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An independent watchdog on Wednesday offered a mixed report card in its annual look at the state of human rights in Pakistan, welcoming the enactment of new laws to protect women but decrying an uptick in religiously motivated vigilantism.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said the country was among the world's most prolific enforcers of the death penalty, having executed 87 prisoners in 2016. Another 426 were sentenced to death last year. Four prisoners convicted of terrorism charges in military courts were hanged early Wednesday, the army said.
Pakistan has executed 432 prisoners since 2014, when it lifted a ban on executions following a Taliban attack on a school that killed some 150 people, mostly schoolchildren.
The report said fewer people died in terror attacks last year, but that Pakistan's judges and lawyers were under increasing threat from targeted killings. It said minorities continued to suffer discrimination and attacks from religious extremists, with little state protection. It noted that Pakistan has one of the world's lowest literacy rates.
The report also criticised the use of a controversial blasphemy law by military and civilian authorities to intimidate critics.
Pakistan last year arrested 15 people, 10 Muslims and five non-Muslims, on blasphemy charges, according to the report. Pakistan has never executed anyone convicted of blasphemy, but the mere accusation is enough to ignite mob violence and lynchings in the deeply conservative country.
Freedom of speech also took a hit last year with threats of blasphemy charges levelled against those who challenged state authority, said the report. Six journalists and a blogger were killed last year. There has been a spike in the level of "intimidation of the media and increased levels of self-censorship by the media," it said.
Jahangir assailed Pakistan's powerful intelligence and security agencies for unlawfully detaining people, including five bloggers who were held for several weeks before being freed earlier this year.
The report also criticized a new cyber law that allows the authorities to access a person's online accounts without a warrant.
It also said attacks against minorities have taken aim at professionals, particularly those belonging to the Ahmadi sect, a messianic faith which is reviled by mainstream Muslims, who believe there is no other prophet than Muhammad.
Ahmadis have been fiercely persecuted in Pakistan by hard-line groups, and in the early 1970s Pakistan changed its constitution to declare them non-Muslims.
Islamic militants also attacked Muslim shrines and mosques.
But Jahangir also noted progress in Pakistan, saying that same lawmakers who once said killing a woman in the name of honor was "social tradition," enacted a law to try to end it. Women are present in all walks of life in Pakistan, she said.
"When I first began there were very few women lawyers but now there are so many bright young women out there, performing better than anyone," Jahangir said.
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