by AFP
ISLAMABAD - Salman Haider, a poet and academic, and bloggers Waqas Goraya, Aasim Saeed, and Ahmad Raza Naseer - who campaigned for human rights and religious freedom - went missing from various cities between January 4 and 7, sparking nationwide protests.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) said their near simultaneous disappearances raised concerns of government involvement.
Rights groups say activists and journalists often find themselves caught between the country's security establishment and militant groups including the Taliban.
Hundreds of people attended protests in major cities Tuesday calling for the bloggers' immediate release.
Speaking at a demonstration in Islamabad, opposition senator Afrasiab Khattak told AFP: "We have seen pressures on the media, electronic media, print media. People have been forced to indulge in self-censorship.
"But for social media this is for the first time, the first attack. And the message is - we won't allow freedom of expression on social media also."
Feminist activist Farzana Bari told AFP the disappearances pointed to a widening crackdown on dissent in the country.
"If they have committed any crime or violated any cyber rules - (the government) could have registered a complaint against them. But we should know what they committed," she said.
The interior ministry said over the weekend it would investigate the disappearance of Haider, but made no reference to the others.
A security source told AFP that intelligence services were not involved in the disappearances.
But the main opposition Pakistan People's Party issued a notice in parliament that said: "The pattern of these disappearances suggests it is a coordinated action, undertaken to silence voices which are critical of prevalent socio-political issues."
Pakistan has had a history of enforced disappearances over the past decade, but they had mainly been confined to conflict zones near the border with Afghanistan or to Balochistan.
Pakistan is routinely ranked among the world's most dangerous countries for journalists, and reporting critical of security policies controlled by the powerful military is considered a major red flag, with reporters at times detained, beaten and even killed.
In April 2015, prominent activist Sabeen Mahmud was killed by militants who said they carried out the attack because she promoted liberal, secular views.
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