I feel ashamed. Do you?

This is what is real and this is what happens in our beloved country. I have always had this feeling that there are actually two pakistans. One, the image of which we have in our pakstudies books. And another, which is the dirtier one and which we don’t want to see and admit. But thats the pakistan that we live in. On the paper, we are a muslim country, a very religious society. But in reality our soldiers, politicians, businessmen and the whole of the elite class is fond of wine and women. Talking about sex and rape is a taboo but it is very much prevalent!

PAKISTAN: Young women held in military torture cells and forced into sexual slavery

**FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE **
AHRC-STM-012-2009
January 12, 2009
**A Statement by the Asian Human Rights Commission **
PAKISTAN: Young women held in military torture cells and forced into sexual slavery
Ms. Zarina Marri, a 23-year-old schoolteacher from Balochistan province, was arrested in late 2005, and has been held incommunicado in an army torture cell at Karachi, the capital of Sindh province. She has been repeatedly raped by the military officers and is being used as a sex slave, to induce arrested nationalist activists to sign state-concocted confessions.
One man, who was arrested by a state agency and kept in military torture cell almost for nine months, narrated the story of this young woman to Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontières, RSF); nowpublic.com; the International Red Cross; and at Woolwich Court in London. The current whereabouts of the young woman are not known. It has been asserted that women who are fighting for the greater autonomy of Balochistan are being arrested by the state agencies and being forced into sex slavery in their custody.
Mr. Munir Mengal, the managing director of a Balochi-language television channel, was arrested on April 4, 2006 from Karachi International airport by the state intelligence agencies and transferred to a military torture cell in Karachi for nine months (GENERAL APPEAL (Pakistan): Alarming situation of forced disappearance of political and human rights activists in Balochistan). He narrated the story of the forced sex slavery of the young teacher Zarina Marri whom he encountered in a military cell. According to the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) Mr. Munir Mengal witnessed many human rights violations in this military prison. Mengal says that, “a young Balochi woman, Ms. Zarina Marri, was used as a sexual slave by the officers. They even once threw her naked into my cell. I did not know what had happened to this mother of a family who was arrested by the army in our province.”
Another Balochi nationalist (name omitted by request), who was arrested by the military intelligence agency twice and kept in military cells in different cities, has confirmed to the AHRC that there were young Balochi females seen at those two torture cells, naked and in distress. The prominent Balochi nationalist leaders say that they know fact that young Balochi women are being arrested, either during or after protest demonstrations on the disappearances and are missing. They also know about the women are sexually abused in the military custody but they cannot say so publically because of their sanctity and harassment of their families.
Mr. Munir Mengal was also tortured and his penis was severely injured when he refused to have sex with Zarina Marri. He told RSF, “on 27th January, 2007 at 6 pm Major Iqrar Gul Niazi (Military Intelligence) called me in his office and showed me some nude pictures, and laughingly told me that you have been a director of a TV channel so certainly you have good relations with actresses.”
When he returned to his cell he found porn pictures strewn all over it. Around 12 pm a low-ranking military officer called Subedar brought a female there. She was trembling and weeping. “He threw her on my body and told me, ‘You know what to do with her. You are not a child we have to tell what to do with her.’” Mr. Mengal says after half an hour the officer returned, and seeing them sitting apart, abused them and forcibly took off their clothes. Mengal said he was stunned when the woman began praying in the Balochi language. She told Mengal her name was Zarina Marri and that she belongs to the Kohlu area, headquarters of the rebel Marri tribe, a scene of a bloody insurgency that begun in 2005. She said she was a schoolteacher and that the army personnel had abducted her along with her one-year-old.
“They accuse us for spying for the Baluchistan Liberation Army,” Zarina Marri said. She begged Mengal to kill her. “I have been undressed several times for them."
Mengal said on the refusal to have sex, the intelligence officials inflicted cuts on his private parts. “I thought I would lose my manhood,” he said. Ms. Zarina told to Mengal that she has seen some females in the torture cell but was not allowed to talk with them.
At the time of this incident Colonel Raza of the Pakistani Army was in charge of that cell. After a few days he was transferred to Rawalpindi, Punjab province and Colonel Abdul Malik Kashmiri came as head of the military torture cell.
Mr. Munir Mengal was released from the military torture cell on 4th August 2007 and was held in a civilian jail on August 5th. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) representatives met him in Khuzadar jail, where he provided them with a detailed briefing which they wrote down. The next day their doctor also checked the injured portion of his penis. Mr. Andrew Barterlays, the officer of ICRC who visited Mr. Mengal several times in jail, told Mr. Mengal that until he was out of custody the ICRC could not take up the issue of Zarina Marri, because both their lives would be threatened.
The Asian Human Rights Commission has already reported that 52 torture cells are run by the Pakistan army, please see following link (PAKISTAN: 52 illegal torture and detention centres identified), Karachi was stated to have three military torture cells. The testimony by Mr. Munir Mengal has revealed the most heinous methods of army torture, using young women as sex slaves to induce political opponents to sign the government-concocted confessions of terrorist and anti-state activity.
The AHRC severely condemns the use of women as sex slaves by the Pakistan army and for keeping these women incommunicado. Pakistan is the signatory to Convention on the Elimination of All Forms Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) but women are being used as sex slaves in a gross violation of the Convention by army officers.
The AHRC urges the government of Pakistan to immediately hold a judicial investigation into the women detainees being used as sex slaves by the army officers in their detention centers, and to arrest all the army officers posted in the torture cells; both in Karachi and in the rest of Pakistan. The perpetrators of these heinous crimes must be brought before the law. The government should ascertain the whereabouts of the women arrested from Balochistan province who have disappeared after their arrest, including Zarina Marri. It is the duty of the government to search for the missing persons taken by State intelligence agencies, who have held them in torture cells for many years.
Pakistan proudly calls itself the Islamic Democratic State but its rulers appear to lack the courage to bring its own military into check. It is a military that engages in torture and some of the most heinous methods of breaking the spirit of those that it considers the enemy, it is a military that pays no heed to the norms of civilised behaviour and is one that, if not brought to book will convert Pakistan into a barbaric state.

