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Pakistan not as bad as it’s made out to be: DG Rangers

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Director General Sindh Rangers Major General Iftikhar Hassan Chaudhary said on Monday that Pakistan is not as bad it is portrayed in the international media.

Maj Gen Chaudhary, while speaking at Dow University in an event to mark the International Day Against Drug Abuse, told the participants about the incident that happened to the Pakistani family in Canada as well as another criminal incident.

“If incidents like those that happened in Canada happened in Karachi, then it would have been declared the world’s dangerous city,” said the DG Rangers.

The head of the paramilitary force said that SharmeenObaidChinoy’s Oscar-winning film “Saving Face” was made after three incidents of acid attacks were reported in the country.

He then compared the situation in Pakistan with London, saying that more than 800 incidents of acid attacks were reported in the British capital yet no film was made and neither did the media report on it.

“10,000 knife attacks happened in Britain and no one got to know about them. Do you think London is safe?” asked the DG Rangers from the participants.

He also compared Karachi to New York, saying that in 2020, 1,638 or 1,688 armed robberies took place in New York while only 280 took place in Karachi.

We are not as bad as we are made out to be and we have started thinking ourselves as bad,” said the DG rangers.

The head of the paramilitary force then explained the procedures followed by Sindh Rangers when it apprehends a suspect.

Maj Gen Chaudhary said that the Sindh Rangers “do not have the right to prosecute a suspect and can only keep an individual in confinement for 24 hours.”

He added that after 24 hours, the rangers are supposed to hand over the culprit to the police.

“Police has the prosecution rights, not us [Rangers],” said the Maj Gen Chaudhary, adding that the rangers did set up a joint prosecution team with the former Capital City Police Officer (CCPO) Karachi.

The DG Rangers said that it was due to that joint prosecution team that the law enforcement agencies were able to identify the former Lyari gangster Uzair Baloch in five cases.

“Rangers work with other organisations, and we have made mistakes,” he acknowledged. However, he highlighted the importance of the rangers by telling the audience that a Karachi businessman had told him that he would move to Lahore if the paramilitary force leaves the city.

 

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