Man guns down wife, mother-in-law

A man shot and killed his wife and mother-in-law in Pindigheb late Friday night.

Muhammad Shahbaz informed the police that many years ago, Sadaqat Ali shot dead his father-in-law Ghulam Rasool and his case is still pending in court. Ali is currently out on bail.

He added that his mother-in-law and sister-in-law were following the case of murder, and they were repeatedly being pushed to give a letter of consent, but they refused. “My wife and I were sleeping in the house of my mother-in-law when they heard gunfire. Just as I came out I saw Sadaqat Ali leaving with a gun. I rushed to my mother-in-law’s room where I found my mother-in-law, Imtiaz Bibi, and my sister-in-law, Salma Bibi, in a pool of blood.”

Shahbaz said that Sadaqat Ali was angry because his wife and mother-in-law kept refusing to give a letter of consent in the case of the murder.

Police handed over the bodies to their heirs after completing medico-legal formalities and also registered a case against Sadaqat Ali.

Protest against taxes

Meanwhile, the residents of Pindigheb, led by Numberdar Ahmed Nawaz, protested in front of the Islamabad Electric Supply Company (IESCO) office against imposition of heavy taxes in electricity bills.

The protesters held placards and chanted slogans against the government and its brutal policies.

The protesters said that the government has put all the burden on the public in the name of fuel adjustment charges on the dictation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), while the lavish lifestyle of bureaucrats and government officials is still at its peak.

The government is fooling citizens and pushing them towards extreme poverty, unemployment and lawlessness, they said.

The protesters said that bills of Rs3, 000 are being sent for spending zero units. The rulers and the elite class can afford the increase in electricity prices, but how will daily wagers pay thousands of rupees bills?

Source: The Express Tribune

Nursing student raped by neighbour

BAHAWALPUR: A nursing student was allegedly raped by her former neighbour at Basti Goth Ghani.

According to the first information report (FIR) registered with Saddar Police Station on the complaint of the girl, she used to visit the family in her neighbourhood with whom she had family relations. During her routine visits, the man in the neighbouring family had taken her pictures and she had been demanding the pictures from him. Meanwhile, her family shifted to Medical Colony.

On the day of the incident, the suspect telephoned her, saying she could come to collect her pictures. When she reached there, his friend, a resident of Kahror Pucca, was also present. The neighbour raped her while his friend stood guard. On her return to her home, the victim informed her father about the incident and he took her to Saddar Police Station where police registered the FIR.

Aamir Nazir, the PRO of DPO office, told Dawn the victim was referred to the Bahawal Victoria Hospital (BVH) for medical examination.

ACTION: Communication and Works (C&W) South Punjab secretary Muhammad Altaf Baloch has ordered action against those who allegedly used substandard material in the revamp of the District Headquarters (DHQ) Hospital, Lodhran, costing about Rs900m.

According to a handout, the secretary accompanied by the EXEN buildings, contractors and other related officials took serious notice of the flawed construction of the building and expressed his dissatisfaction with the work quality. He issued orders that the responsible officials and contractors be served with show-cause notices to initiate action over substandard material.

Presently, the revamp of the main building, surgical and dental wards of the hospital is in progress while work on sewerage,

roofs and electrification of the building is about to be completed.

Source: Dawn

Call to ensure participation of women in decision making

ISLAMABAD: Women’s participation in decision making must be ensured at all levels as women have some inbuilt negotiation capability and better skills to manage conflicts and create innovative solutions to problems, said National Defence University (NDU)’s Professor Dr Shaheen Akhtar.

She was addressing a training workshop organised by the Centre for Peace, Development and Reforms (CPDR). The day-long workshop was attended by around 25 women hailing from Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

Dr Akhtar underlined the importance of structural reforms that are indispensable for encouraging women’s participation in the decision making process in Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

She also highlighted the impact of the Kashmir conflict on the lives of women in Azad Kashmir and how it had restricted the participation of the already neglected female lot in policy-making circles and many other significant areas.

NDU professor says women possess better skills to find innovative solutions to problems

“AJK is not a conflict zone, but a part of a disputed territory; therefore, the impact of conflict here becomes inevitable, affecting the individual grooming at many levels,” she noted.

Dr Akhtar also stated that the government needs to take some concrete steps to reach out to this vulnerable and often ignored section of society in order to make female participation in decision making and governance a reality.

Women of Azad Kashmir have a huge potential to represent themselves and can play an important role in the peace-making and conflict resolution process by being effective mediators.

She castigated the practice of restricting women in some set roles and spoke about the importance of women’s participation in many aspects of governance.

Nighat Khan, the head of a London-based organisation, New Vision for Women, spoke about the significance of individual grooming, and of how an assertive and self-confident class of women can bring a tremendous change in the whole structure of society.

She emphasised the importance of personal grooming to enhance the skills of women and develop their strong characters to rebut the misrepresentation and obfuscation of facts in the society.

“Women in Azad Kashmir are well qualified and have a huge potential to represent themselves and make an impact in policy-making in the region,” she observed.

She reminded the participants that women still have a long way to go in fully releasing their potential in building a just society, especially in the regions affected by violent conflict.

Several women from various parts of Azad Kashmir highlighted different issues like lack of gainful employment, healthcare, transport, electricity and other facilities that become obstacles for them to achieve their goals.

Fatima Anwar said that women are great negotiators because of their inherent compassionate attitude and inclination towards peace and the common well-being of people.

