Cleric, who chains drug addicts at ‘detox centre’, just won’t stop!

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  • Ilyas Qadri was arrested in 2006 for fettering to a single chain 112 drug abuse patients; this time he has been taken into custody for chaining together 115 people 

 

A cleric who was arrested in 2006 for mercilessly chaining drug users together in a detoxification ‘centre’ in Haripur has been arrested again for doing the same thing—this time to 115 people, a media report said on Friday.

According to the report, Ilyas Qadri, the owner of Idara Tark-e-Manshiyat Roohani Ilaj (Centre for Spiritual Treatment of Drug Addicts), was first arrested in 2006 for fettering to a single iron chain 112 drug users, including seven British nationals of Pakistani origin.

The charges against him were brought by Shahid Waseem of Chakwal and Majid Mehmood, a British national, who accused Qadri and his men of maltreatment, physical, mental torture, and sexual abuse of some underage boys. The cleric got bail in 2007 and in 2008 he sued 19 people for defamation. He went to court against the district nazim, tehsil nazim, DPO, DSP and nine journalists. As no one from this group or the families pursued the cases, Qadri was acquitted by the Abbottabad bench of the Peshawar High Court and the cases were dismissed. He went back to work a few months later.

However, he has done the same thing again.

The cleric has been arrested along with five guards from his centre on charges of wrongful confinement, extortion through fear of death for people in custody, intimidation, cheating and impersonation.

The case came to light when a man who was admitted at the centre went to the district judge of Haripur and DPO Haripur with a complaint that the centre was guilty of human rights abuses, torture and mistreatment of patients.

Khalabat Township SHO Raja Mehboob told the media that the police went into action on the orders of the DPO. A team from three police stations, headed by ASP Mukhtiyar Khan, raided the centre and found 115 people between 13 to 45 years of age, fettered in several different large rooms. All the men were bound together with one chain. They remained chained round-the-clock, even while they slept, prayed, or went to the bathroom. The detainees were kept in an atmosphere detrimental to their health and civil liberties as entitled under the law, said the SHO.

The detainees complained of constant intimidation from Qadri’s men who subjected them to beatings without any reason. They told the police that Qadri collected money from their families in the name of a fee for detoxification but the facilities he promised were never provided to them during their stay.

One patient identified as Lutufur Rehman confirmed that Qadri charged each patient Rs 9,000 per month and Rs 35,000 at the time of admission.

The police unchained and released all the men whose families were asked to take them home. The SHO confirmed that three detainees, Noorur Rehman, a resident of Peshawar, Lutufur Rehman of Sikandar Pur and Shaukat were sent to hospital for treatment. Their bodies bore torture marks.

Meanwhile, Qadri has termed the action against him a “a vilification campaign” against his centre. He said that centre was a “blessing” for those whose loved ones have fallen victims to drugs. He said that his centre was registered under the Societies Act of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and he has been treating heroin, hashish, opium and alcohol addicts through spiritual methods without using medicines since 1995.

He justified the chains by saying that it prevented the drug users from escaping to avoid treatment. According to Qadri, religious mantras and praying five times a day were the methods of treatment for addicts. He claimed that he has treated hundreds of patients during the last two decades. He could not, however, answer why or how he could chain patients if the Supreme Court of Pakistan had banned it even for prisoners.

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