LEGISLATION WATCH CELL

Summary

Custodial torture is endemic in Pakistan’s criminal justice system and commonly perceived as an unofficially sanctioned component of investigation. It is used routinely to extract evidence—despite this being prohibited under Article 14(2) of the Constitution—and as an alternative means of punishing individuals in custody. In Pakistan, public officials, including law enforcement agencies and security forces, are known to employ torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment against people in their custody, regardless of the victim’s age, gender or health.

Read complete report ↓

English

اردو

Latest reports

Why the average household needs at least PKR 75,000 a month to ensure access to food, housing, utilities, healthcare, education… and dignity.

Land appropriation and the expansion of corporate farming at the expense of local livelihoods and ecological sustainability in Cholistan.

Why Article 9A establishes the rights to clean air, safe drinking water, waste management, disaster preparedness, and environmental justice.

How rising violence against religious minorities, forced conversions, hate speech and the growing influence of the far right have characterized 2024/25.