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Women's rights in Pakistan:
The woman who dared to cry rape
June 15, 2005 – (Independent)
When Mukhtar Mai was gang-raped on the orders of village elders
to settle a tribal score, she shocked Pakistan by taking her case
to the courts. But now she has found herself persecuted once again.
It was a scorching afternoon in Islamabad yesterday, when a visibly
trembling Mukhtar Mai, teacher and rape victim, announced to assembled
journalists that a long-planned trip to America was off because
her mother was sick.
No one believed her. Ms Mai was to publicise in the United States
the work of the crisis centres she has developed since being brutally
gang-raped on the orders of a village court in Meeranwalla, in
the Punjab. Now it turned out that, because her mother was ill,
she would be unable to undertake a trip that would have been highly
embarrassing to the government of Pervez Musharraf.
For the activists who have passionately championed Ms Mai's cause
for three long years years, the shoddy and hastily arranged "show
conference" as the final insult in a case which has appalled
urban Pakistanis, enraged human rights activists around the world
and thrown a sharp and unflattering spotlight on the way Pakistan
treats its women.
During the first seven months of last year, according to the Independent
Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, at least 151 Pakistani women
were gang-raped and 176 were simply murdered as the victims of
honour killings. The traumatic case of Mukhtar Mai's experiences,
which will not now be personally described to an American audience,
has come to stand for all such brutal violations of female dignity
in the remote tribal regions of the country.
On a terrible June day three years ago, 14 men from the dominant
Mastoi tribe in Meeranwalla volunteered to rape Ms Mai as a way
to settle a score after her 12-year-old brother Abdul Shakoor
was seen walking with a Mastoi girl. The decision on retribution
had been taken by a village court to preserve tribal honour. The
jirga, or council of village elders, summoned Ms Mai to apologise
for her brother's sexual misdeed. When she apologised, they gang-raped
her anyway.
After the atrocity was carried out, Ms Mai was paraded naked before
hundreds of onlookers. Finally, her father covered her with a
shawl and took her home.
Many assumed that the subsequent rumours that the 30-year-old
had committed suicide by swallowing pesticide were true. Few would
have blamed her. Calling attention to such abject abuse is virtually
unheard of even in modern-day Pakistan, where the downtrodden,
especially women, are expected to remain meek.
But Mukhtar Mai, an unmarried daughter from a low-caste family,
was not about to go quietly. She fought back in the courts and
at first the legal decisions appeared to go her way. Half a dozen
men involved in her rape were punished, with two sentenced to
death. But since that early success events have begun to take
an increasingly sinister and depressing turn. Last Friday, a court
in Lahore refused to extend a 90-day detention order and 12 of
the 14 accused were ordered to be released. The case has gone
into appeal, and now is expected to go to the Supreme Court.
All the men must do is post a £600 bail each and they can
leave jail while the case now goes through a series of appeals.
According to a leader in The News, an Islamabad English-language
daily: "The police failed to provide the prosecution with
the damning evidence" even though there were some 150 onlookers
who could have testified. "It is introspection time for government,"
the leader continued.
"It must review the system that routinely acts against people,
and sometimes against the government itself ... It is ironic that
even as her alleged tormentors were freed, the woman who has become
a symbol of courage and the rights of Pakistani women was barred
from proceeding abroad."
In the village, their homes are right across from Ms Mai's. Every
day she must now face the men who gang-raped her and who threaten
to do the same again. Naturally Ms Mai was upset and traumatised
by last week's decision. But there was also trauma in Islamabad,
where the prospect of her imminent visit to the United States
was being viewed with trepidation. By last year, Mukhtar Mai had
become an international icon for abused women after challenging
her rapists and apparently winning. Time magazine named her as
one of Asia's heroes. Half a dozen of the 14 village men involved
were set to hang.
Ms Mai had used her compensation money in the case to start two
schools in her village. She even helped to enroll the children
of some of her attackers, in order to show that she bore no grudges.
American sympathisers sent more than $133,000 (£73,000)
in donations. Using the funds, Ms Mai set up a shelter for abused
women and bought a van which is now used as an ambulance in the
area. She had become something of a local heroine, and on the
back of such a triumphant and defiant rehabilitation, she had
decided to go to the US to publicise her schools and voluntary
efforts. In Islamabad, senior politicians shuddered at the prospect.
