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Thread: Lady Senator advises Seeking justice from Allah

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    Lady Senator advises Seeking justice from Allah

    Hounding a heroine



    By Irfan Husain


    FOR all its talk of transparency, this government’s ways of reaching decisions are murky and mysterious. Rarely does one hand know what the other is doing.

    Consider the current self-created crisis to do with the unfortunate Mukhtaran Mai. Here is a victim of our backward tribal and feudal culture who breaks the mould and in an act of awe-inspiring courage, takes on her rapists and the Pakistani establishment. When the news of her gang-rape breaks (in the foreign media to start with), there is a hue and cry. To his credit, Musharraf intervenes and has the rapists arrested and tried. He also sanctions some monetary relief and police protection for the victim.

    So far so good. But this is where things go dreadfully and inexplicably wrong. After the rapists are found guilty and sentenced to death by a lower court, the Lahore High Court decides that five of the six accused are not guilty, and releases them. The government appeals to the Supreme Court which announces it will take up the case after its summer vacation.

    At this point, an Asian-American women’s group (ANAA) invites Mukhtaran Mai to New York to participate in a seminar on rape. As soon as she applies for a U.S. visa, the establishment’s collective wisdom, such as it is, goes off on holiday. Mukhtaran is placed on the infamous Exit Control List, and placed under virtual house arrest. Defending this decision, Ms Nelofer Bakhtiar, adviser to the PM on women’s development, says on the floor of the House: “We do not want to expose our wounds to the international community. We do not want to wash our dirty linen in public.”

    Perhaps she is unaware that things like TV, satellite dishes and the Internet spread news around the globe at warp speed. In fact, by stopping her from travelling, the government has ensured far worse publicity than anything that would have been generated by her presence in New York.

    If Ms Bakhtiar is in any doubt about the impact placing Mukhtaran on the ECL has had abroad, here is Nicholas Kristof, the American columnist, in his New York Times op-ed column on June 14:

    “Even if Ms Mukhtaran were released, airports have been alerted to bar her from leaving the country. According to Dawn... the government took this step ‘fearing that she might malign Pakistan’s image’. Excuse me, but Ms Mukhtaran, a symbol of courage and altruism, is the best hope for Pakistan’s image....”

    If she still does not comprehend the magnitude of the blunder she and her government has committed, here is Declan Walsh, writing in the Guardian on the same day:

    “President Pervez Musharraf is particularly keen on promoting a ‘soft’ image of Pakistan abroad as proof that his policy of ‘enlightened moderation’ is succeeding... This obsession with external image took a sinister turn last weekend when the government placed Mukhtaran Bibi on the notorious ECL... The move is shocking because Mukhtaran Mai is a genuine Pakistani heroine...”

    Going one step further than Ms Bakhtiar in justifying this action, Dr Shahzad Waseem, minister of state for interior, accuses NGOs of exploiting the case. Launching into oratorical flight, he compares critics with “vultures, crows and eagles.” Perhaps he, too, should be reunited with his village.

    In all this name-calling and mud-slinging, Mr Shaukat Aziz’s response has been oddly muted. Apart from speaking to the victim on the telephone, his spokesman has merely announced that the prime minister has ‘ordered an inquiry into how Mukhtaran Mai’s name was placed on the ECL.’ Surely the PM could have done more. Like immediately removing her from this odious list, perhaps? Or letting her travel to New York as she had planned? The belated announcement that her name has been removed from the ECL days later is too little, too late. And by seizing her passport, the government has ensured that she cannot travel abroad.

    Shaukat Aziz really ought to know better. He is ostensibly a sophisticated man who knows how the media works abroad. He should also realize that one incident like this one completely undermines his and Musharraf’s efforts to lure foreign investors to Pakistan. The New York Times and the Guardian are heavyweight newspapers that are widely read and respected. The president and the prime minister are prone to speaking glibly of security and moderation to reporters on their frequent trips abroad. But these words are made meaningless when the might of the Pakistani state is ranged against a single brave, illiterate woman who has been the victim of a monstrous crime.

    Apart from the rapists and the victim, there is the other question of the village council that has gone largely unaddressed. Who gave these elders the authority to sanction such a vile punishment for a crime allegedly committed by Mukhtaran’s 12-year-old brother? Surely criminal proceedings should and must be brought against them for their part in the whole affair. Unless the government locks them up as well, this kind of kangaroo court will continue inflicting similarly barbarous sentences on others across our benighted country. The reason we are discussing this today is that one woman dared to speak out and confront her rapists. How many other similar crimes go unreported and unpunished is anybody’s guess, but must run into the thousands every year. Rapes occur in other countries as well, but elsewhere, the authorities do their best to bring the culprit to justice. Here, as the actions of the government have just shown, the first impulse is to brush such incidents under the carpet.

