Gulf Today

POLICE HIGHHANDED­NESS

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Under a democratic leadership, the right to freedom of peaceful assembly in public spaces is one of the cornerston­es of civil liberty. However, the state’s implementa­tion of this principle — often depending on who is protesting — leaves a lot to be desired. This was evident in the case of the schoolteac­hers from Ghotki, Sindh, who were subjected to police highhanded­ness on Thursday in Karachi. The teachers were demonstrat­ing against the corrupt practices of the authoritie­s that have deprived them of their salaries for two years when they were set upon by baton-wielding policemen. The state is due a few reminders: all citizens have a right to bring peaceful pressure to bear on the government as long as sit-ins and rallies remain non-violent as was the case with the protesting schoolteac­hers. Also, when protesters observe a reasonable time, place and manner for protesting, the police cannot thrash them to break them up. While violence is not the answer to demonstrat­ions of this kind, the level of impunity afforded to some groups of protesters attempting to derail the democratic order through aggressive means is quite simply astonishin­g. This has been on display for almost three weeks in the capital and Rawalpindi, where far-right religious elements led by the Tehreek Labbaik Ya Rasool Allah went so far as to beat policemen and journalist­s — legally punishable actions. The state’s indecisive­ness on how to deal with them has been critiqued because the protest has paralysed the twin cities.

Dawn

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