The thought of Ms Mai receiving applause in auditoriums across
America prompted immediate and savage action. In effect, the government
decided that Ms Mai needed to be gagged. The American visit was
scheduled to begin last Saturday. On Thursday, the authorities
placed Ms Mai under house arrest. She has reportedly said that
when she attempted to leave her home, police pointed their guns
at her. Three women police officers traipsed after her from room
to room, even following her into the toilet. After overhearing
a couple of telephone interviews withjournalists, police severed
her landline. Ms Mai's name remains on a blacklist, normally reserved
to curtail the movement
of political extremists, called the Exit Control List.
While Ms Mai was under house arrest on Friday, the court decided
to release her attackers. Lahore courts do not normally operate
on Fridays. Their re-opening appeared to be a clear and calculated
attempt to change the balance of power in the Mai case. Using
her mobile phone, Ms Mai continued to argue her case. To no avail.
Airports were alerted that Ms Mai should not be permitted to leave
the country.
There was an international outcry. The actual request to keep
Ms Mai in the country allegedly came from the Pakistani ambassador
in Washington, Jahangir Karamat. In the end, Ms Mai never made
it out of her village, much less to the airport.
Weeping yesterday afternoon, Ms Mai told a founder of the Human
Rights Commission of Pakistan, Asma Jahangir, that she was rushed
on Monday night to the capital and made to sign papers requesting
the return of her passport from the American embassy visa office.
Her signed
statement maintains that she had not been under detention in her
home village, but guarded for her own protection.
Then Ms Mai called yesterday's press conference - held at the
women's development ministry in Islamabad - to announce that her
speaking engagements in America were cancelled.
"I came to Islamabad to discuss my crisis centre back in
the village," she said. "I decided of my own free will
not to go abroad, because my
mother is ill." Minutes later, Farzana Bari, a women's rights
activist, rang her mother in the village and said she sounded
perfectly fine. "But Marktar looks completely terrorised,"
she added. "The government was afraid she would tarnish its
image." Insiders say
she is frightened that government agencies will "whisk her
away" if she dares speak out again. Activists claim that
Ms Mai relented to pressure after being told that President Musharraf
was personally "very angry" with her.
The case has indeed embarrassed President Musharraf, a "modern"
general who is keen to play down the religious extremism in backward
parts of his country. He has been promoting "an enlightened
Islam" but activists say that this vision seems to exclude
women. Privately, General Musharraf is enraged at how Ms Mai's
case has brought infamy to Pakistan. Instead of promoting justice
in the case, his reaction, along with a group of newspaper editors,
has been to suppress information about the case. The President
even threatened to "slap" a reporter "in the face"
for publishing details in an international magazine about Mr Mai's
defiance. The reporter in question was Pakistan's leading women's
rights activist, Ms Jehangir, who is also a UN special rapporteur
on human rights.
General Musharraf incurred the wrath of women's rights activists
earlier this year. A tribe in Baluchistan began a revolt after
an army captain allegedly raped a woman doctor working for the
state-run gas company at its desert installations. The tribal
chieftain, Nawab Bugti insisted that the suspected rapist be tried
by tribal custom - walking across burning coals to prove his innocence.
Instead, the suspected rapist, who had powerful family connections
within the military, has so far never been tried. Nor is he likely
to ever face justice, after General Musharraf publicly declared
he thought that the captain was innocent. The woman doctor was
encouraged by the authorities to leave the country - not a choice
for the defiant village schoolteacher.
The ruling party has vilified Ms Mai's supporters as unpatriotic.
The State Interior Minister, Shahzad Wasim, said: "People
in NGOs are ready to say anything for one dinner with Johnny Walker
and eat innocent people like vultures."
Above all, yesterday's extraordinary
press conference appears to demonstrate that Pakistan is willing
to go to enormous and unjust lengths to protect its public image.
Officials are desperate to hush up the brutal justice of the tribal
hinterlands in Punjab as a matter of public relations. Medieval
punishment discourages investment in the infrastructure, and Pakistan
is eager to be perceived as a haven for moderate Muslims. Mukhtar
Mai could never have been allowed to go to America and tell her
terrible story.
When Time magazine nominated Ms Mai as one of Asia's heroes, it
commented: "As long as the state refuses to fully challenge
the brutality of tribal law, the plight of Pakistani women will
continue. Mukhtar Mai is a symbol of their victimhood, but in her
resilience she is also a symbol of their strength."
In the end, it seems, that strength and resilience was not for export.
From: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/story.jsp?story=646952
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