3. Pakistan: Civic Strangulation and Institutional Decay
If Palestine illustrates the devastating impact of military conflict and occupation on human rights, Pakistan offers a case study in how hybrid governance, economic instability, and institutional decay can dismantle civil liberties within a sovereign nation. Over the past several years, Pakistan’s human rights trajectory has steeply declined, characterized by the suppression of dissent, political persecution, and the systemic failure to protect marginalized groups.
The Shrinking Civic Space and Digital Censorship
Pakistan has witnessed an unprecedented crackdown on freedom of expression and peaceful assembly. Journalists, bloggers, and political activists who dare to criticize the powerful military establishment or the civilian government face severe repercussions.
The state has aggressively weaponized cybercrime laws—specifically the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA)—to criminalize political speech and silence online dissent. To prevent the mobilization of opposition movements and control the narrative, the state has normalized routine, sweeping internet blackouts and bans on major social media platforms.
Enforced Disappearances and Extrajudicial Measures
Perhaps the most egregious human rights violation in Pakistan remains the practice of enforced disappearances. For years, activists, students, and journalists—particularly from Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Sindh—have been abducted by state security agencies without charge, legal representation, or access to their families.
The Commission of Inquiry on Enforced Disappearances has failed to provide justice or hold perpetrators accountable. Instead of abolishing this practice, successive governments have normalized it, creating a pervasive climate of fear that effectively paralyses civil society. When citizens can vanish into thin air without legal recourse, the rule of law is replaced by absolute state terror.
The Erosion of Judicial Independence and Political Persecution
The foundational democratic principle of the separation of powers has been heavily compromised in Pakistan. The judiciary, which should act as the ultimate defender of citizens’ constitutional rights, faces severe political pressure and internal manipulation.
Political engineering has led to the mass arrest of opposition leaders, activists, and even their families, often on highly dubious charges of sedition or terrorism. The attempts to try civilian political protesters in military courts represent a direct violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which Pakistan is a signatory. When the courts are captured or bypassed by executive and military power, citizens are left entirely defenseless against state overreach.
The Vulnerability of Marginalized Groups
Pakistan’s human rights crisis is further compounded by its failure to protect religious minorities and women. Blasphemy laws, which carry a mandatory death penalty, are regularly exploited to settle personal scores, target religious minorities (such as Ahmadis, Christians, and Hindus), and incite mob violence.
Concurrently, the rights of women and transgender individuals remain deeply precarious. Rates of domestic violence, “honor” killings, and forced conversions of minor girls from minority communities remain alarmingly high, while the state’s legislative and judicial machinery consistently fails to provide adequate protection or ensure swift justice.
4. The Global Impact: Comparative Insights
While Palestine and Pakistan feature vastly different historical and geopolitical contexts, comparing their human rights crises reveals several chilling similarities that define the modern era of human rights decay.
The Common Thread of Geopolitical Impunity
In both cases, domestic and international actors exploit geopolitical calculations to bypass human rights standards. In Palestine, Israel relies on the unconditional diplomatic, financial, and military backing of major Western powers—principally the United States—to insulate itself from international accountability.
In Pakistan, the international community frequently ignores severe domestic human rights violations, forced disappearances, and the subversion of democracy because the country is viewed through the narrow lens of regional security, nuclear stability, and counter-terrorism cooperation. This selective morality proves that on the global stage, human rights are frequently sacrificed at the altar of strategic interests.
Conclusion: The Path Forward
The deteriorating situation of human rights in Palestine, Pakistan, and across the globe is a warning sign for the future of human civilization. We are witnessing a transition from a world that, however imperfectly, aspired to rule under the law, to a world governed entirely by brute force and political expediency.
Reversing this decay requires more than just issuing boilerplate statements of concern or publishing annual human rights indices. It demands a fundamental restructuring of international enforcement mechanisms:
- UN Security Council Reform: The archaic veto system must be reformed or bypassed in instances involving mass atrocities and systemic violations of international humanitarian law.
- Universal Accountability: International bodies like the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) must be empowered and insulated from political intimidation, ensuring that laws apply equally to powerful states and developing nations alike.
- Protection of the Civic Architecture: Democratic societies and international organizations must treat digital privacy, a free press, and the right to dissent as non-negotiable red lines, applying robust economic and diplomatic sanctions against regimes that systematically violate them.
Human rights are not a luxury to be enjoyed only during times of peace and economic prosperity; they are the very scaffolding that prevents humanity from sliding back into global conflict and barbarism. If we allow this scaffolding to be dismantled in Palestine, Pakistan, or anywhere else, we ensure that eventually, no one will be safe. The defense of universal human rights is not an act of idealism—it is an urgent prerequisite for our collective survival.
