Body of Charsadda girl recovered from garbage dump

CHARSADDA: Body of a seven-year-old girl, who went missing from her house in Tangi area on Sunday, was found from a garbage heap near her residence on Monday.

The girl’s father, Farooq Shah, a resident of Mufti Nagar area of Khwar Koroona, had lodged a report with the Tangi police station after the girl went missing.

The body was shifted to the Tangi hospital for postmortem.

However, doctors sent the body to the Women and Children Hospital.

The body’s recovery sent a wave of shock and anger among the residents of the locality.

According to the family, the girl had been hit with an object on the back of her head.

According to the initial report of doctors, no evidence of sexual abuse was found on the girl, but that she had died three days ago.

Samples taken from the body were sent to the Khyber Medical University for forensic examination.

DSP Tungi Taj Mohammad Khan and SHO Muzaffar Khan reached the spot soon after the body was recovered and collected evidence.

Source: Dawn

Sexual harassment amid flood relief

THIS is with reference to the report “Man arrested for ‘murdering’ Canadian national wife in Islamabad’ (Sept 24). Every time such a heinous incident takes place, our society wakes up — mostly on social media — before receding into its beloved slumber till the next one crosses what should have long ago become the social redline, but is not.

Such an extreme, life-taking behaviour is surely not a one off incident. In every case there is a history of unacceptable behaviour on the part of the boys, and an incomprehensible acceptance of such behaviour by society. Recently, while commuting to work, I happened to see a girl sweeping a footpath. She was in rags and appeared to be a flood victim trying to clean up part of the pavement for her family to drop anchor for a while. Three men on a motorcycle came and touched the girl rather inappropriately, which is an utterly immodest yet common practice in our society. If we can’t even leave the flood victims aside, what can we do to have some chance of becoming a sane society at some point in time even in the distant future?

Witnessing such a shameful act compelled me to think about thousands of disadvantaged women and children who are staying in flood relief camps under open skies. Torrential rains and floods of biblical proportions have created havoc across the country, sweeping away vast swathes of land, destroying lives and livelihoods, and leaving millions homeless, destitute and vulnerable to diseases of all sorts. As if all this is not enough, harassment and sexual violence are not possibilities that should be ruled out in a hurry. We should remember what happened during the floods that hit the country back in 2010 when multifarious crimes and sexual harassment was found to be a common happening in relief camps and temporary shelters.

The 2010 floods laid bare the ineptness of the disaster management authorities in protecting women and children. According to a survey, sexual harassment during the 2010 floods increased manifold with a large number of women and children getting raped across the country.

When will this sexual harassment stop? When will we learn to act with modesty and decency … some semblance of decency? Should not each of us be the role model for the others by protecting our women and children who are already living on the edge with multiple vulnerabilities?

Pakistan is widely branded as one of the worst countries for women. Sexual harassment, abuse and discrimination in the country are pervasive and deeply entrenched, going mostly unreported and ignored.

Many women and children are being harassed, abducted, raped and even slaughtered for one reason or the other. Given the alarming situation, one must be wondering what the unprecedented climatic catastrophe has to bring for the displaced.

Source: Dawn (Editorial)

Lahore High Court (LHC) sets aside life term, acquits murder convict after 10 years

The Lahore High Court (LHC) on Friday set aside the life sentence of a man in a murder case and acquitted him after 10 years.

The Lahore High Court (LHC) has accepted the appeal of a murder convict named Muhammad Yousuf against his life sentence.

The verdict was announced by LHC’s Justice Shehram Sarwar Chaudhry on the convict’s appeal.

The lawyer told the court that the verdict of the session’s court was not given in accordance with the law. After accepting the appeal, the LHC judge acquitted the murder convict.

A murder case had been registered against the accused Muhammad Yousaf in 2011 and the additional sessions judge Bhalwal had pronounced life in prison to the accused in 2014.

Earlier on November 25, the LHC had acquitted a death row prisoner while expressing reservations over faulty police investigation of the murder case.

A division bench of the high court, comprised of Justice Sadaqat Ali Khan and Justice Shahram Sarwar had acquitted the accused Asif in a written verdict.

“How can an accused awarded sentence over insufficient evidence,” the bench question in its judgment. “The benefit of the doubt goes to the accused”, the bench had said.

“Flawed investigation of police enables accused to get acquitted in courts,” the verdict read. A murder case was registered against accused Asif in Mandi Bahauddin and a trial court had awarded the death penalty to him.

Source: Pakistan Observer

Man arrested for killing his wife, daughter

The Dera Police on Monday arrested a man on a charge of murdering his wife and daughter over a domestic dispute here in ‘Chota Bazar’ area in the jurisdiction of City Police station.

According to a police spokesman, Jamil Rajput, a resident of ‘Chota Bazar’, allegedly killed his wife and a daughter over a domestic issue in wee hours of September 26 (Monday). After committing the crime, the suspect escaped from the scene.

However, the police team led by DSP City Sagheer Gilani and City Police Station SHO Khanzada Khan took an immediate action and nabbed the culprit at Western Circular road who was trying to escape to Punjab.

Source: Pakistan Observer