Police apologise for German tourist's two-week detention

Published April 2, 2014
This photograph taken on April 1, 2014 shows German tourist Kim Laura Schweer speaking on her mobile phone as she leaves Lahore High Court bench after a hearing in Multan. – AFP Photo
This photograph taken on April 1, 2014 shows German tourist Kim Laura Schweer speaking on her mobile phone as she leaves Lahore High Court bench after a hearing in Multan. – AFP Photo
This photograph taken on April 1, 2014 shows German tourist Kim Laura Schweer as she displays her passport with a Pakistani visa at a Lahore High Court bench after a hearing in Multan. – AFP Photo
This photograph taken on April 1, 2014 shows German tourist Kim Laura Schweer as she displays her passport with a Pakistani visa at a Lahore High Court bench after a hearing in Multan. – AFP Photo

MULTAN: Pakistani police have apologised to a German tourist after she was detained for two weeks for allegedly violating the terms of her visa, her lawyer said Wednesday.

Kim Laura Schweer was arrested on March 16 in the central town of Sakhi Sarwar, where she had gone to visit an annual festival in honour of a Sufi saint the town is named after, police official Rana Mohammad Asif said.

He added that Schweer, who is in her twenties, did not have specific permission to visit the town, which lies some 600 kilometres (370 miles) southwest of Islamabad and falls in the district of Dera Ghazi Khan.

According to the non-profit Nuclear Threat Initiative, the district is home to uranium processing facilities. It also borders the restive Balochistan province.

Schweer's lawyer Rana Asif Saeed told AFP he had been contacted about the case by the German embassy in Islamabad, and had taken the matter to court, which ordered the tourist's release on Tuesday.

“I moved the Lahore High Court (LHC) Multan Bench praying that under the UN charter any visitor with a valid countrywide visa can move freely anywhere in Pakistan,” he said.

“If there are some restrictions by local agencies or security forces, they must be in black and white and should be told to the visitor on the issuance of visa. No such restriction was mentioned on her visa.”

“The court asked the police to tender an apology to her and warned the police to be careful in future,” he added.

A spokesman at the German embassy confirmed the facts of the case but declined to confirm the tourist's name or provide further details.

“Her visa is expiring on April 4 and she has moved to Islamabad today and may leave for her country today or tomorrow,” said Saeed, Schweer's lawyer.

Pakistan requires foreigners to obtain “No Objection Certificates” to visit many parts of the country owing to fears over their security and to protect areas considered sensitive by authorities.

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