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PAKISTAN: Women more confident
in reporting sexual violence
September 6, 2005 - (IRIN) The tale of Sonia Naz,
the latest case of alleged gang-rape to be widely publicised in
Pakistan, has left even the most hardened observer badly shaken.
But the very fact that the incident has come to light is indicative
of a growing willingness among many women in this devout Islamic
country to report such crimes.
Sonia's ordeal began nearly six weeks ago in the industrial city
of Faisalabad, about 200 km west of Lahore, when her husband, Asim,
was arrested by police. Asim, a low-level clerk in the revenue department,
was involved with nearly a dozen other officials in a corruption
case.
Most senior officials initially arrested were soon free. Asim, on
the other hand, seems to have vanished - and while his family paid
many bribes, and Sonia, expecting her second child at the time,
repeatedly visited the police station - the young man was never
located.
In despair, Sonia, in April of this year, turned up at the national
assembly in the capital, Islamabad, leaving her two small children
with her sister in Lahore. "I hoped to meet Prime Minister
Shaukat Aziz and tell him my story. I was certain he would help,"
she said.
Sonia, barely educated and unaware of protocol, was accidentally
waved forward by a security guard right into the chamber, where
she took her place among the legislators. When her presence was
noticed, the bewildered Sonia was dragged away by guards, taken
to a police station and charged with breaking into the assembly.
After being released following pressure from journalists and rights
activists, she was re-arrested in Lahore in May, where she says
she was repeatedly raped, stripped naked, beaten and abused by her
police captors, despite her pleas for mercy.
After her story was published, the prime minister and President
Pervez Musharraf swiftly intervened to order an inquiry and the
suspension of Superintendent Khalid Abdullah and Inspector Jamshed
Chishti of the Lahore police, allegedly involved in the sexual assault.
Leading rights activist and Human Rights Commission of Pakistan
(HRCP) chairwoman, Asma Jehangir, has been nominated as her lawyer,
and after meeting the police inquiry team at Jehangir's office in
Lahore she was moved at the weekend to a secure shelter for women
run by Jehangir's legal aid firm, AGHS.
"This is definitely one of the most terrible stories I have
ever heard and we deal with women victims of crime almost every
day," Jehangir said.
Deputy Inspector-General of Police Zafar Qureishi, heading the inquiry
into the alleged rape, said: "We began investigations immediately
after recording Sonia Naz's statement. Nothing will remain unprobed."
While at least three other incidents of brutal rape in police custody
have come forward this year alone, many others are thought to have
gone unreported, the HRCP said.
The commission said Sonia's case demonstrates a growing determination
on the part of many Pakistani women to fight back against violence.
"It is in a way very important that Sonia has had the courage
to go public about what happened. The times when women, fearing
social stigma, refused to report such crimes or were too scared
and ashamed to do so are changing," Mehboob Ahmed Khan, legal
officer at the HRCP, said.
The HRCP said it had details of more than 250 incidents of rape
and gang-rape in the first six months of 2005 alone. The fact that
the figures are significantly higher than in the same period of
2004 is put down to an increase in the reporting of such crimes
by victims.
"This is a huge triumph and shows rights campaigners have succeeded
in at least convincing women victims of rape that they must come
forward, and must not blame themselves for what happened to them,"
Khan said.
Women parliamentarians held a demonstration outside the national
legislature in Islamabad on Thursday protesting against the alleged
rape and abuse of Sonia Naz. The demonstrators demanded the government
bring the perpetrators to justice, whilst carrying placards against
the abuse of power by police officials.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48927&SelectRegion=Asia&SelectCountry=PAKISTAN
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