Pakistan to host 7th meeting of women speakers

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will host the 7th meeting of the women speakers from around the world in November this year.

This was announced by the secretary general of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) here in Panama City at the conclusion of the 124th General Assembly of the IPU, according to the message received from Panama. It will be for the first time that Pakistan will be given an opportunity to host a prestigious IPU event of such a grand stature ever-since the country became member of this international body comprising parliaments of the world. The IPU has currently 157 member countries. It may be recalled that Dr Fehmida Mirza had made the offer for hosting the women speakers from around the world at the 118th General Assembly of the IPU, held in South Africa in April 2008, soon after she had taken office in March the same year. The offer was repeated in Vienna in 2009 and then in Berne in 2010. However, in view of the security concerns, there remained some hesitation on the part of member states in accepting the offer. Nevertheless, it was the personal pursuance and lobbying of Fehmida that the women leaders finally agreed to meet in Islamabad in 2011.

The meeting, to be held in November, will draw 37 women speakers from different parliaments of Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, South America and Asia. There are no women speakers in the Australian continent. Asia has the least number of women speakers with the speakers coming from Pakistan, India, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Europe has 15, Africa has nine while the Caribbean and the Latin American states have eight women speakers.

Source: Daily Times

Date:4/22/2011

Woman murdered by husband, brother-in-law

Karachi – A mother of a child was murdered by her husband and her brother-in-law at her residence in the Ibrahim Hyderi police limits on Thursday, police said.

Khateeja, 40, was stabbed to death by her husband, Jaffer, and her brother-in-law, Mumtaz, after they had an exchange of heated words. Both suspects fled after the assault.

The neighbours came to their house after hearing their child’s cries and saw the woman in a pool of blood. They informed the police, who took the body to the JPMC for legal formalities. Khateeja married Jaffer three months back and it was her second marriage. The woman had a child from her first husband. The police are yet to determine the motive behind the murder.

Source: The News

Date:4/22/2011

Suspect held in girl’s murder case

KARACHI, April 21: Police on Thursday claimed to have arrested a young man for his alleged involvement in the murder of a teenage girl earlier this week when she resisted his attempt to rape her.

Officials said that they arrested Kaleem Ahmed, who is in his mid-20s, after initial investigations suggested that he allegedly strangled the 14-year-old girl near Jubilee Market on Monday and dumped her body in a gunny bag in the Garden area.

The body was found on Monday evening and a few hours after the girl who lived in a residential building in Jubilee area had been murdered, Inspector Ejaz Mughal, the station investigation officer of the Eidgah police station, said.

“We began connecting the dots and after some efforts found out that she was last seen with the suspect who has a grocery shop in her area. Before reaching any conclusion, the police collected evidences which strengthened our doubts.”

On Thursday morning, he said, police finally arrested the suspect, who after a brief questioning confessed to have committed the crime.

“The suspect said he had persuaded the girl to visit his shop’s warehouse situated in the same area. There he tried to carry out his plan but the girl resisted. During the scuffle he heard someone entering the facility,” the Eidgah police official said.

In order to stop the girl from screaming he covered her face with a plastic bag and put his hands on her mouth that led to her suffocation and claimed her life.

“The suspect stuffed the body in a bag, put it on his motorbike and dumped it in a comparatively isolated area,” he added.
He said the suspect claimed that he had not raped the girl and killed her only out of fear.

The police are waiting for the final report of a medical examination before reaching any conclusion.

“We have also sent the DNA and other samples of the suspect for detailed examination. We would corroborate the results of two examinations for further investigation. Initially the suspect has been booked under Section 302 (premeditated murder) of the Pakistan Penal Code in an FIR 12/2011,” added Sub-Inspector Mughal.

Source: Dawn

Date:4/22/2011

Mai feels unsafe

MUZAFFARGARH: Women’s rights activist Mukhtar Mai said on Thursday she felt unsafe after the acquittal by the Supreme Court of her tormentors who had gang-raped her nine years ago.

Talking to reporters after hearing the verdict, a visibly-shaken Mai said the court and police would be responsible if she was harmed by her rapists who would now be freed.

On several occasions in the past, she had expressed confidence in courts.

“Now police and judges have victimised me. Initially, police damaged my case by preparing a flawed challan which resulted in the acquittal of the accused,” she alleged.

She said she would decide whether to seek review of the verdict after consulting rights groups and her lawyer Aitzaz Ahsan.

