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The New York Times , June 21,
2005
The 11-Year-Old
Wife
Author : Nicholas D. Kristof
When Pakistan's prime minister visits next month,
President Bush will presumably use the occasion
to repeat his praise for President Pervez Musharraf
as a bold leader "dedicated in the protection
of his own people." Then they will sit
down and discuss Mr. Bush's plan to sell Pakistan
F-16 fighter jets capable of carrying nuclear
weapons.
But here's a suggestion: How about the White
House dropping word that before the prime minister
arrives, he first return the passport of Mukhtaran
Bibi, the rape victim turned human-rights campaigner,
so that she can visit the United States?
Despite Mr. Bush's praise, General Musharraf
shows more commitment to his F-16's than to
his people. Now he's paying the price. Visiting
New Zealand the last few days, he was battered
by questions about why he persecuted a rape
victim, forcing him to cancel interviews.
Pakistani newspapers savaged him for harming
Pakistan's image. And the blogosphere has taken
up Ms. Mukhtaran's case, with more than 100
blogs stirring netizens to send blizzards of
e-mails to Pakistani consulates or to join
protests planned for Wednesday and Thursday
at Pakistani offices in New York and Washington.
Yet it's crucial to remember that Ms. Mukhtaran
is only a window into a much larger problem
- the neglect by General Musharraf's government
of the plight of women and girls.
Early this year, for example, a doctor named
Shazia Khalid reported that she had been gang-raped
in a government-owned natural-gas plant. Instead
of treating her medically, officials drugged
her into unconsciousness for three days to
keep her quiet and then shipped her to a psychiatric
hospital.
When she persisted in trying to report the rape,
she was held under house arrest in Karachi.
The police suggested that since she had cash,
she must have been working as a prostitute.
Dr. Shazia's husband has stood by her, but
his grandfather was quoted as suggesting that
Dr. Shazia had disgraced the family and should
be killed.
On average, a woman is raped every two hours
in Pakistan, and two women a day die in honor
killings.
While Ms. Mukhtaran and Dr. Shazia have attracted
international support, most victims in Pakistan
are on their own. Earlier this year, for example,
police reported that a village council had
punished a man for having an affair by ordering
his 2-year-old niece to be given in marriage
to a 40-year-old man.
In another case this year, an 11-year-girl named
Nazan was rescued from her husband's family,
which beat her, broke her arm and strung her
from the ceiling because she didn't work hard
enough.
Then there are Pakistan's hudood laws, which
have been used to imprison thousands of women
who report rapes. If rape victims cannot provide
four male witnesses to the crime, they risk
being whipped for adultery, since they acknowledge
illicit sex and cannot prove rape.
When a group of middle-class Pakistani women
demonstrated last month for equal rights in
Lahore, police clubbed them and dragged them
to police stations. They particularly targeted
Asma Jahangir, a U.N. special rapporteur who
is also the head of the Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan.
Ms. Jahangir says the directions to the police
about her, coming from an intelligence official
close to General Musharraf, were: "Teach
the [expletive] a lesson. Strip her in public."
Sure enough, the police ripped her shirt off
and tried to pull her trousers off. If that's
how General Musharraf's government treats one
of the country's most distinguished lawyers,
imagine what happens to a peasant challenging
injustice.
I've heard from Pakistanis who, while horrified
by honor killings and rapes, are embarrassed
that it is the barbarism in Pakistan that gets
headlines abroad. A word to those people: I
understand your defensiveness, for we Americans
feel the same about Guantánamo Bay and
Abu Ghraib. But rooting out brutality is a
better strategy than covering it up, and any
nation should be proud to produce someone like
Ms. Mukhtaran.
So while meeting the Pakistani prime minister,
Mr. Bush could discuss not only F-16's, but
also repeal of the hudood laws. And Mr. Bush
could invite Ms. Mukhtaran to the Oval Office
as well, both to hail a genuine Pakistani hero
and to spotlight the goals of ordinary Pakistanis
- not fighter aircraft but simple justice.
Resources
For more information about some of these issues,
including the planned demonstrations outside
Pakistani offices this week, see www.4anaa.org/projects/mukhtaran-mai.htm.
That's on the Web site of the Asian-American
Network Against Abuse of Women, run by a group
of Pakistani doctors, and it's also the group
that is arranging her visit to the U.S. To
help Mukhtaran, don't send checks to me. Instead,
you can find out about contributing at www.mercycorps.org
.
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