2) What Fourth Schedule placement implies — and why scrutiny is required
Pakistan’s anti-terror framework allows the state to impose monitoring, financial restrictions, and movement controls on individuals deemed a security risk. These powers are serious and far-reaching.
At the same time, credible journalism has repeatedly warned that such measures can be misused to pressure dissent if not backed by transparent evidence.
Both realities can coexist:
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The state may claim it is countering harmful activity, and
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The public still has the right to demand clear, testable proof.
That is the standard being applied to the state.
It is also the standard being applied to Adil Raja.
3) The “home raid / intimidation” narrative: what evidence looks like
Raja has claimed on X that his home was targeted and that UK police responded.
If someone alleges state-linked intimidation abroad, the evidentiary bar is not mysterious. It is basic:
At minimum, publish (with redactions where necessary):
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Police incident or crime reference numbers
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The police force involved
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Confirmation of classification (targeted, political, hate-related, or routine)
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Initial incident reports
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CCTV stills or confirmation none exist
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Forensic findings (forced entry, tools, prints)
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Insurance claim references, if applicable
Until such documentation exists, the claim remains unauditable.
4) The asylum angle: don’t accuse—test incentives
This is not an accusation that Raja is “faking” persecution. That would be reckless.
But it is a fact that asylum claims rely on documented fear and risk. Public narratives of intimidation, if supported by official records, can form part of such cases.
That makes transparency essential.
If Raja wants global audiences to accept his persecution narrative, the solution is simple:
publish the verifiable paperwork.
If he refuses, the public is entitled to ask whether this is:
