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Thursday March 28, 2024

HRCP concerned at allegations about Sana’s treatment

By Our Correspondent
July 17, 2019

LAHORE: The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) is deeply concerned over grave allegations it has received regarding senior PML-N leader Rana Sanaullah’s treatment in detention.

HRCP was approached by his wife, Nabila Sanaullah, who claims that her husband, a diabetic and blood pressure patient, shows visible signs of ill health.

After an initial meeting the day he was arrested, Ms Sanaullah says she was not allowed to see him until three days later. She found that his voice was very low, his hands were trembling and he could not walk without support. He told his wife he had not been given anything to eat for 48 hours following his arrival at the District Jail in Lahore. He added that he had been kept in solitary confinement in a small cell and made to sleep on a mat on the floor. According to his wife, he was told by the jail authorities that no family member had been to see him.

Ms Sanaullah alleged that the food and other necessities she tried to deliver to her husband in jail did not reach him. She believes that the jail authorities are under instructions to mistreat her husband as a means of demoralising him, and she now fears for his wellbeing.

These are serious charges and need to be investigated swiftly and independently. HRCP has applied for permission to visit Sanaullah, but this has not been granted yet. We have been told that the authorities concerned have directed the jail staff to issue a report on the state of his health, it said.

However, given widespread allegations of political victimisation, independent observation and assessment is necessary. Internal reports alone will not inspire confidence. Indeed, if there is no reason for public concern, then the government’s apparent reluctance to grant HRCP permission to visit Sanaullah only increases the anxiety over his treatment in detention, commission said. HRCP would like to remind the state of its obligation to ensure that all prisoners have access to food and medicine they need.

To deprive any prisoner of basic standard of care amounts to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. HRCP strongly advises the government to take urgent action in this regard if it is to refute the claims of political victimisation, it said.