    And not just the government: families and communities are shamed if one of their daughters has been raped, and do their best to cover up the crime.

    In this scenario, it is especially creditable that Mukhtaran Mai had the guts to fight the system and win.

    A recent debate in the Senate was particularly revealing of our attitude towards rape. Senator Kulsoom Parveen is reported in this newspaper as stating that ‘cases like those of Dr Shazia [the lady doctor raped in Sui a few months ago] and Mukhtaran Mai should not be highlighted’. She went on to advise that “Mukhtaran Mai should seek justice from Allah.” And if this was not enough wisdom from the lady for one day, she pronounced: “Mukhtaran Mai, being an eastern woman, should not go abroad.”

    I wonder if her response would have been the same had somebody close to her been subjected to the same treatment that Mukhtaran Mai was.

    http://www.dawn.com/weekly/mazdak/mazdak.htm
    A very interesting case.

    A brave woman who fights Pakistan's feudal laws and the govt and a Senator (who is a lady herself) advises cases like those of Dr Shazia [the lady doctor raped in Sui a few months ago] and Mukhtaran Mai should not be highlighted’. She went on to advise that “Mukhtaran Mai should seek justice from Allah.”

    It indicates the warped mentality that is caused by religious indoctrination!

    No wonder there is apathy in giving justice to such women related cases.

  2. #2
    Ray
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    Making a hash of it



    By Ardeshir Cowasjee


    IT IS becoming increasingly difficult by the day to fathom out the rationale behind the leeway President General Pervez Musharraf allows his chosen few.

    Since his government’s installation, other than in the removals and appointments of his prime ministers, he tends to sit back and watch the world, while his government behaves in a manner totally contrary to his preachings and his stated intentions. Is he extending to it the proverbial rope?

    Take the case of Mukhtaran Mai. In Musharraf’s Pakistan, there should have been no such case concerning this or any other woman. Under an enlightened system, in which moderation is the bye-word, there can be no jirgas, women cannot be raped on the orders of a jirga, rapists cannot be set free by the courts, a raped woman cannot be terrorized by her own government. None of what is happening sits with enlightenment.

    It belongs way back in the 10th century AD, in the dark ages of civilization. The president might take a tip from Governor-General Lord William Henry Cavendish Bentinck (1833-1835) and read how he dealt with his administration and suppressed such ritual practices as ‘suttee’ and ‘thugee’.

    On June 17, an e-mail arrived from Zafar Iqbal of Arizona. He is a member of the Asian-American Network Against the Abuse of Women which came into being in 2002 with the much publicized rape cases of Saima and Shama. Its members familiarized themselves with those strange obscurantist laws operating against women in Pakistan — the Hudood and Qisas — and with the much practised custom known as ‘honour killing.’ The network runs on donations, and last year set up a website : www.4anaa.org

    “Mukhtaran Mai was our latest project,” wrote Mr Iqbal. “We wanted to organize a symposium in Houston to create awareness about the violence against women in Pakistan. We wanted to humanize the issue so that people can relate with them and understand them. Mukhtaran Mai was the best choice. She represented a brave lady, a victim turned into an activist, a hope for our country, Pakistan.

    “We went to her website made contact with her and Nicolas Kristoff. Mukhtaran and Naseem, her school principal, are brave women. Naseem whose name is never mentioned in the press is a big factor in her struggle. Our friends advised us that if we involve the media, the Pakistani government would never allow her to come. We tried not publicizing it. We were constantly in contact with her and arranged for her new passport and visa interview at American embassy in Islamabad.”

    He then related the facts that we all now know from our own press, as well as the foreign press. ANAA’s representatives have been interviewed by the CNN, the BBC, VOA, CBS, MSNBC and various other channels. Do Pakistan and its people need this type of publicity?

    On June 11 we read that the previous day the honourable justices of the Lahore High Court had ordered the release from detention of 13 men accused in Mukhtaran Mai’s gang-rape case, and how the same day the interior ministry, in its wisdom, had put Mukhtaran’s name on the Exit Control List.

