Nilofer to hold conference on Swat schools

ISLAMABAD: An all-party ‘Iqra’ conference regarding the protection of female educational institutions in Swat will be held on February 3, Senator Nilofer Bakhtiar said on Friday.

To a press conference, Nilofer said the Iqra conference would evolve a comprehensive joint strategy for curbing incidents such as torching girls’ schools. “Some 200 girlsÂ’ schools had been set on fire in the Tribal Areas and this affected the education of around 80,000 girls in the area,” she claimed. Nilofer asked the media to highlight the grave violation of human rights in the Tribal Areas. She also appealed to religious leaders to create awareness regarding female education as granted by Islam.
Source: Daily Times
Date:1/24/2009

Maria Shah’s condition still unstable’

Karachi- The condition of 24-year-old Maria Shah, an acid burn victim undergoing treatment at the Burns Ward of the Civil Hospital Karachi (CHK) is precarious despite the best efforts of doctors.

“Shah walked today, a TV channel interviewed her but I would say her condition is not stable.

She was admitted with 38 per cent burns,” Burns Ward Executive Director Dabir-ur-Rahman told The News on Friday.

“The Burns Ward Karachi recorded 16 cases of acid burning amongst females in 2007-2008 while 25 cases of acid burning in men were also admitted at the facility during the same period,” Rahman said.

Data collected by Aurat Foundation shows there was one case of acid throwing in Sindh in 2008 in the first quarter (January-March), one case in second quarter (April-June), and one case in fourth quarter (Oct-December). Violence against women is on an ascending order in Sindh as elsewhere in Pakistan. This could be gauged from the fact that there were 112 cases of domestic violence, 62 cases of gang-rape, 47 cases of sexual assault and 284 cases of so-called honour killing in Sindh province alone during 2008, according to Aurat Foundation.

“We have sent as many as 300 women in the assemblies but they are not even aware what is going on in their own locality,” Pakistan Medical Association (PMA) Karachi General Secretary Dr Samrina Hashmi said bitterly. “Until and unless social inequality is not removed and women do not become independent economically, ugly incidents of acid burning and domestic violence will continue.”

“Primary and secondary education should be ensured to all women, baby-care centres should be established for working women and economic equality between women and men should be guaranteed failing which we will continue to witness horrendous incidents like that of Shah,” she said.

Shah, an acid burn victim, a symbol of extreme callousness, hails from Shikarpur, Sindh and was brought to the Burns Ward in a precarious condition.

Thanks to the electronic and print media her case drew attention of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani who not only announced financial assistance to the girl but also directed Federal Information Minister Sherry Rehman to visit her personally. Gilani issued orders that the culprit should immediately be apprehended and brought to the court of justice.

A First Information Report (FIR) was lodged but since the culprit was in hiding, his brother and father were detained.

As a result of the hue and cry in the media, Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar took suo motu notice of the incident and directed the Sukkur Regional Police Officer (RPO) to investigate the case. Shah became the victim of the heinous crime while she was working in a clinic when the accused approached her and threw acid at her because she had refused to marry him.

Although the Minister of State for Interior, Tasneem Ahmed Qureshi has been reported to have claimed that acid burn cases in Pakistan have declined, it seems to be far from true. Innocent women are becoming victims of acid burning across Pakistan essentially due to the rising trend of malignant aggression and a police system riddled with inefficiencies and indifference.
Source: The news
Date:1/24/2009

Suspect in acid throwing held

SHIKARPUR, Jan 23: Police after arresting the absconding accused from Karachi involved in throwing acid on a midwife in Shikarpur brought him to back on Friday.

The accused Arsalan Sanjrani threw acid on the face of a midwife Maria Shah d/o Baqar Shah some nine days ago in the clinic of Dr Imran and fled.

Maria Shah was rushed to the Civil Hospital and then referred to Karachi where she was reported out of danger.

The Supreme Court of Pakistan, the Sindh government and human rights organizations took serious notice of the case and demanded early arrest of the culprit. DPO Shikarpur, Khadim Hussain Rind was also summoned by the Supreme Court to appear in the apex court.

Police arrested Arsalan Sanjrani from Karachi on Thursday night and brought him back to Shikarpur on Friday. The DPO said that the two detained uncles of Arsalan Sanjrani would be released now.

According to Arsalan, he was a matriculate and had an affair with Maria since school days and carried out the duty of picking and dropping her from school to home and back without any charges on his auto rickshaw for years.

The accused tried to commit suicide four times and even sold his sister’s jewellery to see his love happy and on hopes of marriage.

