Implementation of International Human Rights Treaties in Pakistan: Legal and Institutional Challenges
Keywords:
International Human Rights Treaties; Treaty Implementation; Pakistan; Constitutional Law; Incorporation; Monism And Dualism; Judicial Practice; National Human Rights Institutions; Legislative Harmonization; Enforcement Gaps.Abstract
The involvement of Pakistan in the international treaties of human rights, is a case of a multi-faceted engagement between the international treaties of human rights and the domestic constitution, politics and institutional realities in the country. In the last few decades, Pakistan ratified various fundamental international human rights documents, thus assuming accountability to respect, safeguard, and uphold the rights regarding civil freedoms, political participation, equality, fair trial, and social-economic rights. However, conversion of these commitments of the treaties into practical domestic action is still lopsided and frequently disputed. The article critically discusses how international human rights treaties have been implemented in Pakistan by reviewing the legal position of treaties within the national constitutional order, how the international standards are integrated in the domestic legislation and policy and through which institutional channels the execution of international standards is viewed and implemented. It claims that the problems of implementation in Pakistan are motivated by an ambiguity of doctrines in the context of the local justifiability of treaties, legislative inadequacies, and lack of institutional coordination and structural governance issues such as resource constriction, politicization, and fluctuated accountability. The paper also concludes that despite the reforms inspired by treaty even in places where treaty-inspired reforms are in place, enforcement gaps are found since there is lack of capacity in policing, prosecution, adjudication and administrative regulation, and lack of awareness among the people and lack of civic space. This kind of legal analysis and institutional evaluation going hand-in-hand proves that the mere act of ratifying a treaty cannot guarantee the actualization of rights unless these processes are backed by sensible incorporation plans, efficient oversight bodies and political determination. The paper finds that to enhance treaty enforcement in Pakistan, reforms are needed to make the domestic impact of treaty commitments, institutionalize coordinated action in compliance, and entrench international human rights principles in the drafting of law, judicial interpretation and administrative practice.


