Farmer kills wife, three daughters for ‘honour’

MUZAFFARGARH: A man allegedly killed his wife and three daughters for ‘honour’ at Shahiwala village in Seetpur police limits on Saturday. According to the police, farmer Muhammad Afzal allegedly killed his 25-year-old wife Azra and daughters – four-year-old Taskeen, three-year-old Misbah and 10-day-old Guriya. The police shifted the bodies to a hospital for autopsy and arrested the accused. Seetpur SHO SI Azhar Haider said the people of the area informed him that the accused killed his wife and children for giving birth to the third daughter. The DPO said that the accused committed the crime as he suspected the character of his wife.

The News

Police foil child marriage bid; ‘groom’ flees

By: Malik Tehseen Raza

MUZAFFARGARH: The Rohillanwali police arrested a man attempting to marry a 12-year-old girl in Jarh Ratheib near Rohillanwali on Sunday, 45km from the city.

Munir Ahmad, 35, was being married to 12-year-old Aasia. SHO Munir Chandia said he was told by a local that some people had arranged the marriage of the underage girl with Ahmad, who had recently divorced his first wife. Ahmad’s first wife was said to be Aasia’s maternal aunt. Allegedly the girl’s parents had sold her to Ahmad.

Police conducted a raid and arrested the girl, her parents as well as those of Ahmad, while he managed to flee from the scene. Police registered a case and formed teams to arrest Ahmad.

Know more: Little headway in child marriage laws

Meanwhile, a seminar was organised by Rahnuma FPAP to create awareness about ending child marriage in the district. It was attended by members of the civil society, lawyers, religious persons, media representative and politicians who discussed aspects of the Child Marriages Restraint Act (CMRA) 1929. Although CMRA declared child marriages illegal, punishment under the act was minimal.

Sheikh Abdul Basit Zaheer, a focal person, said child marriage was widely practiced and was reinforced by customs that commoditised girls. There was no law on marital rape in the country, he added. Through the proposed initiative, he said they would raise collective voices of the civil society with the support of the media across the country to revise the CMRA and make it more punitive. He said it would also be advocated to make 18 years the minimum age for marriage for both boys and girls.

He further said awareness campaigns should involve members of the National Assembly equally with provincial ministers for excessive results. The provincial authorities could be approached to crate an efficient mechanism to reduce violations in child rights.

At the end participants passed a resolution stating the government should amend CMRA 1929 and also enforce the law strictly.

DAWN

Police kill rape suspect teacher

MUZAFFARGARH: The schoolteacher who was suspected of kidnapping, raping and murdering an 11-year-old child was killed by Khanewal district police on Tuesday.

Muhammad Ishaq, who belonged to the Shah Jamal locality of Muzaffargarh district, had allegedly kidnapped a class-V student last week from the Missali School in Qaimwala, Khanewal, and killed him after rape.

According to an FIR, when the school closed on last Thursday, Ishaq and the school principal telephoned the child’s parents to send him for tuition. When the child reached the school, Ishaq and the principal raped him. Later, Ishaq fled, taking the child along.

When the child did not reach home till night, the family contacted the principal who denied having any knowledge about the child. The parents took police and reached school where the principal was arrested for investigation. The principal disclosed that Ishaq had gone to Muzaffargarh.

SHO Sadiq Rind raided Ishaq’s home in Shah Jamal, Muzaffargarh, but he fled from there. Police contacted former tehsil nazim Abad Dogar who called the accused to his outhouse and handed him over to police.

During interrogation, Ishaq said he had killed the child, put acid on his face and buried him. Police took him to a farm and recovered the body on his information.

On Tuesday, Khanewal police claimed, when they were taking Ishaq to Lahore for a DNA test, he attacked policemen and tried to snatch their weapons. They said the suspect was killed during the fight.

DAWN

Rape victim’s family accuses police of coercion

ISLAMABAD: Nizam Mai, the mother of the rape victim who torched herself in front of a Muzaffargarh police station and later died of her injuries, said on Wednesday she was being coerced to settle the matter through a deal.

“We are scared to death. We cannot live in Lundi Pitafi village any longer,” Nizam Mai told Dawn after attending a Supreme Court hearing in her case.

She and her husband accused Aslam, a local police officer, and Ramzan Sindhi, an influential man of their area, of providing shelter to the accused and pressurising the victim’s family to withdraw the case.

Chief Justice Tassaduq Hussain Jillani had taken suo motu notice of death of the first-year student who set herself ablaze in Bet Mir Hazar area, about 40km from Muzaffargarh, in protest against a police report which helped her alleged rapist win freedom on bail.

According to media reports, the 18-year-old student was returning home from college on Jan 5 when the accused, with the help of four accomplices, allegedly raped her in a deserted area. A criminal case was registered but it was cancelled despite the statement of the victim and the evidence available on record.

