07-02-2002, 11:44 PM
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retired
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Toronto, Canada
Posts: 1,930
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Girl pays price of tribal honor
Girl sentenced to gang-rape for brother's offence
Quote:
Associated Press
Multan, Pakistan — A Pakistani tribal council ordered an 18-year-old girl gang-raped, police said Tuesday, after her brother was seen walking with a girl from a higher caste.
The private Human Rights Commission of Pakistan demanded that all those involved in the rape, which took place June 22 in the village of Meerwala in southern Punjab, be punished.
Police said the victim's father has filed criminal charges against the four men involved in the case, and eight relatives of the suspects have been picked up to put pressure on the perpetrators to surrender.
"We will spare no efforts to do justice" for the victim, police official Malik Saeed said.
According to the victim, the Mastoi tribe demanded punishment after her 11-year-old brother was seen walking unchaperoned with a Mastoi girl in a deserted part of the village. The boy and his sister are from the lower-caste Gujar tribe.
The meeting of the Mastoi tribal council ordered that the girl be raped to avenge their tribal honour. The teen-ager said she was taken to a hut and assaulted as hundreds of Mastois stood outside laughing and cheering.
Pakistan has a tradition of tribal justice in which crimes or affronts to dignity are punished outside the framework of Pakistani law. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan has demanded an end to punishments by tribal councils.
The commission's Kamla Hayyat said the group will send a fact-finding mission to the victim's village to determine what happened and provide help to her.
"The increasing incidents of terrible atrocities against women are a terrible reflection on the state of society and the status of women within it," commission chairman Afrasiab Khattak said in a statement.
Last month, an Islamic court overturned the conviction of a woman who was to be stoned to death for adultery. Zufran Bibi, 28, said she was raped, and she appealed her early May conviction in the conservative North West Frontier Province.
Her case prompted demonstrations and protests by hundreds of civil and women's-rights groups nationwide.
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