Pakistan's Military Escalates Global Crackdown on Dissidents Under Asim Munir

A report states Pakistan's use of transnational repression against dissidents abroad has escalated since General Asim Munir became army chief in late 2022. It alleges Munir personally steers a campaign involving surveillance, intimidation, and coordinated violence in Western countries. The report cites a 2025 constitutional amendment granting Munir lifetime immunity and sweeping powers to target critics globally. A key example is violent attacks in the UK against supporters of former Prime Minister Imran Khan, including an assault on lawyer Mirza Shahzad Akbar.

Key Points: Pakistan's Transnational Repression Rises Under Army Chief Asim Munir

  • Repression intensified since 2022
  • UK attacks on Khan supporters
  • Lifetime immunity for Munir
  • Violence includes firearms, arson
  • Western response called inadequate
2 min read

Under Asim Munir, Pakistani military escalated transnational repression: Report

Report details intensified global attacks on Pakistani dissidents since General Asim Munir took command, citing UK violence and legal immunity.

"Pakistan's military establishment is running a dirty transnational repression campaign against dissidents in Western countries. - Greek City Times report"

New Delhi, Feb 22

Pakistan has long been accused of employing transnational repression to silence dissidents living abroad, with the frequency of such incidents rising since General Asim Munir assumed command of the army in November 2022, as per a media report.

Several analysts and global watchers argue that Munir has personally steered this "dangerous" approach and openly warned individuals associated with former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, according to a report in Greek City Times.

By portraying opponents as existential threats, Munir justifies surveillance and violence against Pakistani citizens overseas, it said.

Pakistan's 27th Constitutional Amendment, enacted in late 2025, granted Munir "lifetime immunity, created a puppet court, and stripped judicial oversight", leaving him with sweeping power to target dissidents worldwide.

"Pakistan's military establishment is running a dirty transnational repression campaign against dissidents in Western countries. This is not speculation; it is a pattern under which the Pakistani state critics are hunted, threatened, assaulted, and terrorised in their homes abroad, while their families inside Pakistan are squeezed as leverage," the report detailed.

"The military's goal is simple: break critics psychologically, force them into silence, and warn everyone else that exile does not protect them. It is an extension of Pakistan's domestic coercion model into Western streets, using criminal proxies and deniable intimidation," it added.

The report highlighted that since Munir took command of the Pakistani Army, the transnational repression has intensified, evolving from legal harassment to coordinated acts of violence across Western capitals. The attacks, it said, include the use of firearms, arson, acid, and trained operatives acting in apparent confidence that democratic governments will not intervene.

"The most recent and clearest evidence is in the United Kingdom. In January 2026, the local media reported that Scotland Yard's counter-terrorism command took over an investigation into 'highly targeted' attacks on Pakistani dissidents living in the UK, including prominent supporters of jailed former prime minister Imran Khan," the report mentioned.

"The attacks were violent and sustained, including assault, a firearm incident, attempted arson, and repeated property damage. One victim, Mirza Shahzad Akbar, a human-rights lawyer and former cabinet member under Khan, was attacked after the assailant confirmed his identity and then punched him repeatedly in front of his family," it stated.

The report emphasised that despite mounting evidence indicating the Pakistani state's alleged role in transnational repression, Western responses have been "woefully" inadequate.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone living abroad, this is terrifying. If they can do this to their own citizens in the UK, it raises serious questions about the safety of others who criticize them. Western governments need to take a much stronger stand. Their "woefully inadequate" response is enabling this behavior.
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Vikram M
Lifetime immunity and a puppet court? That 2025 amendment sounds like something from a dictatorship, not a constitutional republic. It's a sad state of affairs for the people of Pakistan. The international community's silence is deafening. Where is the outrage? 🤔
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Priya S
While the report is damning, we must also be careful about the source. Greek City Times isn't a mainstream global outlet. The core issue is real, but we need more credible international journalism to build an undeniable case for action. Just my two paise.
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Rohit P
This is the same establishment that has nurtured terrorism for decades. Exporting repression was the next logical step. The attack on Mirza Shahzad Akbar in front of his family is barbaric. The UK must treat this as state-sponsored terrorism and act accordingly.
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Michael C
The pattern is clear: silence critics by any means necessary. It's a classic playbook. What's shocking is the scale and brazenness in foreign lands. Democracies need to unite and impose serious diplomatic and economic costs on Pakistan for this. Freedom of speech is non-negotiable.

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