Punjab Police is known for its heavy-handedness even in full view of the public
Tariq Siraj, a Sialkot-based lawyer, says he saw some dreadful things in jail after he was framed by a political rival.
“One of the most horrifying cases of torture I know of was when a drug mule was tortured,” he says. “He had brought a contraband package hidden in a body cavity. When the jailers found out, they sodomised him with vegetables sprinkled with spice.”
Such extreme actions are rare. But then there are other, more common, methods.
For instance ‘falakka’ — the beating of soles of the feet with a cane — is quite frequent. This is preferred by law enforcement personnel because the marks of such torture are less easy to spot. There is also strappado — when a man is left hanging by his arms. This can result in the dislocation of shoulders. Another form of torture popular with jail staff is ‘jahaaz banana’ [make into an aeroplane]. The victim is held in the air by four people, each holding a limb while two others beat him with a ‘chhittar’ [whip] made out of tyre rubber.
“You get really disoriented,” says Siraj, who says he was beaten up, though mercifully only with hands.
“The superintendent was paid a large amount of money to torture me,” he alleges.
Another form of torture is ‘kawwa banana’ [make into a crow] — where a person squats, bending forward, with a rod passing through behind the knees. The victim is kept in the posture for hours, hampering blood circulation.
Former prisoners say they saw this in both Kot Lakhpat and Sahiwal prisons.
WHY THEY DO IT
While torture at police stations is meant to force confessions and supposedly facilitate investigation, in jails there are other reasons for it. First of all, there is the failure to prosecute the perpetrator. This and the rampant criminal economy are a deadly mix.
There are those who readily pay for the smallest of facilities and those who do not. They are made to pay by setting an example: ‘see what happens to those who don’t pay.’
The jail insulates not just the prisoners but also the wardens and the superintendents from the world outside. A prison guard is not a very powerful man in the world outside, but inside he wields incredible power over people.
A central issue around the phenomenon of brutal torture inside jails is that, despite international pressure, Pakistan has no law which criminalises torture.
“Some of the jail staff simply loves to torture prisoners,” says Siraj. “I won’t paint everyone with the same brush, but when there is a system of abuse, it starts being accepted as standard. Yes, the police are guilty of a lot of abuse, but the prison staff ... they think they can get away even with stealing your death shroud.”
A jail official notorious for torture, currently stationed at the Adiala Jail, was known as Chacha Giddar Kut. Prisoners remember him as a man who revelled in torture.
“He used to carry a baton and his hand would never be still,” says Yafat. “When he was not hitting a prisoner, he would be poking or hitting anybody who was passing by. When no one was within an arm’s length, he would start hitting his own boots with it!”
The unique problem with the jails is that their secrets are more likely to remain within their walls. Kot Lakhpat is often even called Kot Lakh-Laanat [Kot ‘Cursed’] by the prisoners. They say, after three years of being behind bars, a prisoner feels the fatigue within him; after five years he himself becomes a tormentor. Many convicts are thus used to abuse other prisoners.
Organised corruption, too, supports torture. Those with money and influence can pay their way out of torture. They can also pay for a little extra fresh air, a little more movement across the barracks and the use of cell phones, even drugs.
LEGAL RIGHTS (AND WRONGS)
The legal framework of the prison system has been inherited largely from British India.
“The British in India were using this prison system as an instrument of punitive measures instead of a reformative centre in order to suppress freedom fighters and other political opponents,” according to Human Rights Violations in Prisons by Assistant Professor of Law Muhammad Zubair and Sadia Khattak (2014) of Abdul Wali Khan University.
“Even the UTPs face staggering levels of torture under judicial custody,” says lawyer Saroop Ijaz, the Country Representative of Human Rights Watch (HRW).
A central issue around the phenomenon of brutal torture inside jails is that, despite international pressure, Pakistan has no law which criminalises torture.
“Usually Article 14 of the Constitution — “Dignity of Man” — is used and interpreted to constitute as protection against torture,” says Ijaz. “This is because there is no specific law, not even a definition of torture, especially in sync with international laws.”
Section 337-K of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) provides punishment for torture as 10 years in prison, but torture remains undefined. The UNCAT (United Nations Convention Against Torture) came about in 1987. Pakistan ratified it in 2010. An anti-torture law was drafted but never approved.
The lawyer explains that despite there being a provision in the PPC regarding “Mistreatment of Authority”, very rarely is anyone convicted. More than anything, torture is viewed as a ‘disciplinary offense’ rather than as a crime. Combined with outdated colonial laws and rules which are meant to keep the population in check rather than reform them, this creates a very enabling environment.
More importantly, there is also a doubtful system of addressing complaints.
“If a prisoner has a grievance, he can only complain to the jail superintendent or the district judge,” says Ijaz. “Once convicted, the prisoner hardly comes to court so he is cut off more or less. Meanwhile, the jail superintendent is an interested party, so complaints can’t really be fleshed out if they reach him. There is always an incentive to keep them hidden so controversy can be shunned. [Complainants] can petition the court — but there is a failure of the judiciary, because rarely is any action taken.”
The HRW representative suggests that lawyers should be able to call for independent medical examinations, or the court itself should be recognising torture signs, but the fact is that torture is usually done in such a way that no obvious signs are left.
“The point is that there are ways around [the barriers to complaining], but most cost money,” says Ijaz. “And if you have money then you’d most probably rather pay it inside the jail so that they don’t torture you in the first place.”
Another method is for legal aid itself to reach out for inmates and help them, rather than waiting for them to come out and ask for help.
“We formed a network of more than 20 organisations called the Anti-Torture Alliance (ATA),” says Bushra Khaliq, focal person of ATA. “We developed the draft anti-torture bill through a series of discussions and consultations with parliamentarians and lawyers among several others. It was an all-encompassing law covering all aspects of custodial torture, but the matter remains in limbo.”
The Senate of Pakistan passed the Torture, Custodial Death and Custodial Rape Bill in January 2015 after it was moved by Senator Farhatullah Babar in August 2014. The National Assembly was supposed to take up the Bill next but did not. “Thus criminalisation of custodial torture is still an unfinished agenda in Pakistan,” she laments.
Meanwhile, Yafat’s life has a new chapter. Prisoners are known to age fast and Yafat wants to make the most of his experiences.
“I was one of the fortunate ones in terms of the physical pain I went through,” says Yafat. “Still, sometimes it feels as if my soul is shattered.”
There is redemption of sorts in his work as a criminal defence investigator with a legal aid organisation named Justice Project Pakistan, where he deals with complaints of torture in jails. A full recovery, he says, may take the rest of his life.
INTERNATIONAL DEFINITION OF TORTURE
According to the United Nations definition, the term torture means any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him/her or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions.
The writer is a member of staff. She tweets @XariJalil
Published in Dawn, EOS, December 10th, 2017