Source: PAKISTAN: Young women held in military torture cells and forced into sexual slavery

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

We are ashamed of this all. Since last few years we are going down and down.Our nation is not looking at importance of charecter and behaviour. The biggest problem is corruption.Zia called a conferrence on biggest issues of Pakistan but against his thinking 90 % of the paticipents said that the corruption is the biggest issue of Pakistan . As the conferrence was fourced to end and even no commitee was formed to work on results of that very high scale organised conferrence. Money makers are crossing all the limits and every good tradition is being spoiled . No way out.

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

Oki i go through so called Asian Human Rights Commission wensite. Anyone can file a complain with making up a really good story and they will publish it. WTF ?

Pure Sick Propaganda !

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

I'm not surprised that there are some human rights violations in Balochistan but is this a credible website? More importantly, do we have reason to think that this represents all of Pakistan?

If this is true, I call for the execution of the men involved. But let's wait to see some confirmation before we start the self loathing.

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

sigh
we need to protect women better.

I think every society has its good and bad points. These problerms occur int he world over. Some justify it through democracy, some through nationalism, some through religion.

Look at so-called liberal democracies such as the UK and the USA - bastions of human rights - yet look at what they did in Iraq, it equals the picture this article paints.
Other democracies such as Israel and India....they are not any better.

I wont be surprised this happens - lets face it some husbands actually treat their wives like this - although im sure a very small percentage.
Power corrupts most people. theres a lack of accountability and very little respect for women.

Theres a lot of positive things In pakistan too but sadly not one of us write about them or publish them.

We are to blame for our negative self-perception.

