Gang-rape victim commits suicide in Burewala

BUREWALA – A girl who was gang raped by two youth four days ago, committed suicide at Chak 273/EB while the Gaggo Mandi Police arrested one of the accused and registered a case here on Sunday.

The 18-year-old daughter of Muhammad Ramzan, a resident of Chak 273/EB went to wash clothes at water channel. Meanwhile she was allegedly abducted by two youth identified as Ikram Jatt and Mujahid Joyia and gang raped her. Later the girl informed her parents about the incident and they approached police to register a case against accused.

However, some influential people of the area pressurised them to compromise with the culprits. But the girl, dejected over the incident, consumed poison at her house. She was rushed to hospital but could not survive.

The Gaggo Mandi Police registered a self-immolation case. Meanwhile, the police also arrested one of the accused Mujahid Joyia involved in gang rape.

The Nation

Man kills wife in Malakand Agency

BATKHELA: A man allegedly killed his wife and injured her brother in Mina Kot in Malakand Agency on Sunday, sources said. The sources said that 20-year old Nagina Bibi, wife of Dalil Khan, came to her parents’ home after developing differences with her husband.

The News

A quiet revolution by women in Pakistan

The term ‘a quiet revolution’ sounds like an oxymoron, since revolutions normally produce a lot of noise. But when something entirely unexpected happens that, too, can be called a revolutionary event even if it is not noisy. That is precisely what women in Pakistan are experiencing. A significant number of them are leaving their homes and entering the workforce. The numbers involved are large enough to make a difference not only to the women’s overall welfare, but it will profoundly affect the way Pakistani society will function, the way its economy will run and the manner in which its political order will evolve. This change is coming about as a result of development in three major areas: education, employment and entrepreneurship.

Let us begin with education. There is a widespread belief that women are faring poorly in receiving education. That impression is correct to some extent. The overall rate of literacy for women is low; much less than that for men which is also not very high. Although the Government of Pakistan is a signatory to the Millennium Development Goals (MDG), the country is far from achieving them. Attaining universal literacy for both boys and girls by the year 2015 was one of the MDGs. With literacy rates standing at 70 per cent for boys and only 45 per cent for girls in 2010, Pakistan will miss these goals by a vast margin.

However, when speaking of a revolution, the reference is to the growth rate in women’s enrolments in institutions of higher learning. Here, the recent trends are extraordinary — in fact revolutionary. It is interesting and puzzling that some of the numbers used here to make this point have not appeared in the country’s discourse about economic and social issues. Over the last 17 years, from 1993 to 2010, the number of girls enrolled in primary education has increased from 3.7 million to 8.3 million. This implies a growth rate of 6.7 per cent a year, about two and half times the rate of increase in the number of girls entering the primary school-going cohort. However, even with this impressive rate of increase, it is worrying that girls still account for less than one half — the proportion was 44.3 per cent in 2010 — of the total number of children in school.

It is in higher education that girls have made a most spectacular advance. The numbers of girls attending what are described as ‘professional colleges’ has increased in the same 17-year period, at a rate of eight per cent per annum. In 1993, there were only 100,400 girls attending these institutions. Their number increased to more than 261,000 in 2010. There are now more girls in these institutions than boys. Their proportion in the total population of these colleges has increased from 36 per cent to 57 per cent in this period.

It is attendance in the universities, though where the real revolution has occurred. There were less than 15,000 girls in these institutions in 1993; their number increased to 436,000 in 2010. The proportion of girls is approaching the 50 per cent mark with the rate of growth in their numbers an impressive 28 per cent a year. While a very large number of girls drop out between the primary stage and the stage of professional and university education, the numbers completing higher education is now much greater. Three quarter of a million girls are now leaving the institutions of higher learning every year.

In education, it is the numbers that make a revolution. Given the rate of increase in the number of girls attending these institutions, it is not an exaggeration to suggest that by 2015 a million girls will be ready every year to enter the modern sectors of the economy. That has already begun to happen and here the statistics on participation in the workforce don’t tell the complete story. Official statistics still indicate very low levels of women’s participation in the workforce. According to the official data, only 16 per cent of women were working compared to 50 per cent of men. The rate of women’s participation in the workforce is higher in the countryside than in urban areas — 19 per cent as against eight per cent. But these statistics don’t paint the real picture. A lot of the work that women do, either in the households or in the work place, does not get recorded. This is not only the case for developing countries. The same happens in more developed economies that keep a better record of what people do for living. In Pakistan, for instance, women are very actively engaged in the livestock sector but that goes mostly unnoticed in official accounting.