Arsalan had no remorse over throwing acid on Maria as she ditched him by refusing to marry him.

The accused was produced before the court and police obtained his remand for six days.
Source: Dawn
Date:1/24/2009

Newlyweds live in fear of honour-killing

KARACHI, Jan 23: Pervez Chachar and his young wife live in the police headquarters in Karachi. Their crime? They fell in love and married without their families’ permission.

The newlyweds dare not venture out of the police station as they fear their families will hunt them down and kill them.

“I know they will kill her and I have to protect her,” Chachar said of his wife’s family who are enraged that the young woman chose to marry a man from a rival tribe.

In traditional rural society, getting married without permission is sometimes deemed such a serious slight to the “honour” of a family or a tribe that death is seen as fitting retribution.

Rights groups estimate 500 people, most of them women, are killed in the name of “honour” in Pakistan every year, with the majority of victims from poor, rural families often killed by their own relatives.

Shortly after Chachar married Humera Kambo a year ago, the couple fled to Karachi from their home in the interior of Sindh. Humera, too afraid to talk to a reporter, has been abducted by her family and Chachar has been beaten by them.

Still defiant, they fear death if they stray too far from the cramped room next to the police canteen which they share with another young couple in the same position.

They have been there for four months and they don’t know when they can safely leave.

The United Nations has estimated that some 5,000 people, mostly women, die every year in so-called honour killings, mostly in South Asia and the Middle East.

Women are the weakest of all in traditional, male-dominated society so they are often targeted, rights groups say.

“Why does it happen? Because they are always the ones who have no redress, either legally or socially,” Anis Haroon, of the women’s rights group the Aurat Foundation, said of the victims.

“They don’t know anyone, they have no contacts, they have no money to offer the police. And these perpetrators come from the higher status of society,” she said.

Ms Haroon said there could be no hope of change until legislators changed their mindset.

A senator from Balochistan provoked outrage late last year when he said the killing of some women, who were reported to have been shot and buried alive in another case of honour killing, was a reflection of tribal traditions.

The senator, Sardar Israrullah Zehri, is now a minister in the federal government.

“It is a very bad sign … people who are encouraging violence, their membership should be cancelled. They should not be allowed to contest elections,” Ms Haroon said.

Orangzeb Magsi, a 32-year-old graduate from an American university, is a leader of one of the most powerful tribes in Balochistan.

Mr Magsi has dealt with more than 100 cases of “honour” crime in the past four years in his district but thankfully no killings, he says. Only education and time will bring change, he adds.

“On the one hand, you have these centuries-old customs and, on the other, the government says ‘it’s illegal’,” he said.

“Since they are not educated, it’s very difficult to make them understand.”

Nafeesa Shah, a newly elected member of parliament from a rural area of Sindh, said the jirgas and custom of killing women over honour reflected the failure of the judicial system.“You had these customs in mediaeval Europe. You had the lynching of people in America … These things will only go if you have laws that don’t allow space for it,” Shah said.

Ms Shah, a member of the Pakistan People’s Party, said the party’s victory in the 2008 elections was a golden opportunity for change.

“It is important now that we, who are in power and can change things, take this as a sign of the times and work towards making laws and improving criminal procedures in a way that deters the offenders from protecting their crimes in the name of honour or customs,” she said.
Source: Dawn
Date:1/24/2009

Redress for acid attack victim sought

KARACHI, Jan 24: National Assembly Speaker Dr Fehmida Mirza has said that those who threw acid on Maria Shah, a young lady health worker from Shikarpur, will be brought to justice.

She made these remarks in conversation with journalists after visiting the victim at the Burns Centre of the Civil Hospital Karachi on Saturday.

The speaker was accompanied by members of the National Assembly, Nafisa Shah and Khush Bakht Shujaat.

They inquired after the health of the victim who is being treated at the intensive-care unit of the hospital.

Dr Fehmida said that the purpose of their visit was to make sure that the victim received proper medical treatment.

She expressed satisfaction over the medical treatment being given to the victim and over the fact that the accused in the case had been arrested.

Those involved in such crimes should be given exemplary punishment so that no such incident should take place in future, the NA speaker said, adding that the punishment would get the message across that no one could get away scot-free after committing such an act.

The accused in such crimes should never get bail and if there were any legal loopholes, they should be closed, she said.

She also said that a proper campaign was required to increase awareness regarding the acid-throwing cases in society and emphasised the need for legislation in this regard.

She said, “The judiciary should be sensitised on the matter”, adding that it should deal with such cases on a fast-track basis.
Source: Dawn
Date:1/25/2009