“If given opportunities, women can bring peace to society through negotiating a solution based on a win-win situation for the parties,” she added.

Mahvish Bakht said the Kashmiri women were major stakeholders in society and managing conflicts and maintaining peace. It is essential to have women in the centre of peace-making, mediation and the negotiation process to find amicable solutions to political disputes.

The session concluded with the distribution of certificates among participants by Dr Shaheen Akhtar, Nighat Khan, Fatima Anwar and Mahvish Bakht.

Source: Dawn

Ex-minister booked for killing woman dancer in Mansehra

MANSEHRA: The police on Saturday booked former minister Ibrar Hussain alias Iqbal for allegedly killing a woman dancer in Noguazi area here.

SHO of the city police station Sadaqat Nisar told reporters that Ibrar Hussain allegedly killed Kiran by firing after she stopped him from groping her during a dance performance at her own house.

He added that the former minister along with his friends left the body near her Noguazi house in a car.

The SHO said Kiran was a resident of Azad Jammu and Kashmir and rented a house in Chiria Dee Takee area here.

He said Ibrar Hussain had requested a co-accused, Mohammad Jamshed, to hold the event and invited his friends and two women, one of them a dancer, to it.

Police arrest two accused, say search for others under way

Mr Nisar said the main accused fired three gunshots at the dancer and disposed of the body with the help of other accused, including Raheel Tanoli and Mian Amir.

He said the police had already arrested Mohammad Jamshad and a woman, who had engaged the dancer for performance.

“I learned about the dancer’s body when patrolling the Abbottabad Road, rushed to area and shifted it to the King Abdullah Teaching Hospital. The body was handed over to her brother after the doctors completed formalities,” he said.

The SHO said the police registered the murder FIR under the Pakistan Penal Code and began carrying out raids to arrest the main and other accused.

Source: Dawn

Police apathy over woman’s ‘sale’ draws LHC ire

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court has observed that while laws for women’s protection have been gradually put in place in the country, these had not helped attain the level of deterrence or prevention of the offence.

“The Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan through its Article 11 vows to eradicate all forms of slavery and trafficking, yet in practice, women continue to suffer and are subject to trade by their close family members and this goes on despite the evolution and introduction of laws aimed at ensuring protection of women against such abominable practices. South Punjab being no exception,” Justice Mohammad Shan Gul writes in a judgement passed on a habeas corpus petition on Saturday.

Kalsoom Mai filed the petition seeking recovery of her daughter Sajida Mai and granddaughter Sadia from the illegal custody of certain individuals in Rajanpur. The petitioner had alleged that the detainee’s ex-husband had sold her to one Anwar Khalid, who was at large.

Justice Gul said the nonchalance with which the Saddar police SHO informed the court the “detainee perhaps may have been sold off for immoral illicit purposes” was what prompted them to summon the district police officer of Rajanpur.

Court perturbed by police response in case seeking recovery of mother and daughter ‘sold’ by ex-husband

“This was, to say the least, shocking and equally appalling,” the judge added.

The DPO appeared before the court and stated that an FIR had been registered against the former husband of the detainee for having allegedly sold her, while a case was also filed against the supposed ‘buyer’ Khalid. The officer further apprised the court that her ex-husband had been granted bail in the case.

The judge observed that it was not understandable how her former spouse managed to get bail, even though the detainee had not been recovered.

Justice Gul noted that the police indeed took measures that might or might not result in the production of the detainee, but it was a stark fact that the concept of a woman “being treated as a commodity or as a product who can be sold” indeed caused anguish to the court and needed to be addressed.

He said the apathy and indifference of the law enforcement agencies in curbing and arresting the deplorable menace of treating women as an object was what needed to be addressed.

Issuing an incessant direction, the judge asked the Rajanpur DPO to recover the daughter and granddaughter of the petitioner and ensure they are set at liberty and allowed to live and reside wherever they desire.

Before concluding his judgement, Justice Gul observed that in Pakistan the state of women and inhuman treatment meted out to women mostly by men whom such women were more likely to turn to for their protection prompted the legislature to enact various safety valves in the form of penal provisions to curb women’s trafficking. But he regretted that despite the laws being in place, the deterrence or prevention aimed at through such provisions had not been attained.

He lamented that the current state of women in Pakistan, especially in far-flung areas, marked by harrowing cases such as the present one displaying a society worse than the one that formed basis for feminist movements in 18th century, revealed that we have become a nation where weak were exploited and the exploiters were condemned on paper only.

The judge said the claim of being a civilized society with dictates of pro-women laws and even decrees of Sharia should have eliminated all such evils and there should have remained no single custom or usage degrading/lowering the women or depriving them from their guaranteed rights, but facts of the present case painted a sorry and a different picture.

He regretted that holding jirgas and passing illegal decrees trading women, trafficking in women, awarding women as Badl-i-Sulah etc were still a matter of routine practices in many remote areas.

Justice Gul directed the provincial law secretary, prosecutor general, as also the inspector general of police to ensure that the laws put in place by the legislature are effectively implemented.

He directed the law secretary to consider if the present legislative framework for arresting and preventing the menace of women’s trafficking was satisfactory or the laws needed to be reinforced by introduction of any additional safety valves. He also ordered the inspector general of police to strive to ensure recovery of the detainee at any cost.

Source: Dawn