Woman held in acid attack case in Muzaffarabad

MUZAFFARABAD: A woman accused of throwing acid on another woman was apprehended by the police within five hours of the incident.

Rashid Habib Masoodi, station house officer (SHO) of City police, told Dawn on Sunday that the incident had occurred on Saturday afternoon when Humaira Naveed was on her way home from work at a cosmetics shop in Madina Market.

The accused, who was clad in a burqa, to conceal her identity started following her from her workplace and at a deserted place in Muhalla Shahnara threw acid on her.

However, the victim somehow managed to cover her face and the acid burnt her neck and other body parts, the SHO said.

He said the accused also snatched the victim’s mobile phone, rendering her unable to contact anyone and fled.

However, people from the nearby houses came to her rescue and shifted her to the CMH besides informing the police about the incident, he added.

The SHO said though apparently there was no clue to the accused particularly after the victim also denied having any enmity with anyone, his three-member team held the accused after around five hours in Tariqabad.

According to Mr Masoodi, the accused had confessed to her crime.

“She told us that she was distressed because Ms Naveed [victim] had not only refused to do make-up of her daughter on the eve of her [daughter’s] engagement but had also scoffed at them,” the SHO said.

He said the accused had been booked under section 336-B dealing with “hurt by corrosive substance” and would be produced before a judicial magistrate on Monday.

According to the penal code, whoever causes hurt by corrosive substance shall be punished with imprisonment for life or imprisonment of either description which shall not be less than 14 years and a minimum fine of Rs1 million.

Newspaper: Dawn

Other Media Reports: Business recorder

Woman burnt in acid attack by in-laws

BAHAWALPUR: A woman suffered serious burns on Monday, allegedly when her husband and in-laws threw acid on her at a Sukhail village in the limits of Dera Nawab Sahib police station, about 40kms from here.

According to the district police, victim Parveen Bibi had strained relations with her husband Shahbaz, both residents of Sukhail village near Dera Nawab Sahib.

The police said Parveen had earlier filed a case against her husband for subjecting her to torture. After the torture incident, she had move to her parent’s house. However, her three-year-old son, Ali Abbas, was still with her husband.

In her latest complaint to the police, Parveen Bibi stated she had gone to her in-laws’ house to meet her son, where her husband and his family tortured and abused her for lodging the torture case against Shahbaz.

She said her father-in-law Riaz, mother-in-law Faiz Bibi and sister-in-law Sajida Bibi brought a bottle of acid and threw it on her, inflicting serious burns to her face, arms, legs and other parts of the body.

The victim had been admitted to the Ahmedpur East Tehsil Headquarters Hospital, where she was stated to be in a serious condition.

The police registered an FIR (No.29/21) under section 336-B of the PPC on the complaint of the victim, without making any arrest so far.

Newspaper: Dawn

Husband throws acid on wife for filing suit

By: Owais Jafri

MULTAN: A woman who had been fighting a court case to receive haq mehar (dower) and financial support from her estranged husband was attacked with acid on Tuesday. She was referred to Bahawal Victoria Hospital, Bahawalpur, in a critical condition with 40 per cent burns to her body, including her face.

Sajida Perveen*, 27, a resident of Bakhshan Khan village in Chishtian, Bahawalnagar, had married Ahmad Farooq, 30, a resident of Chak 102, Chishtian, over two years ago. The couple had not had any children, which, according to a statement given to the police by the victim’s family, had led to their estrangement.

Farooq used to beat up Perveen and had later told her to leave his house so she had returned to her parents. Police said last year, she approached the family court in Chishtian, to seek haq mehar and a monthly allowance of Rs2,500. The case was pending in court.

Police said Perveen’s family had told them that Farooq had been enraged over her moving the court. On Tuesday, Farooq and an accomplice forcibly entered the house of Perveen’s parents, beat her and then threw acid on her.

Perveen was taken to Chishtian tehsil headquarters hospital. Doctors there told The Express Tribune that Perveen had suffered 40 per cent burns to various parts of her body and had to be referred to Bahawal Victoria Hospital for specialised treatment.

Her family filed a complaint against Farooq and his unidentified accomplice with the Bakhshan Khan police. Bakhshan Khan Station House Officer Hameed Aslam told The Express Tribune that Farooq had fled after the attack but his location had been traced using his cell phone. “We hope to arrest him within 24 hours,” he said.

Perveen’s family, however, said that Farooq was not the only one to blame.

Her father, Aslam Hussain, said it was the court’s negligence and its failure to grant her daughter her rights for over a year that had led to the incident. “We have been visiting the courts for over a year and the judge is yet to take a decision.” He said the least the judicial system could ensure was that women who sought their haq mehar and maintenance were given timely redress. “Instead they end up using all their resources to gain token justice,” he said.

The victim’s mother also blamed the lawmakers and judiciary. “Why blame my son-in-law alone? There are no policies or justice for victims like my daughter.”

She said over the course of her daughter’s hearings she had met with several women who had been visiting the courts for years hanging in desperation for some form of relief. The courts simply keep setting dates of hearings but there is no justice, she lamented.

Sher Zaman Qureshi, president of the Multan District Bar Association, told The Express Tribune that there were more than 5,000 cases pending in family, sessions and high courts by women seeking haq mehar and monthly allowance for themselves and their children. He said the executive and the judiciary should devise a policy to ensure timely hearing in these cases.

Express Tribune

Acid attack main suspect taken into custody

Acid attack

BAHAWALPUR: The Sammsatta police on Sunday claimed to have arrested the main suspect in the acid attack case.

The suspect, Afzal, along with his four accomplices had allegedly thrown acid on a girl, Samina, for refusing his marriage proposal. Police have arrested Afzal and Abdul Khaliq while three other suspects were absconding. Samina is in serious condition in the Bahawal Victoria Hospital (BVH).

Punjab Minister for Cooperatives Malik Muhammad Iqbal Channar visited the BVH and inquired after Samina. He directed the doctors to take special care of the victim and assured her family that the remaining suspects would be arrested at the earliest.

DEMAND: People from different walks of life demanded the Punjab government withdraw its decision of handing over 75 informal/community primary schools in Cholistan to an NGO instead of running them through the Cholistan Development Authority (CDA) or Punjab Education Foundation (PEF).

Those who made the demand included PTI District President Farzand Ali Gohar, JUI’s Allama Shafqatur Rehman, JI district emir Dr Muhammad Ashraf, PPP’s Saira Abbasi and Awami Tehreek President Dr Muhammad Aamir.

They said the government had recently agreed to run schools and the CDA and PEF had signed an MoU to manage them with the PEF funds. However, an NGO was also being involved to run the affairs of these schools, they said, adding that the teachers had expressed apprehensions that the NGO would not be able to deliver and the CDA or PEF should directly handle the schools.

DAWN

Men involved in acid attacks on woman, child get life imprisonment

ACID ATTACKS

MULTAN: The anti-terrorism court (ATC) No 1 on Thursday awarded life imprisonment on three counts to three men for killing a woman and her daughter by throwing acid in 2011 at Kehror Pakka.The convicts, Zafar, Ijaz, and Zahoor Ahmad, had thrown acid on Yasmin Bibi and her five-year-old daughter, Sanobar, on August 2, 2011, after Yasmin, who had filed a petition for dissolution of her marriage, rejected a proposal from Zafar.

The News