The United Arab Emirates has been accused by the Human Rights Watch (HRW) of “forcibly disappearing” four Pakistani men since October and deporting six others based on their Shia background.
The New York-based campaign group published a report on Tuesday that said that the 10 men had mostly lived and worked in the UAE for many years as managers, sales staff, CEOs of small businesses, laborers, and drivers.
Human Rights Watch has previously said hundreds of activists, academics, and lawyers serve lengthy sentences in UAE jails. The UAE has dismissed those accusations as false and unsubstantiated.
“UAE authorities released and immediately deported the six in October and November after also subjecting them to enforced disappearance and incommunicado detention for between three weeks and five months.”
The HRW report said.
One of the four men who remain in detention was able to call his family after six months. The family still does neither know where authorities are holding him nor why he was detained, the report said.
The rights group said it had spoken with family members who said they knew of other Pakistani Shias who had been picked up by UAE authorities since mid-September.
“Reports of UAE authorities arbitrarily targeting Shia residents, whether Lebanese, Iraqi, Afghan, Pakistani or otherwise, often emerge at times of increased regional tensions.”
HRW said.