Pakistan Plans to Track 1,600 Terror Suspects With Chips 

Tracking anklets will be installed on 1,600 terror suspects in Pakistan’s Punjab province.

PTI
World
Updated:
File image of Pakistani Paramilitary soldiers searching a man from the Hazara community  in Quetta after Lashkar-e-Jhangvi’s  sectarian attack on Shias which killed 80 people in Quetta on February 16, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)
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File image of Pakistani Paramilitary soldiers searching a man from the Hazara community in Quetta after Lashkar-e-Jhangvi’s sectarian attack on Shias which killed 80 people in Quetta on February 16, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)
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For the first time in Pakistan, ‘tracking chips’ will be installed on 1,600 terror suspects in the Punjab province by the end of this month to monitor their movements.

The terror suspects have been placed under the Fourth Schedule of Anti-terrorism Act, 1997 that lists all the known suspects belonging to banned militant or sectarian groups who could pose a threat to public peace and security.

For the first time in the country’s history, the law enforcement agencies will start ‘electronic surveillance’ of 1,600 terror suspects by installing a tracking device at their ankles (commonly known as ankle-band) to monitor their movements.
The suspects who have been allowed to stay in restricted areas will be summoned and the tracking chip will be installed
– Senior official, Punjab Counter-Terrorism Department

The use of this modern technology will not only help the law enforcement agencies to keep an eye on the suspects’ movements but also help reach ‘hard core terrorists’, he said.

After the installation of the ankle-band, it would be difficult for the suspects to leave the restricted area, he said.

The government decided to install the ‘ankle-band’ after reports that a number of high-profile members of the banned groups were flouting orders to ‘stay in a restricted area’.

Militant outfit Lashkar-e-Jhangvi chief Malik Ishaq, who was on the Proscribed List, reportedly managed to leave the country for Saudi Arabia to perform the religious ritual, Umrah, in the past without the permission of the government.

Under the law, a suspect of the Fourth Schedule may leave the ‘restricted area’ after taking permission from the government.

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Published: 11 Jul 2015,01:32 PM IST

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