Source: Dawn

Date:4/22/2011

Mukhtar Mai case: all but one freed

ISLAMABAD, April 21: To the consternation of rights activists, the Supreme Court rejected on Thursday, by a majority of two to one, appeals of Mukhtar Mai against acquittal of her tormentors who had raped her almost nine years ago and for enhancement of their sentence.

Only Abdul Khaliq, one of the 14 accused in the case, will remain in prison to serve life sentence.

A three-judge bench comprising Justice Mian Shakirullah Jan, Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk and Justice Mian Saqib Nisar also discharged the March 14, 2005, suo motu notice under which the March 3, 2005, verdict of the Multan bench of Lahore High Court had been suspended.

The high court had reversed a trial court’s judgment on the basis of “insufficient evidence and faulty police investigations”.

In its detailed judgment, the Supreme Court ordered that all accused who were arrested because of its July 28, 2005, directives be released forthwith, but ruled that Abdul Khaliq be released only after completing his sentence. The bench had taken up the appeals against the order of Multan bench of the Lahore High Court commuting the sentence of the accused (Abdul Khaliq) and acquitting the abettors involved in gang-raping Mukhtar Mai on June 22, 2002, on the orders of a punchayat (village council) convened by the influential Mastoi tribe in the village of Meerwala in southern Punjab.

The incident was widely condemned in the country and abroad.

In a dissenting note, Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk partially accepted the appeals of Mukhtar Mai to an extent when he set aside the high court’s verdict of acquitting the accused – Allah Ditta, Ghulam Fareed, Faiz Mastoi and Muhammad Ramzan Pachar.

“They are convicted under Section 10(3) of Offence of Zina (Enforcement of Hadood) Ordinance, 1979, read with Section 19 of the Ordinance and Section 109 PPC for abetment of ‘zina-bil-jabr’ (rape) and under Section 7(c) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997, and on each count sentenced to imprisonment for 10 years. The sentence shall run concurrently,” Justice Mulk observed.

In August 2002, the ATC sentenced six men to death – four for raping Mukhtar Mai and two for being part of the jirga. The remaining eight were released.

Later the LHC’s Multan bench on separate appeals acquitted five of them and converted the death sentence of Abdul Khaliq to life imprisonment.

The punchayat had been called to seek punishment for Shakoor, then 12-year-old brother of Mukhtar Mai. It suggested that Shakoor should marry the girl with whom he was accused of having an affair and Mukhtar Mai be married to a man of the Mastoi tribe. But the Mastois rejected it and insisted that the offence of adultery should be settled with adultery.

Mukhtar Mai was called by the council to apologise for the conduct of her brother who had already been sodomised by the Mastois. She was allegedly dragged to a nearby hut and raped by four men.

“It is quite normal that crimes of rape are not reported promptly,” Justice Mulk observed while taking note of registration of the FIR after a delay of eight days and said that the devastating effect of rape on the victim and her family itself furnished explanation for delay in such reporting.

“There is another compelling reason that discourages the rape victim to prosecute the accused. She is deterred by the embarrassment and humiliation she will have to suffer in narrating the incident to strangers, more so, to the police recording the FIR, followed by probes during investigation into matters personal to her,” he said. The dissenting note said:

“She will further have to bear the agony of narrating the story in an open court in the presence of men and face searching and harassing questions from the cross-examiner. The rape victim relives the trauma every time she narrates the incident.

“Rape victims in our society, particularly from rural areas, are not free agents. To bring the rapist to justice, they invariably require permission and approval of their men-folk. This fact is amply demonstrated in this case when prosecution witness Maulvi Abdul Razzaq, a local prayer leader, claimed that when he learnt about the incident, he approached the father of the complainant, Ghulam Fareed. It was only after he managed to persuade the father that the complainant was taken to lodge the report.

“The complainant party was under a continuous threat from the accused not to disclose the incident. The threat was real in view of the social disparity between the two parties. Without the moral support of Maulvi Abdul Razzaq and the publicity given to the incident, perhaps, it may never have seen light of the day.

“However despite such odds, the complainant, an illiterate woman of rural humble background, mustered tremendous courage to stand up against powerful influential culprits to bring them to justice.”

About the case of Abdul Khaliq, Justice Saqib Nisar noted in the majority judgment that the high court had distinguished the case primarily for the reasons that he had remotely admitted the adultery but failed to prove the defence of ‘Nikkah’ (wedlock) he had claimed.

Justice Nisar declined to accept the allegations of abduction as made out by the prosecution and said the court was not convinced that the victim was taken to the room as had been alleged by her.

Source: Dawn

Date:4/22/2011