There are a number of sectors in modern areas of the economy where women now make up a significant part of the workforce. These include the traditional areas where educated women have been active for decades. These include teaching and medicine. However, more recently, as the number of women with high levels of skills increased, they have become players in sectors such as banking, communications, law and politics. Women also now makeup a significant proportion of the workforce in companies engaged in IT work. Some IT experts have estimated that in their sector, there are tens of thousands of women working in what they call ‘cottage businesses’. These are women with good computer skills, who are working from their homes undertaking small contractual work for members of their families or their friends who are living and working abroad. Some estimates suggest that more than a billion dollars worth of work gets done in these informal establishments. These are, by large, one-person shops that receive payments through informal transactions. However, it is the entry of women in the entrepreneurial field where the real revolution is occurring. I will take up that subject in this space next week.

Express Tribune

Crime: ‘Child rapist, murderer’ escapes

FAISALABAD: A rickshaw driver, arrested on Thursday for killing a child after sexually assaulting her, escaped police custody late night on Saturday.

Nadeem alias Billa escaped from Ghulam Muhammadabad police station where he was detained for questioning by Batala Colony police who had arrested him.

Eight policemen were arrested on charges of delinquency and negligence in the wake of the suspect’s escape. Nadeem had confessed to killing a six-year-old girl after sexally assaulting her on June 23.

He also led the police to the spot where he had dumped the remains of the child’s body. DSP Ghulam Muhammadabad Chaudhry Ashiq Jutt said teams had been formed to raid the nearby areas and arrest the suspect.

Express Tribune

Woman MLA recounts horror of mob attack after she remarried without divorce

RAWALPINDI: Congress leader Rumi Nath, who represents Borkhola Assembly constituency, married Jaki Jakir, a Muslim, last month and converted to Islam. She had allegedly not divorced her first husband.

Superintendent of Police Pradip Pujari said that five people, suspected to have been involved in the attack, have been arrested.Mrs Nath was visiting her constituency in South Assam for the first time since her remarriage and conversion to Islam. Some reports say they were attacked because they had together visited a temple during the day, reports NDTV.

Rumi Nath was first elected to the assembly in 2006 on a BJP ticket from Borkhola constituency. She later defected to the Congress and won the seat a second time in the 2011 elections.

Her first husband Rakesh Singh, with whom she has a 2-year old daughter, had filed an FIR last month saying his wife was missing. But Mrs Nath herself came out in the open saying she remarried her Facebook friend and converted of her own free will.

“It is a complex situation because of personal dynamics but our interest is to maintain order and take action. She is a sitting MLA and no one has any business to manhandle the woman whether they agree to what she has done or not,” said Choudhury.

Her own party has condemned the incident. “There are legal means if they have any grievance. But this is reprehensible and we condemn this incident,” said Haren Das, General Secretary, Assam Pradesh Congress Committee.

The National Commission of Women (NCW) too has promised to look into the case. “It was a matter of marriage affair; it’s an unfortunate incident and the government should have tightened the security. We would take suo moto cognisance,” said Mamata Sharma, Chairperson, NCW.

Though the police say that action is being taken against the guilty, it seems the administration is going slow on the case.The police in Assam have said that action will be taken against those who brutally attacked 33-year-old woman MLA Rumi Nath and her second husband at a hotel on Saturday.

There was a mob of 100 people who attacked the couple while they were having dinner.“I got attacked by some boys who were drunk. They even tried to rape me and take my clothes off, so it’s an attempt to murder and rape. Since I got married it has been a political issue; it’s 100 per cent a political conspiracy,” said Mrs Nath. She was rushed to the hospital but has been brought to her Guwahati residence where she is recovering.

“They went to a hotel and tried to take shelter when a crowd of people surrounded them and manhandled, and also physically assaulted them. We have registered a case. Some elements are trying to give a communal colour to this incident,” said Jayanta Choudhury, DGP, Assam.

The News