IN PAKISTAN, THOSE WHO
CRY RAPE FACE JAIL
INTERNATIONAL
By Juliette
Terzieff - WeNews correspondent
ISLAMABAD,
Pakistan (WOMENSENEWS)
--Flies circle around hungrily
as Zafran Bibi struggles to
cook a simple lunch of roti
(flat round bread) and lentils
on a small open fire using
the only utensils she has;
a stained pan and a cracked
wooden spoon.
As Bibi moves
around the sun-baked courtyard
of the day care center where
she and her husband work as
caretakers, her youngest daughter
Zabnam (which means "morning
dew" in Urdu) clings
to her dress.
"We have
nothing, but I am amazed we
have even this," Bibi
says cradling the two-and-half-year-old
Zabnam.
Ensconced in
a dusty slum on the outskirts
of the Pakistani capital Islamabad,
where the only buildings are
rickety mud and straw huts
that are home to Afghan refugees,
her home might not be idyllic.
But for the illiterate 30
year old, it is a lifesaving
refuge from her family, her
tribe and a society inclined
to shun her.
In 2002, Bibi
catapulted onto the world
stage when a court in her
native Northwest Frontier
Province sentenced her to
stoning by death under Pakistan's
controversial Hudood Ordinances,
which effectively equate rape
with adultery. Despite Bibi's
repeated charges that her
brother-in-law had raped her
on multiple occasions, the
presiding judge convicted
her of zina (adultery).
As is common
in such cases, nothing happened
to the man involved.
Promulgated
through presidential decree
by former military dictator
General Zia-ul-Haq in 1979
as part of his Islamization
program to deal with a spectrum
of sins ranging from theft,
to false accusations, to adultery,
the Hudood Ordinances are
a volatile mix of Islamic
decrees and Pakistan's secular
laws and are part of almost
every court's legal arsenal.
At Heart
of Struggle for Justice
They are also
at the heart of women's struggle
for justice in this troubled
South Asian nation.
"These
laws have been a disgrace
since they were introduced,"
says Majida Rizvi, a former
Supreme Court judge and head
of the National Commission
on the Status of Women. The
commission is a Islamabad-based
council of religious scholars,
government officials and legal
experts set up by Pakistan's
President Pervez Musharraf
in 2000 to examine laws pertaining
to women's rights.
The National
Commission on the Status of
Women voted overwhelmingly
to repeal the Hudood in a
mid-2003 report.
Since then,
Musharraf has appeared reluctant
to repeal the Hudood for fear
of further antagonizing his
important but tenuous political
ties to religious clerics
and their supporters. Musharraf
angered clerics by siding
fully with the U.S. war on
terror, banning militant groups
and seeking to reform Pakistan's
13,000 religious seminaries.
Those aligned
with the clerics argue that
the Hudood are God's law and
term any tampering of them
un-Islamic. "If there
are any problems, it is with
poor work by judges, lawyers
or the police, not with the
word of God," says Khurshid
Ahmed, member of the six-party
religious alliance United
Action Forum.
Up to 80 percent
of the 2,000 women now in
Pakistani jails are facing
charges related to the Hudood
Ordinances, according to Rizvi.
Many of the cases involve
women being charged with adultery
after they have allegedly
been raped. Another case involves
a woman seeking a divorce
who has then been accused
of adultery. While few are
ever tried and convicted,
the stigma and the ordeal
can color the rest of their
lives.
"These
laws promote injustice and
are un-Islamic, denying women
the rights given to them in
the Koran, and discriminating
against the weakest sections
of society; women and minorities,"
Rizvi says. "It is a
flawed legislation that can't
be fixed. Its drafting is
flawed. Its motive is flawed."
Four Males
Needed to Verify Rape
Under the Hudood,
punishment of a man for rape
must be preceded by his own
confession or the testimony
of four males of upstanding
character who witnessed the
act of penetration. Women
and non-Muslim witnesses are
considered worthless.
"Hudood
cases involving rape can not
be registered under the law
without production of four
witnesses" says Faqir
Hussain, secretary of the
Karachi-based Law and Justice
Commission of Pakistan, which
monitors Pakistani law.
However, according
to Hussein, the police often
register cases in which no
witnesses were produced setting
the victim up for possible
prosecution. "At their
best the Hudood are discriminatory
and confusing, at their worst
they are systematic tools
for abuse."
Anti-Hudood
activists say that Pakistan's
secular laws served rape victims
far better.
Before the imposition
of Hudood, a case could be
registered with police on
suspicion alone, prompting
an investigation that might
or might not have resulted
in formal charges. Such was
the case with rape before
the Hudood altered the crime
from a private offense to
an offense against the State.
The Hudood's
discouraging effects on rape
allegations were made conspicuous
in the 1983 case of 15-year-old
Jehan Mina, who became pregnant
and alleged that she had being
raped by her uncle and his
son. After filing a complaint
with police, she was charged
and sentenced for illegal
fornication on the grounds
of her pregnancy. Because
of her young age, the judge
reduced her original sentence
of 100 lashes to 10.
Punishments
under the Hudood are severe;
amputation for theft, whipping
for drinking alcohol, hanging
for rape and stoning for adultery.
If the court rules there was
no rape, the accuser is often
sent to jail either convicted
of adultery or qasf (false
accusation).
Devastated
Lives
The infant Zabnam
was taken away to a state-run
orphanage when Bibi was placed
onto death row in a squalid
Northwest Frontier Province
prison. Months later--in mid
2002--she was acquitted by
a higher court after an international
outcry by the domestic and
foreign press and nongovernmental
organizations like the Women's
Action Forum and the Aurat
Foundation.
"My innocence
was my protection, my savior,
but this case destroyed our
lives," she says as her
husband, Zabnam, and two sons
look on and the family sits
down to eat their meager meal.
The family sold
their home and possessions
to pay for legal costs, but
they still couldn't cover
the bill. They still owe 200,000
rupees (about $3,500). After
her release from jail, life
in the village was uncomfortable
under the watchful eyes of
Zafran's in-laws. Nobody wanted
to give the couple work as
day laborers, nobody wanted
to help them with a place
to live and tongues wagged
with incessant cruelty.
With the help
of a sympathetic Islamabad-based
lawyer, Zafran and her husband
Naimat Khan secured work here
earning them 4,000 rupees
(about $70) a month and a
place to live.
"What happened
to me should not happen to
any other living being,"
she says tearfully. "I
am not an educated person,
but if innocent people like
me are being punished then
obviously there is something
wrong with the laws."
Juliette
Terzieff is a freelance journalist
currently based in Pakistan
who has worked for the San
Francisco Chronicle, Newsweek,
CNN International, and the
London Sunday Times.
For more
information:
Asian Human
Rights Commission-- - "Pakistan:
The Women's Commission and
the Hudood Ordinances":
- http://www.ahrchk.net/hrsolid/mainfile.php/2003vol13no04-05/2292/
Human Rights
Watch-- - "Discrimination
under the Hudood Ordinances":
- http://www.hrw.org/about/projects/womrep/General-90.htm
Inter Press
Service News Agency-- - "Despite
Sound and Fury, 'Hudood' Laws
Still Stay": - http://www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=20333