ISLAMABAD, Aug 30: Several hundred people in Pakistan have disappeared, apparently taken into detention in connection with the war on terrorism, the human rights group Amnesty International said on Wednesday.

So-called enforced disappearance has long been a problem in strife-torn countries such as Nepal and Sri Lanka, but new patterns have emerged in South Asia related to the war on terrorism, such as the Pakistani cases, it said.

“Whilst many of those have eventually been acknowledged as being held in Guantanamo Bay, others are believed still to be held in Pakistani detention although their precise whereabouts remain unknown,” the rights group said.

“South Asia has a history of enforced disappearances, with tens of thousands of people going missing over past decades in countries such as Nepal and Sri Lanka,” Amnesty International’s deputy Asia director, Catherine Baber, said in a statement.

“It is very disappointing to see countries such as Pakistan join in the trend that one would hope would be declining,” she said.

In Nepal, where Maoist rebels have battled government forces for the past decade, a government committee is investigating more than 600 cases of enforced disappearance. But activists say more than 1,000 are unaccounted for, the rights group said.

Maoist rebels are believed to have abducted thousands of people in Nepal and more than 330 people are still missing, it said.

The United Nations urged the Nepali government on Wednesday to clarify the fate of hundreds of missing.

Sri Lanka, where ethnic Tamil rebels began a war for a separate state in 1983, has one of the highest levels of unresolved enforced disappearance in the world, it said, though it did not give an estimate of the number of cases.

Up to 10,000 enforced disappearances have been reported in the Indian-controlled Kashmir, it said.

Ms Baber said people should be detained lawfully. “People should be arrested and detained according to the law, not forced into a van in the middle of the night and swept off to an anonymous detention centre where they risk torture and further abuse,” she said.

Individuals should have the right to challenge their detention, to see a lawyer of their choice and talk to their families, she said.

—Reuters

Opinion

Editorial

Missing confidence
03 Jun, 2026

Missing confidence

For the government, the economy may be more stable now than it was three years ago, but for manufacturers and exporters, it is still difficult to do business.
GB elections
03 Jun, 2026

GB elections

THERE has been some heated politicking in the country’s scenic north in recent days, with Gilgit-Baltistan finally...
The Lebanon factor
03 Jun, 2026

The Lebanon factor

THE fragile calm that followed the recent US-Iran confrontation is being tested. Iran has made it clear that it does...
Mixed messaging
Updated 02 Jun, 2026

Mixed messaging

It is fair to ask how these actions fit into a strategy that is supposedly aimed at reaching a negotiated settlement.
Sugar: the bitter truth
02 Jun, 2026

Sugar: the bitter truth

THEY are at it again. Politically powerful sugar mill owners are back with their demand seeking permission to export...
Uphill battle
02 Jun, 2026

Uphill battle

A DISPUTE has broken out between Karachi’s political representatives over illegal encroachments on the city’s...