    On June 12, we read that the previous day the foreign office, in its wisdom, had directed the interior ministry to ensure that Mukhtaran was not allowed to leave the country for the United States. All airports had been alerted. That day General Musharraf left for his trip to the Antipodes, where, on arrival, he received a 21-gun salute. The Aussies know what pleases who.

    On June 13, a report from New York quoted the Human Rights Watch which had termed it “preposterous that while Mukhtaran Mai’s alleged rapists had had their release ordered she had been placed on Pakistan’s infamous ECL. If the purpose was to ‘protect’ Pakistan’s image by restricting Mai’s freedom of movement, the attempt has backfired.”

    That same day Mukhtaran was taken from her village, Meerwalla, to the chief minister’s house in Lahore, and then onward to Islamabad to meet the prime minister’s adviser on women’s affairs, Nilofer Bakhtiar. In the Senate, on June 13, Ms Bakhtiar is quoted as having said, in response to objections raised by the opposition on the affair that “we do not want to expose our wounds to the international community. We do not want to wash our dirty linen in public. The government will not be bullied by the opposition or the NGOs which have a foreign-driven agenda.” She was ably supported by the state minister for the interior, Dr Shahzad Waseem, who accused the NGOs (en masse) — vultures, crows and eagles, he called them — of exploiting the issue “for a dinner with John and Johnnie Walker” and to build their portfolios by getting more foreign funding.

    On June 14, a column by Nicholas Kristof, who last autumn had written extensively on Mukhtaran’s rape, appeared in the New York Times under the heading “Raped, kidnapped and silenced.”

    On June 15 headlines announced : “US dismayed by Mukhtaran Mai’s treatment : Rocca.” The assistant secretary of state for South Asian affairs, Christina Rocca, testifying before a congressional committee in Washington said “We are dismayed at the treatment being meted out to a courageous woman... We will pursue this matter during the course of the day.” That day, an editorial was printed in the New York Times under the heading “With friends like this....”. It suggested that the US should go beyond just selling F-16s to General Musharraf, but also press him and Pakistan “to adopt minimum standards of human rights.”

    Back in Pakistan, we read that day how Mukhtaran had been to the US embassy, retrieved her passport, and had it taken away from her by her government ‘handler’, Adviser Bakhtiar, and also how, obviously under instructions from Ms Bakhtiar, she had cancelled her trip as ‘her mother was ill’ (shame on Ms Bakhtiar. It takes me back to the early 1940s. Much to my father Rustom’s disgust, he being both an LSE and an Inner Temple man, and to my later regret, I dropped out of D.J. Sindh College, apprenticed myself to my father, and joined the family shipping business.

    Over one impending Id holiday season we received 18 identical letters, supported by 18 identical telegrams, all sent from Sukkur, from 18 members of our cargo-loading gang, asking for urgent leave, which read “mother sick come soon.” I took them to Osman, post and telegraph master of the Keamari PO, who exclaimed ‘Pakra gaya’. The war is on, I told him, Rommel is in Tobruk, we are loading reinforcements in three hired transports which must sail and join the convoy sailing from Bombay. We cannot spare 18 serangs. ‘Samaj gaya’, said Osman. The next day he brought to us 18 telegrams addressed to the 18 serangs which read “Mother better, do not come.”)

    On June 16 the press told us that Mukhtaran’s name was off the ECL, and that the US embassy in Islamabad was “concerned” about her and had made their concerns known to the Pakistan government. A column by Glenn Kessler in the Washington Post that same day announced the lifting of the travel ban and the fact that US officials “said they were appalled by the government’s actions in this case”. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters “We were confronted with what I can only say was an outrageous situation where her attackers were ordered to be freed while she had restrictions on her travel placed on her. We conveyed our views about these restrictions to the senior levels of the Pakistani government.”

    On June 16, President Musharraf, having presumably blithely ignored the unholy mess made by his government, left Australia and arrived in New Zealand. On the 17th, in Auckland, he met members of the New Zealand Foreign Correspondents’ Club. According to an agency report, it was he, he told questioners, who had ordered that the woman not be allowed to be taken by NGOs to the US “to bad mouth Pakistan,” it was he who labelled the NGOs as “westernized fringe elements.... as bad as the Islamic extremists.” His acolytes were merely towing his line, admittedly in a highly hamfisted manner.

