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Pak orders inquiry into Indian fisherman's death
Friday, March 21, 2008 16:36 [IST]

Islamabad: Pakistan today ordered an inquiry into the death of Indian detainee Laxman Kanji in a police hospital in Karachi as its Human Rights Minister urged both governments to stop politicking over jailed fishermen from each others country.

Kanji, 40,  who was arrested in February 2006 for allegedly fishing in Pakistani waters, died yesterday of a "cardiac arrest" after being taken to hospital from Landi Jail where he was detained, authorities claimed.

Caretaker Human Rights Minister Anasar Burney, who had played an important role in ensuring the release of another Indian prisoner on death row in Pakistan for 35 years Kashmir Singh, today told reporters that he had initiated an "immediate inquiry" into the death of Kanji while in custody.

Burney also asked the Pakistani and Indian government to "stop playing politics or a numbers game and to release all fisherman lodged in their jails on an urgent basis".

Expressing grief over the fisherman's death, Burney, one of Pakistan's leading rights activists, said it was a shame that he died away from his family in Pakistan and had spent two years in a prison "for a crime that he should have been released for already".

Kanji was admitted to hospital last week after he complained of stomach pain, officials claimed.

According to initial reports, Kanji had died of natural causes, Burney said.

Officials in Karachi said an autopsy would be performed on Kanji's body to ascertain the exact cause of death before it is handed over to Indian authorities.

Burney said it was a shame that hundreds of poor fisherman from Pakistan and India were in prison in the two countries "for crossing an invisible line that divided territorial waters".

"The vast majority of these fisherman cross international borders unintentionally, but they are still arrested, their boats are impounded and they end up spending years in jails. Many are the sole breadwinners for their families or are fathers of young children. In their absence, their families suffer immensely," the minister said.

"Even when they are released, these fishermen return without their boats or equipment."

Burney said that instead of arresting such men who are only trying to earn a decent living and feed their families, Pakistani and Indian security forces "must come up with a better and more humane plan as they themselves were aware that the fisherman were crossing the border accidentally".

Instead of being arrested, the fishermen should be guided back into their own country's waters, he suggested.

He suggested that boats impounded by the two countries forces should also be returned to the fisherman so they can continue to earn a living.


Source : PTI

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