Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Tuesday asked Pakistan to urgently investigate the mysterious disappearances of at least four activists who campaigned for human rights and religious freedom, saying their near simultaneous disappearances raised concerns of government involvement.

The statement came as protests are planned throughout the country demanding the recovery of the activists.

The missing men are Salman Haider, a poet and academic, and activists Waqas Goraya, Aasim Saeed, and Ahmad Raza Naseer. The four went missing from various cities between January 4 and January 7.

Pakistan is routinely ranked among the world's most dangerous countries for journalists. Rights groups say Pakistani activists and journalists find themselves routinely caught between the country's security establishment and militant groups.

"The Pakistani government has an immediate obligation to locate the four missing human rights activists and act to ensure their safety," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

"The nature of these apparent abductions puts the... government on notice that it can either be part of the solution or it will be held responsible for its role in the problem."

The interior ministry said over the weekend it will investigate the disappearance of Haider, but made no reference to the others.

A security source has denied intelligence services were involved in the disappearances.

Activists were set to hold protests in major cities on Tuesday afternoon, using the hashtag #RecoverAllActivists to generate support on social media.

Dawn's strongly-worded editorial says: "The sanitised language ─ 'missing persons', 'the disappeared', etc ─ cannot hide an ugly truth: the state of Pakistan continues to be suspected of involvement in the disappearance and illegal detentions of a range of private citizens."

"It is simply not enough for government and police officials to claim that the disappearances are being investigated. Mr Haider and the other recently missing activists need to be returned to their families immediately."

Read: A dark new chapter in the state’s murky war against civil society appears to have opened

In April 2015, prominent activist Sabeen Mahmud was killed by militants who said they carried out the attack because she promoted liberal, secular views.

Editorial

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