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Pakistan: Pakistani rape
victim says attacks increasing
By Waheed Khan
February 1, 2007 - (Reuters) A Pakistani rape victim
who became a prominent women's rights campaigner said on Thursday
violence against women was increasing in Pakistan because authorities
were not serious about punishing the perpetrators. Mukhtaran Mai,
who was gang-raped in 2002 on the orders of a traditional village
council, said she was appalled by a similar attack on a 16-year-old
girl at the weekend.
"Such inhuman acts are increasing in Pakistan
as the government is not sincere about punishing offenders,"
Mai told Reuters on Thursday. "When I read about this girl's
ordeal, I felt the work we have done for women in the last four
years was for nothing," she said.
A group of Pakistani men has been accused of raping
the 16-year old girl in the southern Sindh province at the weekend
and forcing her to parade naked through her village because one
of her relatives eloped with a young woman from the men's family.
Such attacks, known as honour crimes because they
are committed in response to a perceived slight on a family's honour,
are common in predominantly Muslim Pakistan, especially in backward,
rural communities. "When I read about it I realised what this
girl must have gone through, and all this in the name of honour,"
Mai said.
Mai, who runs a community centre for women and
a school in her home village in Punjab province, urged the government
to provide swift justice for the girl. Mai was gang-raped in Punjab
province in 2002 as a punishment because her brother had had a relationship
with a young woman without the approval of the woman's family.
"BARBARIC ACT"
Mai was an illiterate villager at the time of her
rape but took her attackers to court in a case that gained international
prominence, won her human rights awards and made her an icon for
oppressed women in Pakistan. Her case also highlighted Pakistan's
laws on rape and helped galvanise public opinion behind a government-backed
change to Islamic laws, approved late last year, that makes it easier
for women to seek justice in civil courts.
Under the old Islamic law on rape, a woman risked
prosecution for adultery unless she could produce four male witnesses
to a rape. But Mai said those guilty of honour crimes knew that
even if they were convicted and imprisoned they would be free after
three or four years. The case against the men who attacked her is
still going through the courts.
Police in Sindh province said they had arrested
two more of the 11 men accused of attacking the girl in a complaint
filed by her father. "Six men are now behind bars and will
be produced in court," investigating officer Aftab Farooqi
said from the town of Ubaro.
Authorities had set up a team to investigate the
incident, a provincial official said. "We have ordered police
to investigate the case thoroughly and also constituted a special
team to look into the matter," said provincial government spokesman
Salahuddin Haider. "It is an absolutely barbaric act and we
cannot allow such things to happen," Haider said.
In a separate incident, a man and woman were stoned
to death by their relatives in Punjab province last week on suspicion
of committing adultery.
From : http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/ISL92880.htm
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