Heinous crime: Two children, four women raped in Bahawalpur

BAHAWALPUR: Two children and four women were reported raped in Bahawalpur on Tuesday.

Ejaz Ahmad’s five-year-old daughter Sehr* was abducted by a man, Waseem* from Islampura locality in Ahmadpur East. The accused took her to an abandoned home and raped her there. She was taken to a hospital.

City police have registered a rape case against Waseem and are searching for him. Another five-year-old girl was raped in Tahliwali village.

She has been hospitalised. Channi Goht police have registered a case and arrested a suspect. A 13-year-old girl was raped in Chak 12-BC by her cousin. Baghdadul Jadeed police have arrested the accused.

In Hasilpur, a woman was abducted and gang-raped. In Ahmadpur East, a man raped a married woman. Another woman was gang-raped in Kanjoo Colony. Police have registered separate cases.

Express Tribune

Three women teachers, two children killed in Bajaur bomb blast

By: Anwarullah Khan

KHAR: At least six people, three of them women and two children, were killed when a roadside bomb detonated by remote control struck a van taking them to a school in Salarzai tehsil of Bajaur tribal agency on Tuesday.

The women were schoolteachers.

Official sources blamed the blast on Taliban who had been involved in similar blasts in the past.

According to official sources, the blast took place at around 8am on Tuesday in the far-flung area of Thangi, about 10 kilometres northeast of Khar, the administrative headquarters of the agency.

The six people killed in the blast included the driver of the van. The school for girls is run by a non-governmental organisation.

The deceased include three female teachers, two children and the driver of the vehicle.

The six deceased were identified as Tabinda Bibi of Kot Mena in Malakand Agency; Sameera Bibi, of Mardan; Salama Bibi, of Thana in Malakand Agency; Abbas, 6, nephew of Tabinda Bibi; Abbas, 5, nephew of Sameera Bibi; and driver Liaq Shah, Inam Khoro Chinagi area.

Residents said the powerful blast created panic among people.

“I was working in my field near the road when I heard the explosion soon after the vehicle entered the katcha road in the area,” Akbar Khan, a resident of the area, said.

According to the local administration, the blast destroyed the van. A passerby was injured in the blast.

Driver of school van hit by explosion also dead
Soon after the blast, local people and members of the peace committee rushed to the area and retrieved bodies and took them and the injured to the agency headquarters hospital in Khar.

Sources in the administration told this correspondent that no arrest and no claim for responsibility had been made till late evening.

“We have started investigating about the tragic incident but according to credible information, Taliban militants are responsible for the attack as these elements have been involved in such activities in the past too,” an official of the administration said.

An official of the `Idea’, a non-governmental organisation working for the promotion of education in the far-flung areas of agency, told Dawn that the teachers who had died in the blast were non-locals.

He said the education project was recently launched in the Bajaur agency to provide basic education to girls deprived of proper schooling because of Taliban threats.

According to official data, at least 109 schools have been blown up by Taliban since the upsurge of militancy in Bajaur region in 2007.

DAWN

Man kills wife in Takht Bhai

TAKHT BHAI: A man allegedly killed his wife over domestic issue in Gul Faraz Banda in the limits of Shergarh Police Station on Tuesday, official sources said. The sources said that Asghar Ali shot dead his wife Samina over domestic issue and fled the scene. The police on complaint of the accused’s uncle, Sawab Khan registered the case and started an investigation.

The News

Karo-Kari claims two lives in Khairpur

Karo-Kari

SUKKUR: Karo-Kari claimed two lives in Khairpur on Tuesday. Police sources said Ibrahim Mamdani allegedly shot dead his wife Shahida and her alleged paramour Arbab Ali in the limits of the Mahmood Channa Police Station after he had seen them in an objectionable condition. The accused managed to escape after the incident, they said. Later, the police shifted the bodies to a local hospital for post-mortem examination. Further investigations were underway.

The News

Call for effective implementation of women protection laws

Political empowerment

LARKANA: Speakers at a seminar titled ‘Provincial policy dialogue on early marriages and domestic violence’ called for establishing committees at district level to ensure implementation of laws protecting women’s rights and curbing underage marriages.

They were of the concerted view that the laws protecting women’s rights did exist but were rarely implemented.

The seminar was held under the auspices of a non-governmental organisation, Shirkatgah, at a local hotel on Tuesday.

A large number of women from all walks of life attended the seminar.

Amar Sindhu, a leader of the Women Action Forum (WAF), said that although a change was being witnessed in the culture, where women were killed (for honour or other invalid reasons), it seemed as if men still possessed the licence to kill their female family members.

Larkana’s City ASP Tauqeer Naeem, sharing the crime data with the seminar participants, said that over the past seven months alone 28 women had been killed in the city. Most of the cases related to karo-kari (so-called honour killings) and four related to domestic violence, he added.

He observed that one of the main factors behind many cases of violence against women appeared to be ‘watta-satta’ (an arrangement under which a man is marries a woman only if her brother/son marries the man’s close family member).

Under this arrangement, he said, most underage marriages were held.

The police officer, on the basis of the cases he came across during his posting in the city, disclosed that “between 90 and 95 per cent marriages are held without a Nikahnama being signed or registered”.

He stressed the need for ensuring formal education in society to create awareness of demerits of underage marriages and impact of violence against women on families and relationships.

Four women committed suicide in the city over the past few months due to violence against them by their husbands, he told the audience, and said police personnel should also be sensitised on how to deal fairly with cases of violence against women.

Regarding the state of women empowerment in society, the ASP said that remnants of the 5,000-year-old civilisation of Moenjodaro showed that women in that era remained in the forefront in all walks of life. The present-day society, he observed, was a male-dominated one where the process of women empowerment was very slow.

“Culture is changing, but jirgas (tribal courts) presided over by feudal lords, lawmakers and other influential people are frequently held at circuit houses and bungalows of tribal chieftains. More often, the rulings are influenced by them and women are losers,” she said.

She also referred to the recent incidents of gang rape in Rasoolabad, Khipro, Johi and some other areas, and said feudal lords appeared undeterred by civil society’s protests over the illegal jirgas and struggle against injustices with the womenfolk.

The struggle should now move ahead, i.e. from justice in individual cases to the cause of collective change, she stressed.

“A collective change is possible only when ‘big houses’ are shaken by the voice of a larger number of women [legislators],” she said.

Calling for the abolishment of the jirga system, she criticised the role of state institutions that was helping the system to flourish.

Shirkatgah director Gulnaz Tabassum observed that women, constituting more than 50 per cent of the country’s population, had meagre representation in elected houses, courts and all major sectors. “That’s why decisions come against women,” she said.

She was of the view that male members dominating households and institutions had the mindset of going against women.

She held obsolete traditions and customs rooted deeply in culture responsible for killing of and violence against women.

Other participants, including district social welfare officer Dr Amir Abro, PML-F divisional chief Wahab Pandrani, Khalid Chandio, Ms Hameeda, Hajira Selro, Rubina Chandio and Safia Abbasi, expressed their dismay over the non- implementation of the laws protecting women.

They proposed insertion of the column of ‘age’ in the Nikahnama form to remove any doubt about the bride’s being adult. The supported the idea that education was key to the required change in the system and root out all inhuman, unfair and illegal customs and traditions.

DAWN