Crimes against women committed in Pakistan

Are the current laws failing to protect woman?


Acid Attacks Condemn Pakistan Women to Life of Pain

AHMEDPUR SHARQIA (Reuters) - Shaheena moans in pain as the fierce summer heat sears her skin. She can no longer see and her once pretty face is horrifically disfigured.

The 15-year-old from Punjab province is one of the hundreds of Pakistani women who fall victim each year to acid attacks perpetrated by jealous husbands or rejected suitors or as plain acts of revenge.

For many victims, death would be less painful than living with pain and the humiliation of disfigurement.

Shaheena’s nightmare began when the husband of her elder sister, Sakeena, threw acid over them after an argument in November. Sakeena suffered 70 percent burns but her face was largely spared.

Shaheena was hit full in the face and blinded. Her wounds have still not properly healed and a terrible burning sensation returns every day with a maddening itching.

“I wish I had died that day,” Sakeena said in the one-room house in which they live in the small town of Ahmedpur Sharqia, 330 miles south of Islamabad.

“I was sitting with my sister. He just stood there and looked at us for two minutes and then poured the acid.”

She said her sister’s life had been ruined. “Who will marry her in this condition? Who will take her? Her face has been destroyed.”

The pain of their injuries is bad enough, but the sisters have worse worries. Sakeena’s husband is in prison awaiting trial, but they still have to live in his house.

They have nowhere else to go and are under constant pressure from his relatives to drop the charge against him and preserve their marriage.

“I have no brother, no father,” Sakeena said. “The whole family is behind him, urging us to settle. They say what has happened has happened, forgive him and return to your life.”

Rights activists say acid attacks are among the worst of the huge numbers of crimes against women committed in Pakistan, a male-dominated Islamic state where the human rights commission estimates a woman is raped every two hours.

“MOST BRUTAL”

“Burning is the most brutal crime,” said Shahnaz Bukhari, head of the Progressive Women’s Association, a non-governmental organization helping acid burn victims.

“If a woman survives, she is alienated from society, children look at her as if she is an ugly witch.”

Bukhari blamed “this possession feeling in our society.”

“The phenomena ingrained in our males’ minds is that ‘I am God on Earth’.”

The rights commission says as well as huge numbers of rapes hundreds of women fall victim every year to “honor killings” in which close male relatives kill a woman to avenge perceived shame she has brought to the family.

This can range from having an affair to choosing a husband without the family’s consent.

Many die or are terribly injured in what are described as “accidents” with kerosene cooking stoves.

Madadgaar, a joint venture of Lawyers for Human Rights and the United Nations Children Fund, recorded 4,485 cases of violence against women in Pakistan in 2002, including murder, rape, burning and physical and sexual abuse.

The figures are compiled from media reports and activists say they are a fraction of the actual number.

Rape can be considered a dishonor on a family so often goes unreported.

“The issue of rape, the issue of incest, child sexual abuse is not talked about,” said Bukhari, who has been urging victims to narrate their stories and challenge perpetrators.

But this is easier said than done.

An hour’s drive from Sakeena live Mariam Bibi, 45, and her daughter-in-law Nazeeran Mai, 30, who were gang-raped on May 8 in their house in the impoverished village of Pati Kheiara.

They were each raped by three men, and say they receive daily threats from one of the suspects, even though he is in police custody.

Bukhari said violence against women was rampant because of an absence of specific laws against domestic violence and loopholes in existing laws. Also, police implementation of laws was ineffective.

Under traditional Islamic law employed in the countryside, four witnesses are needed to convict a person of rape and there are no laws at all against wife-beating.

“We need proper legislation and implementation of the legislation,” Bukhari said.

http://reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=ourWorldNews&storyID=2899984

Yeah, the laws definitly need to be re-checked. New laws must be implemented for violence against women. It's high time.

I have great respect for the movement and countless women who are fighting this human rights abuse in Pakistan and the many organisations that aid these women in physical and mental ways.

Truly, this is a problem closer to home. A failure of the "Pakistani Culture" to keep the male from becoming a slave to his desires and his anger. The only solution to the problem is law that protects the rights of women and the swift and careful carrying out of justice from crimes such as this. Jurisdiction on a state level with severe punishment.

By shariah, this crime is a major social problem and must be dealt with strictly with further aim to improve the future condition of the family and society in general. The person who has written the article is misguided in two senses. Firstly, Islamic law cannot be "traditional" because it surpasses geographical, racial and age boundaries. Secondly, the implementation of rural laws is misguided and it is incorrect to equate these laws as being those of Islam. Each case is circumstantial and based on evidence of or on the victims, a judicial investigation should have taken place.

Pakistaan ki bhi kyaa baat haye. Tarbiyat of the family and children in a truly islamic sense must be the bare minimum. Sometimes this nation really worries me.

its not the law, its the unIslamic tribal system that needs to be changed....

This happens in our country because people are willing to close their eyes and put it all behind them.. Personally i think this is a serious problem and it should be brought to attention via media.. if they can put an advertiement on tv claimin "bache do hi ache" then they shoudl start makin advertisments sayin ITS WRONGGGGGGG TO BURN OR THROW ACID ON UR SPOUSE"S FACE!! cuz ppl dont realize the severity of the crime ... they think they can get away with it... and then the rishtedaar who dont support the victim sayin that ohh patch up.. an blah blah blahh.. plz .. save ur marriage while u cannn.... so what of he threw acid on u ortr ur saas tried to burn u.. ughhhh

UTD,

I must respectfully disagree with the last few lines of the article. To the best of my knowledge, 'rape' is a category separate from adultery/fornication and hence there is no need for four witnesses. So the law being employed in Pakistan is a Pakistani law, and not a law under "Traditional Islam".

If the woman even kills the guy to protect herself, then she is not considered at fault.

There are two instances which I have come across describing the punishment given to a rapist, and they were both the death penalty (handed out on the complaint of a single woman), though I do think that the final decision rests on the judge to decide according to the severity of the situation.

Re: wife beating I am not sure. I know that she can go upto the Imam or the judge and ask for the marriage to be annulled. If the beating is so severe (such as the one described in the article.. or burning), then the punishment will increase in the same manner. I will check up on this.

Yeh, it is very sad that these people are opressing women under the guise of Islam. But as mushi mentioned the situation is improving as more people are being made aware of the truth. Thanks for the article, and a wake up call to the rest of us to try in every little way to put an end to this crap.