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

I think these so-called human rights orgs need to focus their energies on India, Israel, Russia and other countries which perpetually subjugate their minorities. Baluchistan is no problem for Pakistan nor it ever was. Shadan, your story does not reflect the general picture in that area and is more of an exception.

I am not at all concerned with other countries. I am just shocked over the intelligence tactics used in my country over my fellow citizens. It is not about subjugating minorities. It is about the approval of the use of such tactics by an institution of the state, which happens to be the most powerful institution of the state. It is about the level of moral degradation of our society, which can accept such incidents and which doesn't demand any investigation into such matters.

Please tell me how Baluchistan is not a problem for Pakistan? do blood-sucking Pakistan military has any rit in NWFP? Why we spend 60% of our GDP on these incompetent generals/soldiers.. ? .

By the way India,Israels & Russia never had any drone attacks ... yeh sirf hamharhi ki khasiyaat hai ...

Where the hell do drone attacks come into the picture? If you believe that's an issue, start another thread or post elsewhere where such an issue is under discussion. Duh!

Shadan, as I've said the story is a) unverifiable, its just an allegation which may very well be a planted story from elsewhere and b) its totally unrepresentative of the broad picture!

Critical thinking is the need of the hour. It reminds me of the much bantered Mukhtaran Mai case ...worse, much worse has happened and is probably happening still in many parts of the world, yet it goes unreported because its not in the interest of the media elite. Sad.

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

I wouldn't be surprised if this story is totally concocted to demonize the army and give Balcohi nationalists justification for their acts of treason. Balochistan looks like its being staged for separation too now.

No, some Indian/RAW/Afghan elements want to do so to take hold of minerals,natural resources,gold and copper of Saindak Minesand above all warm waters of Gwadar(as Russia wanted to do so in 1979 and invaded Afghanistan otherwise what was in Afghanistan except heroin and mountains) ,Indian Counsellates in Afghanistan are also creating disturbance funding BLA(Balochistan Liberation Army) etc but situation is 95% say, under control.

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

Few points are noteworthy

  1. from 9 March 2007 to present day, Why Pakistan Political System is in constatnt Turmoil .Just because of sacking of Chief Justice of Pakistan

why ???

Just because this brave man took Suo Moto of these poor people of Balochistan,Sindh Punjab etc who were kidnapped by security agencies on orders of Musharraf.Some were sold to US ,sent to GITMO for $5000 each while other remained in GASTAPO cells of ISI and MI as Shadan has mentioned.

  1. Its not now any Secret that US is the worst enemy of Chief Justice ,not because he toook notice of this brutality , but 93 missing people recovered after 2 years long case and still CJ gave threat of bringing DG IS to Supreme Court then Musharraf sacked him again on 3rd November,2007.

  2. Chief Jutice also broke US Plan of Benazir+Musharraf Deal by striking down NRO so that US plan to kill more in Tribal and handing Dr.AQ Khan could not accomplished

  3. Much blame go to Musharraf who ordered such GASTAPO state acts,Army at large is not involved in such dirty acts.Wine may be common in few top level Generals but lower ranks Officers are mostly religious rather fundamentalists in US terminology having sympathies with Talibans and are Anti-US in US Afghan policy

*NO! It's happening there bal ke is se bhi ziada ju batiy agiya hai
*

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

I love how after such stories, pakistanis try to take the moral high ground with Israel. Hypocrisy at it's absolute best.

Re: I feel ashamed. Do you?

utter BS, this is beyond reality in every sense. BLA trying to ignite some sympathy here. Women are very very respected in this part of Pakistan. the whole idea of writing these false article is to create scene of enmity for Pakistan and Pakistan Army, India is back to its Bangladesh creation exercise! so be warned.

after reading this a young mind can easily be toiled to carry out any desperate act i., e suicide bombing, terror activities etc. even i would like to avenge this if it was true. but this is not true!

This.

Yeah because you can equate war crimes and crimes against humanity undertaken by an organized Military to the actions of a few individuals. Brilliant work there.