On March 14, the victim, her mother and other relatives mounted a protest in front of the police station. The college student committed self-immolation and was rushed to the Nishtar Hospital in Multan where she later died.

On Wednesday, the victim’s mother Mai and father Ghulam Farid appeared before the court and submitted that they felt insecure in their village because some police officials who were protecting the accused were exerting pressure on them.

Mr Farid said the police officials who were trying to protect the accused should be brought to justice and requested the court to provide protection to his family.

After listening to grievances of the victim’s parents, Punjab’s Acting Advocate General Mustafa Ramday assured the court that he would get in touch with the District Police Officer of Muzaffargarh to ensure that all the accused were brought to justice. He said the parents of the victim and other members of her family would be provided protection as and when needed.

The police officer accused of carrying out partisan investigations had been sent behind bars, he said, and the DSP who had verified the report of innocence of the accused had been nominated in a separate case registered on March 15 at Bait Mir Hazar police station under sections 201/322 of the PPC read with section 7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act and section 5-C of Police Order, 2002. However, the DSP was on a pre-arrest bail, Mr Ramday said.

He said that investigations into the tragedy were still under way. The investigations would be finalised after the receipt of a report from the Punjab Forensic Science Laboratory in Lahore.

The court later adjourned further proceedings till April 21 and ordered the inspector-general of Punjab Police to ensure that the final report about the investigations was submitted by then.

Dawn

Amina, you were raped by the State

By: Fahd Husain

As the flames licked her body, the bloodcurdling shrieks of Amina in Muzaffargarh reverberated across the power centres of Punjab, echoing off shiny flyovers, illuminated underpasses and gleaming metro stations of Lahore. Her flesh burned, her soul burned. She struggled in sheer agony against her pain, her torment, and her existence as a citizen of Pakistan.

And then she let go. Yes, she let go of her being, of her hopes and dreams. She let go of her loved ones and her cruel fate. She let go of her will to fight her tormentors and their protectors; she let go of all that mattered, and slowly slipped into eternal sleep.

Amina was extinguished. The lights on the glitzy flyovers of Lahore burnt bright. The irony is revoltingly uncomplicated.

She was raped by the State.

And now the State has kicked into vigilante mode. The rough and ready chief minister (CM) of Punjab hopped onto his plane — as he usually does — and did a political para-drop onto Amina’s home. He then sat on the floor with her parents — as he usually does — and consoled their grief. Once satiated, the CM savaged the cops — as he usually does — and bloodied them with his trademark verbal whipping. Venting, arrests, suspensions and transfers done, the CM hopped back onto his plane — as he usually does — and whizzed back to Lahore, flying over flyovers burning bright in the gleaming March sun.

This charade of the State is playing itself out yet again. An all-powerful State ripping apart the Social Contract, and the lives of the citizens it is contracted to defend and safeguard. Why? Is the concept of the State so hard for the State to grasp? Is the responsibility and duty of the State so impossibly difficult for the State to comprehend? Is this really that hard?

Buried deep within this rot is a sickness of the mind. A sickness bred over decades — and perhaps, even longer — that visualises governance through the prism of naked power: he who wields the stick, must use it. And so, naturally, the stick falls on those who cannot hurt you back. Rights are trampled, self-respect is violated and dignity torn to shreds as the State asserts itself against those it is meant to shelter. Life is considered cheap, and therefore, dealt with accordingly.

The State turns grotesque. It invests in bricks and mortar, not in human beings. It spends on projects, not on institutions. It focuses on infrastructure, not on reform. It prizes concrete structure, not human life.

It becomes a predator State. It feeds on its own children, and grows fat on their flesh. This predator wears a uniform, holds a gun and has a licence to use violence against the hapless citizens. This predator wears a judicial robe and has a licence to skew justice and skewer the justice seekers. This predator sanctions the repression of women and wants laws that allow little girls to be married off to old men. This predator allows the persecution of minorities, exploitation of the weak and ravaging of the law by the powerful.

This predator is sick in the mind.

What else to call a State that allows little babies to die of starvation in Thar; that drives teenage girls to immolate themselves with petrol; and that permits care-giving nurses to be beaten savagely on the roads? What else to call this State other than utterly sick?

This sickness reigns across the four provinces. It manifests itself in daily incidents of brutality, injustice and State-perpetuated excesses. This sickness blinds the State to its core responsibility of nurturing its children, not murdering them. It propels the State to modernise roads instead of modernising minds. The sickness makes the State brittle and rough, instead of soft and caring.

The State is powerful and so is the sickness. But you know what is even more powerful? The determination of the citizens to fight back. Amina fought this battle on the streets of Muzaffargarh. She lost. But one day, the citizens of Pakistan will win. And at that moment, the name of Amina will be in their minds — and on their lips.

Express Tribune