    The general is rightly concerned. As he said in Auckland, “I am a realist. Public relations is the most important thing in the world.” It is indeed, general, but we are not doing too well when it comes to PR. If, as he said, “Pakistan is the victim of poor perceptions,” he must ask himself how much fault lies with him. Mukhtaran Mai is but one of the symptoms that afflict this country — and it is host to thousands of Mukhtaran Mais who suffer in silence, unknown.
    The Dawn of the same day caries the above article on the case.

    Here, it appears that Mushrraf is not so keen on justice but more as a PR exercise!

    Most baffling a way to run a country!

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    Senior Contributor Asim Aquil's Avatar
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    great. Though you're making too much of it the Allah comment. It means different in the local urdu linguistic context.

    I would disagree with her, that the case should not be Highlighted (unless demanded so by the victim herself, which is not the case). Justice has to be swift and hard in these cases. Quite frankly Musharraf would be doing something very illegal by butting in. But he's still treading on a fine line since its pretty much obvious that she's a victim of a heinous crime. It's the judiciary's fault and Musharraf has tried to repeal such laws that help rapists get away with their crimes. But MMA which controls 13% of the country's vote bank and an even bigger percentage in the areas where these rapes have occurred, removing these self-claimed Islamic laws is difficult.

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    Jay
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    Quite frankly Musharraf would be doing something very illegal by butting in
    Oh puhleez, Mushy did some thing really worse and illegal. A coup, based on Pakistan's constitution a govt servant cannot hold 2 positions, but he did. He even changed the constitution to suit his needs.
    So if Mushy, indeed wants to take stern actions, he can. He is just doing a PR exercise, to appease nations like US. Deep down, he is not going to do much for Ms.Mai or Dr.Shazia.
    A grain of wheat eclipsed the sun of Adam !!

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jay
    So if Mushy, indeed wants to take stern actions, he can. He is just doing a PR exercise, to appease nations like US. Deep down, he is not going to do much for Ms.Mai or Dr.Shazia.
    He is all about better packaging the product not in improving the product itself.Make all that outsiders see abt pakstan glitter.
    What's the difference between people who pray in church and those who pray in casinos?
    The ones in the casinos are serious.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Asim Aquil
    Quite frankly Musharraf would be doing something very illegal by butting in.
    As Jay said, “Oh puhleez”.

    Where were those niceties when he “butted in” and prevented Ms. Mai from visiting the US ?

    I stopped Mai from going abroad: president

    Where were those niceties when he “butted in” and prevented Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times from visiting Ms. Mai in Pakistan ?

    Raped, Kidnapped and Silenced

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    Jay
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    An interesting letter from The Dawn..

    THERE were three letters on June 20 concerning Mukhtaran Mai’s case. Each correspondent was trying to find out who was responsible for the mishandling of her case. One blamed the “people who wield power”, the other “the government” and the third found fault with the “judges”.

    The same is true about the column writers. Mr Irfan Husain (June 18) writes: “For all its talk of transparency, this government’s ways of reaching decisions are murky and mysterious. Rarely does one hand know what the other is doing.” So, for him it is the government.

    A day later (June 19), for Mr Ardeshir Cowasjee it is “the chosen few of Musharraf”. He writes: ‘It is becoming increasingly difficult by the day to fathom out the rationale behind the leeway President General Pervez Musharraf allows his chosen few.”

    According to of Mr Omar R. Quraishi (June 20), it is simply “whoever” without naming any name as he begins his article with “whoever came up with the bright idea...”

    Why does every Pakistani forget that Pakistan is constitutionally an Islamic state? In any Islamic state, the state is bound to apply Islamic laws. There is no separation of state and religion (Islam). The head of state is also the head of religion (or vice versa). All powers are invested in a single person no matter how he came into power. At present, in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan that person is Gen Pervez Musharraf.

    During his visit to New Zealand on June 17 he said at Auckland that it was he who had ordered a travel ban on Mukhtaran Mai to protect Pakistan’s image abroad. At the same time he acknowledged some other aspects of the so-called “mishandling” of the case simply to save the honour and the name of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

    Why is there such hypocrisy among the media and the intelligentsia that they are looking for “somebody responsible” for the mishandling of Mukhtaran Mai case when the person responsible is claiming responsibility even in a foreign land?

    MUHAMMAD AHSAN KHAN
    Via email


    http://www.dawn.com/2005/06/22/letted.htm#2


    Its interesting to note that Pakistani posters here in this board show same amount of hypocrisy regarding the travel ban of Ms.Mai. May be they are too scared or trying to uphold the image of "Islamic Republic of Pakistan" like their head of state.
    A grain of wheat eclipsed the sun of Adam !!

