Manzoor Pashteen, the leader of the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM), was arrested by the police on Monday for “criticising chiefs and generals of the Pakistan Army” while speaking at the Asma Jahangir Conference.
Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar, activist Sammi Deen Baloch, and former chief minister of Balochistan and chairperson of the Balochistan National Party-Mengal Akhtar Jan Mengal were among those who attended the session on “Reluctance to Criminalize Enforced Disappearance and Arbitrary Detentions.”
In his statement on Sunday, Pashteen identified the national organisations responsible for the killings in the former Fata districts committed in accordance with the “state of exceptions” policy imposed on Pashtun.
He had claimed that since 2001, customary laws had been altered and a brand-new story about national security had been created. Every journalist, person, and organisation that supported independent thought was targeted and persecuted by the new dictatorship.
A production order was being withheld from MNA Ali Wazir, according to the PTM leader, because of his right to free expression. The power targeting free thought, he claimed, was beyond the reach of the media, courts, legislatures, and civil society. Resistance is the only path to freedom.
A day after the meeting, Pashteen claimed in a tweet that he had only been the subject of a complaint for treason and intimidation due to his conference speech.
The Lahore Civil Lines police station received the allegation made by the PTM leader from a local by the name of Naeem Mirza. According to the report, Pashteen criticised the leaders and generals of the Pakistani Army and their participation in the fight against terrorism during his address.
It said that Pashteen attempted to incite popular opposition to the military forces and accused them of committing “genocide against Pashtuns.”
According to the FIR, 15 to 20 of Pashteen’s supporters screamed anti-army slogans and attempted to “provoke people against the armed forces and the state” throughout the speech.
The complaint referenced the Pakistan Penal Code’s sections 124A (sedition), 149 (every member of an unlawful assembly guilty of an offence committed in furtherance of a common aim), and 505 (statements conducive to public mischief). Additionally, it covered Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997 Section 11-X (liability for inciting civil disorder).
In reaction to the allegations against him, Pashteen tweeted that the only way to silence the voices of the oppressed on the right was to “provide justice,” not through FIRs, imprisonment, or propaganda.The FIR was criticised as being “beyond humiliating” by MNA Mohsin Dawar.In contrast to what Manzoor said in his speech, many others have expressed much more in recent protests. He is, however, facing ATA and sedition charges. He tweeted, “The absurd FIR needs to be dropped.