The findings, contained in the 102-page report by the Human Rights Watch, is based on interviews with senior police officials, and victims and witnesses of police abuse in Balochistan, Sindh and Punjab provinces.
The report details the allegedly over 2000 false "encounters" committed by police in 2015, and demanded an immediate overhaul of the country's police system that "enables and even encourages serious human rights violations".
"Those from marginalised groups - refugees, the poor, religious minorities, and the landless - are at particular risk of violent police abuse," it said.
"Methods of custodial torture include beatings with batons, stretching and crushing legs with metal rods, sexual violence, prolonged sleep deprivation, and mental torture, including forcing detainees to witness the torture of others," the report added.
Expressing concern over the situation, Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said that "Pakistan faces grave security challenges that can be best handled by a rights respecting, accountable police force."
Senior police officials told Human Rights Watch that physical force is often used because the police are not trained in methods of professional investigation and forensic analysis, it said.
"Police officers openly admitted to the practice of faked encounter killings," the report said, adding that such actions were often carried out under pressure from powerful politicians and local elites.
Police in Pakistan are under-resourced and over-stretched with under qualified and poorly trained officials often in important positions.
"Abysmal work conditions contribute to the climate where violations are tolerated or encouraged," Adams said, adding that the rule of law won't become a reality in Pakistan unless the law enforcement forces are also held to it.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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