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    Ray
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    In Urdu, Arabic, Pashto, Tazik or in Persian, it means the same thing.

    For a person of responsibility and that too a lady, it shows the mindset which rejects amelioration by legal means and instead advices leaving it to the supernatural i.e. Allah is stupid and medieval to say the least.

    Such acts indicate the decadence of such a society.

    I also fail to understand why such cases should not be highlighted as mentioned by Asim.

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    Wednesday, June 22, 2005 E-Mail this article to a friend Printer Friendly Version

    I still feel I am in prison, says Mai


    LAHORE: Mukhtar Mai has said that although she is not under house arrest anymore, she still feels as if she is in prison.

    In an interview with IRIN on the telephone from her village of Meerawala, Mukhtar said: “The police are still outside my house. Though the situation is not the same as it was last week, when I was definitely under house arrest, I still feel I am in prison here.”

    She said she collected her passport from the US embassy last Wednesday without a visa stamp. “It is no longer with me. This is all that I can say,” said Mukhtar, declining to comment on where her passport was now.

    She said she did not know why the government had banned her from going abroad. “I can’t understand why the government has done this to me. This was not the first time that I was travelling abroad. I have already gone to Spain, Saudi Arabia and then just last year, to India as well.”

    She said she received an invitation in April to visit the US from a Washington-based organisation fighting to reduce violence against women. “When I submitted my passport to the US embassy in Islamabad to get it visa-stamped in early June, my movements were restricted,” Mukhtar said. “I’ve done nothing wrong. If Pakistan has become notorious because of the way women are treated, then that’s not my fault, go and ask the men why that is,” Mukhtar said. irin

    http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default...-6-2005_pg7_31

    A rather sorry state of a woman who has stood up to injustice of the tribal laws and the shoddy treatment from her govt which claims to be modern.

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    Jay
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    Pakistan hears rape case appeal
    Mukhtar Mai (R) leaves the Supreme Court in Islamabad
    Mukhtar Mai (R), leaving court, has "high hopes" of success
    Pakistan's Supreme Court has begun hearing appeals in a notorious gang rape case that has been the centre of worldwide attention.

    A village council allegedly ordered the rape of Mukhtar Mai in 2002 because her younger brother was seen with a woman from a more influential tribe.

    The case became mired in controversy after a lower court in March overturned the convictions of five men.

    Ms Mai and the government are appealing against four of those acquittals.


    This terrible rape case was in one remote part of Pakistan and is not rampant everywhere and happening every day
    President Musharraf

    Ms Mai, 33, said outside court on Monday: "I have high hopes. I hope the original verdict will be upheld and that my attackers will be punished."

    Proceedings are expected to last at least a week. The three-judge panel adjourned the case until Tuesday after hearing initial arguments.

    Attorney General Makhdoom Ali Khan said the decision to acquit was unsustainable and corroborating evidence had been ignored.

    'House arrest'

    The case acquired political overtones after President Pervez Musharraf barred Ms Mai from travelling abroad, fearing she might undermine Pakistan's image.

    The government has stationed police at her home in Meerwala, in central Punjab province, saying she needs protection.


    PAKISTAN RAPE STATISTICS
    320 rapes in first nine months of 2004
    350 gang rapes in same period
    39 people arrested
    Police cases registered in only a third of reported rapes
    Source: Human Rights Commission of Pakistan

    But she has complained that she is under virtual house arrest.

    "Are free people like this? I am not being allowed to speak with people," she told the Associated Press news agency.

    On Monday Ms Mai confirmed she had now been given back her passport.

    Critics of Pakistan's judicial and social systems say the Mukhtar Mai case is an example of appalling treatment often handed out to women, particularly in feudal, rural areas.

    President Musharraf says the case is not representative.

    "We are no worse than any other developing country," he said earlier this month during a tour of New Zealand.
    What an idiot, he simply reads out like an avereage illetrate, when asked about a specific problem in Pakistan, he says its no different than other countries, escapist

    'Test case'
    Both Ms Mai and the government are appealing to the Supreme Court in Islamabad to overturn the March acquittals of four men initially sentenced to death for raping her.

    They are not appealing against the acquittal of a fifth man - a village council member. Let justice prevail, its interesting that even after all the hue and uproar the govt is still not trying to punish all the criminals, they give preferential treatments to accused

    The acquittals were ordered by the Lahore High Court on the grounds of lack of evidence. It also reduced the death sentence of a sixth man to life imprisonment.

