|
A Victory for Pakistani
Women
August 3, 2006 – (The Washington Times) In
the more repressive parts of the Muslim world, a rape is often just
the beginning of a victimized woman's tragedy. That's because a
type of Islamic law known as "Hudood" means a victim of
rape faces charges of adultery -- which carries a penalty of imprisonment
or even death -- if she fails the almost impossible test of producing
four male eyewitnesses to the crime. But now President Pervez Musharraf
of Pakistan is challenging his country's version of that law. He
deserves praise far and wide for the effort.
The proposal, due to be submitted shortly to the
National Assembly, would remove the crime of rape from Hudood law
-- introduced in 1979 by then-President Zia ul-Haq -- and place
it under Pakistan's coexistent and overlapping secular penal code
which derives from British common law. It would end the requirement
of male eyewitnesses; increase the burden of proof against persons
accusing a woman of adultery; proscribe the death penalty in cases
of gang rape; make it a crime to publish the name of a rape victim;
criminalize sex with a girl under the age of 16; and introduce a
prison sentence of up to 25 years for the crime of trafficking in
women for purposes of prostitution.
In a country like Pakistan -- where one prominent
lawmaker upon hearing the news cried that Hudood cannot be changed
because it is God's will -- this is Earth-shattering. It is a direct
challenge to the country's hardline Islamist political parties,
all of which support the repressive laws and can be expected to
use their 60 seats in the 342-person National Assembly to obstruct
the changes. It will no doubt be opposed by many in a country where
Islamist opinion is widespread.
This is also a challenge to other countries in
the Muslim world like Iran and Saudi Arabia, which have similarly
strict Hudood laws. They are certain to face their own equivalent
of the international outcry over Pakistani rape victim Mukhtar Mai,
whose terrible case is credited with stiffening world opinion against
Hudood. In 2002, a tribal council sentenced the Punjab village girl
to be gang-raped as reprisal for her younger brother's alleged affair
with a woman of a higher caste. The case has been a rallying point
for activists inside Pakistan and out ever since.
Gen. Musharraf's unexpected proposal in the face
of what is likely to be significant opposition -- to say nothing
of the ever-present threats to his life his other policies provoke
-- is to be commended as an act of personal courage as well as a
victory for women's rights in the Muslim world.
From: http://www.washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20060802-095409-1513r.htm
|