.Syed Mumtaz Alam Gillani 
Federal Minister for Human Rights 
Ministry of Human Rights 
Old US Aid building 
Ata Turk Avenue 
G-5, Islamabad 
PAKISTAN 
Fax: +9251-9204108 
Email: sarfaraz_yousuf@yahoo.com 

4. Mr. Muhammad Ayaz Soomro 
Minister for Law, Parliamantry Affairs & Criminal Prosecution Service 
Sindh Assembly Building, 
Court road, Karachi, Sindh province 
PAKISTAN 
Fax: +92 21 9211982 
E-mail: secy.law@sindh.gov.pk 

5. Chief Justice of Sindh High Court 
High Court Building 
Saddar, Karachi 
Sindh Province 
PAKISTAN 
Fax: +92 21 9213220 
E-mail: info@sindhhighcourt.gov.pk 

6. Ms. Nadia Gabol 
Minister for Human Rights 
Government of Sindh, 
Pakistan secretariat, Barrack 92, 
Karachi, Sindh Province 
PAKISTAN 
Fax: +92 21 9207044 
Tel: +92 21 9207043 +92 21 9207043 +92 21 9207043 +92 21 9207043 +92 21 9207043 +92 21 9207043 +92 21 9207043 +92 21 9207043 +92 21 9207043 
E-mail: lukshmil@yahoo.com 

7. Dr. Faqir Hussain 
Registrar 
Supreme Court of Pakistan 
Constitution Avenue, Islamabad 
PAKISTAN 
Fax: + 92 51 9213452 
E-mail: mail@supremecourt.gov.pk 

8. Inspector General of Police 
Police Head office, I. I. Chundrigar road 
Karachi, Sindh Province 
PAKISTAN 
Fax: +92 21 9212051 
E-mail: ppo.sindh@sindhpolice.gov.pk 

————————– 
Thank you. 

Urgent Appeals Programme 
Asian Human Rights Commission (ua@ahrc.asia)