‘Domestic torture accused to be punished’

LAHORE: SPECIAL Assistant to Chief Minister and former IG Rana Maqbool Ahmed has said that those torturing and killing domestic workers will not escape punishment.

According to a handout issued on Friday, Rana Maqbool said this while presiding over a meeting of Cabinet Committee regarding torture and killing of domestic workers.

He said that the cases of torture of domestic workers had become a tragedy. He said the Punjab chief minister had especially directed that justice should be provided to the oppressed children and women.

The News

Sana to monitor maids’ murder cases

LAHORE: Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has appointed Law Minister Rana Sanaullah to monitor progress of the murder cases of two housemaids.

The heirs of two girls Azra Batool and Fiza Batool who became victim to domestic torture met the Chief Minister here Tuesday and informed him about the details of the tragic incidents.

The CM assured complete justice to the victim families and that culprits involved in the incidents would not escape punishment. The chief minister directed Minister for Law, Rana Sanaullah Khan to personally monitor the pace of investigation into both the cases.

He directed the Additional IG Investigation to submit report to him twice a week regarding the investigation of the case. The chief minister announced financial assistance of Rs five lakh each for the families of the deceased girls.

The Nation

PTI submits draft bill against domestic violence in PA

By Kashif Hussain

LAHORE: Expressing concern on the cases of torture and killing of housemaids in the province, the major opposition party in Punjab Assembly, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) has submitted a bill against domestic violence in the assembly secretariat.

The bill was submitted by the PTI legislator from Lahore, Dr Nausheen Hamid, expressing her concern over increasing incidents of domestic violence and suggested provisions for protection against it. The PTI legislator will table this bill in the Punjab Assembly during the next session.

Talking about the reasoning of the bill, Dr Nausheen has said that although Section 337 of Pakistan Penal Code provided the law but separate legislation was required for the issue of domestic violence against women or servants.

She argued that law enforcement agencies usually ignored the domestic violence, as it was considered an internal matter so that should be solved within the walls of the house. Also women and servants need extra protection because the family turns against them on lodging a complaint. Extra measures are therefore required due to pressure of family and society during proceedings of the case, she said, adding that a mechanism was required to bypass police stations and FIRs which was a strenuous exercise for these vulnerable victims.

Dr Nausheen said specific punishments under this legislation would be a deterrent for perpetrators and the bill would provide the definitions for domestic violence and domestic relationships and also the procedure for initiation of proceedings and investigation and time limit for them.

Under the bill, PTI legislator said, would also provide protection and compensation to the victim during proceedings. Expressing a hope of passage of her bill from the House, she said a similar bill had already been passed in Sindh Assembly so now the treasury benches in Punjab Assembly should also take the matter of domestic violence seriously.

Moreover, the PTI backed opposition leader in the Punjab Assembly Mian Mehmood ur Rasheed also submitted a Call Attention Notice (CAN) against the murder of his party’s women wing head Neelam Ashraf in the assembly secretariat.

The opposition leader also filed a separate CAN on the murders of four of companions of Masood Bhatti, the PTI leader from Kasur, demanding the Punjab chief minister to inform the house about legal progress in the case.

Daily Times

‘Stricter laws needed to protect domestic workers’

ISLAMABAD: Condemning the torture of an underage maid in Lahore that resulted in her death, the National Commission on Status of Women (NCSW) has called for stricter laws to protection of domestic workers.

In a statement issued here on Monday, NCSW Chairperson Khawar Mumtaz said the “state of domestic workers here is miserable.”

She said domestic violence on innocent children is the single-biggest contributing factor for the untimely deaths of child domestic workers (CDWs).

A CDW in Lahore’s upscale residential area was severely beaten by her employer, a university professor, and the girl was eventually hospitalised in critical condition. The professor later confessed to his crime and was put behind bars. The girl died in hospital yesterday.

NCSW chairperson showed concern that domestic workers are denied rights enshrined in the constitution and even the right to life.

Cases of violence against domestic workers are on the rise in Pakistan.

In the last three years, at least 47 cases were reported in the media. The culprits of these heinous crimes often get bail due to non-implementation of existing laws.

The plight of CDWs is alarming in all the four provinces in the country and cases of torture are often noticed in the upper segments of society, where children are often coerced into working against their wishes.

Express Tribune

Domestic work hazard: Child maid’s employer confesses to beating

LAHORE: The police on Monday charged the employer of a 15-year-old maid with murder after he confessed that he had beaten her for stealing from him.

Police said Professor Salman Rashid, of Islamia College, Railway Road, had brought Fizza Batool, his maid, to a private hospital late on Sunday night with serious injuries.

She was referred to Services Hospital where she was treated until she died.

Police said Rashid had earlier said she had gotten injured when a tree at his house fell on her and later that she had injured herself to avoid punishment for stealing valuables from him.

Cantonment division Operations SP Umer Riaz Cheema said the case was registered with Defense A police on behalf of the state to protect the girl’s family from being pressured.

Cheema said a medical board at the Services Hospital had found that the girl had suffered at least 13 injuries.

Batool, of Sialkot, had been working at Rashid’s house for six years, police said.

Cheema said the girl had apparently been abandoned by both parents. Her grandmother was contacted following the hospitalisation.

Cheema said she had been beaten with a steal rod. He said her family took her body to her home town, Sambrial, for burial. The chief minister has taken notice. Chief Minister’s Adviser on Health Khawaja Salman Rafique and Minister Rana Mashhood had visited the hospital on Sunday to inquire about her before she died.

Express Tribune