In a statement issued on Saturday, the HRCP said the sheer impunity with which such arrests have been made, often without warning in the early hours of the morning, with some of those arrested alleging that their families were harassed and their property damaged, is a cause for alarm.
The human rights body said dissent and criticism of the government are essential ingredients of robust public debate in a vibrant democracy and should never be construed as sedition. Successive governments have brazenly weaponised archaic, colonial-era laws to stifle dissent, it added.
“Never has this served any democratic purpose. While we do not condone abusive or threatening language or slander, in light of the recent arrests of leaders such as Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed and Fawad Chaudhry under sections 153-A, 505 and 124-A, the HRCP urges the government to abolish the sedition law, as it is currently worded, from the Pakistan Penal Code, given its long history as a tool of political victimisation,” the statement read.
It further said a political process to do so, which was initiated in the Senate in early 2020 but could not come to fruition, must be revived immediately.