    The six men were among 14 men originally charged in the case.

    All 14 men are behind bars after the Punjab government ordered their arrests, in spite of the judgement of the Lahore High Court.

    As well as hearing petitions from Ms Mai and the government, the Supreme Court will rule on a petition from the man serving life imprisonment who is asking to be acquitted.


    The BBC's Paul Anderson in Islamabad says the case has become a test of President Musharraf's commitment to protect the rights of women.

    Women's and civil rights activists, he says, argue neither the president nor the government have been able or had the will to resist the tribal and feudal leaders who mete out justice by what they see as a time-honoured cultural code.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4624799.stm
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    Senior Contributor Samudra's Avatar
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    But she has complained that she is under virtual house arrest.

    "Are free people like this? I am not being allowed to speak with people," she told the Associated Press news agency.
    I hope the HR activists in Pakistan have a feild day at all this stupidity.

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    Well Musharraf and the government was wrong with how they handled this situation, right from the start to this point. There's no denying that.

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    Ray
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    Given the situation in Pakistan, could it be that Musharraf had no options?

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    Jay
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    This tale is getting interesting...btw this news was published around July 2002 and nothing has changed so far...

    The ICJ intervented with President Pervez Musharraf requesting that police inaction in the case of the gang-rape of a woman and her very young brother be investigated and that the abusive and illegal exercise of judicial power by tribal councils Pakistan be prevented. The case concerns the gang-rape of Mukhtaran Bibi, as ordered by the Tribal Council in Punjab in retribution for her very young brother's alleged "affair" with an older women. Our information indicates that the "affair" was in fact fabricated to cover up the brother's earlier gang-sodomy by man from a higher caste. The woman's case is now before the Supreme Court, however, no action has been taken in regard to the child.

    http://www.icj.org/news.php3?id_article=2641&lang=en
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    Raped doctor: I'm still terrified

    A Pakistani doctor whose rape in the southern province of Balochistan last year sparked tribal clashes says she is still terrified.

    "I was threatened so many times in Pakistan that I still feel scared," Dr Shazia Khalid told the BBC.

    She is currently living in London and has spoken about the incident for the first time since leaving Pakistan.

    Dr Khalid's rape led to a violent confrontation between Baloch tribals and the security forces.

    "I cannot tell you how many times I was threatened. My life was made impossible. I am still terrified," she said in the interview with the BBC Urdu service.

    Tribal tension

    Dr Khalid said she had never been satisfied with the inquiry conducted by the government into the incident.

    "Instead of getting justice, I was hounded out of Pakistan," she said.

    "I never wanted to leave Pakistan but I had no choice."


    Dr Khalid was employed at a hospital managed by Pakistan Petroleum (PPL), the state-owned supplier of natural gas.

    The PPL's installations are located near the town of Sui in Balochistan - a province that has seen great tension between Baloch tribals and security forces.

    The tribals have been agitating for years for more autonomy and a share in the natural gas reserves.

    They also oppose the construction of new military cantonments in the province.

    Dr Khalid was raped at the hospital and an army officer was accused of the crime.

    But the government declared the officer innocent, leading to violent clashes between tribesmen and the security forces in which eight people died in January.


    Tribesmen say dozens of people were killed in sporadic clashes that lasted until March. The government disputes the casualty figures.

    "My case led to so much death and destruction in Balochistan. So many children died because the doctors couldn't reach the hospitals during those violent times," Dr Khalid said.

    "My whole career was destroyed, as was my husband's. That was why we left our country," she said.

    Pakistan's government has denied that Dr Khalid suffered any harassment from any quarter.

    In an earlier interview with the BBC, Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said: "She has been sent out of the country by some NGOs [non-governmental organisations] and the government has nothing to do with it."

    Rape appeal

    Dr Khalid has been invited to address a function organised by the Asian-American Network Against Abuse of Women (AANA) in the US on 2 July.

    The function is a substitute for the organisation's earlier plans of inviting Mukhtar Mai, the victim of a notorious gang rape whose case is now in the Supreme Court in Islamabad.

    Ms Mai was stopped from travelling to the US by President Pervez Musharraf who said he did not want NGOs using Ms Mai to malign Pakistan.

    According to AANA, Dr Khalid will address the 2 July function over telephone. Ms Mai will address the function in the same way.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4633849.stm
    A grain of wheat eclipsed the sun of Adam !!

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