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The Meerwala
gang-rape case and the Mianwali incident, involving the offering
of eight girls as barter in a murder case, have brought into sharp
focus the inherent deficiencies of the state's justice system and
the dangers of the jirga system as an alternative means to resolve
disputes.
In the Meerwala case, the father of the gang-rape victim had offered
her in marriage to the other party (and to accept the allegedly
wronged woman from the latter party as his son's bride). In the
Mianwali case, eight girls were offered in marriage as part of the
deal to save four men from execution. In both cases, the surrender
of girls was in accordance with the tribal custom followed in murder
feuds that are resolved outside the courts. However, in the Mianwali
affair, this custom infiltrated into the judicial system because
of the opening provided by the Qisas and Diyat law.
This law allows the compounding of the murder offence. The killers
can win freedom at any stage of the case if they can secure a compromise
with the victims' families on receiving blood money or satisfaction
in other forms. Thus, when such bargains are negotiated, the victim's
family may demand compensation according to its tradition and there
are numerous tribes that insist on taking women from the offenders,
the prohibitory proviso in the Qisas law notwithstanding.
Some of the girls surrendered in the Mianwali episode were too small
to realise the enormity of the deal. Most significant, however,
was the case of an 18-year-old collegiate: she reportedly expressed
her willingness to sacrifice her future to an octogenarian to save
her father from the gallows. This amounts to a stunning indictment
of the death penalty, a desperate lack of confidence in the judicial
process and the lengths a convict's family will go to if offered
a way out of their despair. The girl accepted the horrible choice
because the Qisas law offered an opportunity to save her father
at the altar of her life and happiness.
Awareness of the fate in store for victims of the system, called
vani in Mianwali and swara in the Frontier, has only now begun to
filter out into society. An infant girl given in barter in Buner
was abandoned by her husband who maintained that a woman given away
in a swara deal had no rights. She won freedom 25 years later under
a Peshawar High Court order. Reports are now coming in from Mianwali
about women threatening to kill themselves if they are forced to
consummate vani deals made when they were infants. Such deals, based
on a callous rejection of women's rights under Islam, is a telling
reflection on the blatant disregard for both Islamic and state law.
The Mianwali case also confirms the view that the death penalty
does not end a feud, it only fuels the fires of revenge and generates
a bloody cycle of more murders and more executions. It is therefore
imperative to make a serious effort towards the abolition of the
death penalty in Pakistan. Only then could a way be opened to reduce
the abuse of the Qisas law's compromise provision and soften the
horrors of a barbaric custom.
The media hype generated by these two incidents, however, has also
revealed an even more horrifying fact: a large section of the population
is wedded to this custom that upholds the surrendering of women
to a rival party to settle a dispute. Those negotiating such deals
see no harm in them. Indeed they seem to prefer bargains struck
at tribal jirgas/community forums/panchayats to settlements pronounced
by normal courts of law, proving that the jirga system enjoys a
fairly wide range of acceptability.
Ironically, the state recognises some tribal jirgas as lawfully
established judicial tribunals, although the law under which they
are created, the Frontier Crimes Regulation (FCR) of 1901, has been
roundly denounced by the superior judiciary as well as enlightened
public opinion as a draconian piece of colonial legislation. A jirga
under the FCR, technically described as a council of elders, is
not an elected body; its members are nominated by the deputy commissioner
or political agent. Theoretically, a jirga's findings are in the
form of an advice, but custom has elevated these findings to the
level of a court verdict which usually translates into law. This
law is applicable only to the tribal areas. The council of elders
has jurisdiction in both civil and criminal matters. No appeal is
provided for against jirga verdicts although the commissioner can
review a case. A jirga has sweeping powers to impose penalties in
criminal cases. It can award sentences of fines, whipping and life
imprisonment, demolition of a convict's house and the blockade of
a hostile or unfriendly tribe. Technically, under the FCR, a jirga
cannot award capital punishment.
However, in some tribal areas, jirgas are formed by tribes themselves
and these are subject neither to the FCR nor any other law and there
is no limit to their power. They have awarded and enforced capital
punishment. For instance, in 1999 in the Waziristan Agency, a man
belonging to the Bara Khel tribe was executed by firing in the presence
of thousands of spectators. He had been tried by a tribal jirga
for killing a fellow tribesman over a property dispute. The jirga
also ordered the demolition of his house and fined him half a million
rupees. In 2000, a jirga in the Orakzai Agency awarded the death
penalty to two men who had been accused of kidnapping for ransom.
The convicts were executed by a firing squad. In 2001, one Shamsul
Qamar was executed in Khyber Agency under a local jirga's orders.
He was shot dead by the heirs of the man he had allegedly killed.
In another case, a jirga in North Waziristan ordered the execution
of an Afghan, Abdullah, who was accused of first sodomising and
then stoning to death an 11-year-old boy. The man was shot dead
by the boy's father.
In several parts of the country, tribal jirgas use methods steeped
in ancient superstition to determine innocence or guilt. The accused
is forced to walk barefoot over burning coals; if his feet burn
he is pronounced guilty and liable to punishment, if the fire leaves
his soles unsinged he is declared innocent. The jirga system has
survived even in those areas described as settled districts although
it is not recognised by law. For instance, some of the jirga cases
noted in the annual report of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan
(HRCP) for 2001 included: A tribal jirga held at Ratodero, Larkana
district, to resolve a feud that had claimed 11 lives. It found
one party guilty of murder and ordered a fine of one million rupees
as compensation to the aggrieved tribe. A property dispute between
two political leaders was resolved at a jirga held at a rest house
in Ranipur. In Sukkur, a jirga reportedly resolved a 16-year-old
feud between two factions of the Rind tribe in which 15 people,
including two women, had been killed. The jirga found one faction
guilty of five murders and the other faction of three murders. Both
sides were fined.
A number of factors have contributed to the survival of the jirga
system, which is supported not only by tribes, but also by political
leaders and even the administration. Quite often jirgas are held
at official premises and attended by district officials including
police officers. In one case in Sindh, the administration brought
a tribal chief from prison to preside over a jirga. Nazims too have
attended jirga proceedings. The jirga system has also been strengthened
by official sanction. For example, last year the Dera Ghazi Khan
administration convened a large Punjab-Balochistan jirga to resolve
a long-standing conflict between the Buzdars in Punjab and the Jafars
of Balochistan, which was presided over by the D.G. Khan district
nazim. The Frontier government accepted the plea that only a jirga
could resolve the Shia-Sunni feud in Hangu and accordingly set up
a 10-member forum. The Sindh government too has often relied on
the jirga system in its campaigns against dacoits, especially while
negotiating ransom in abduction cases.
Meanwhile, some tribal jirgas, particularly in Sindh, have won public
respect by meting out punishments to police officers responsible
for extra judicial killings. For instance, a Nawabshah jirga in
1998 ordered a Sakrand SHO to pay 400,000 rupees as compensation
for torturing one, Khamisoo Khan, who later died in a Karachi hospital.
In the same year, a tribal jirga in Khairpur held a former SHO guilty
of killing a landlord and ordered him to pay 400,000 rupees to the
victim's family. Last year, a DSP, an SHO and some other policemen
in Sindh, were found guilty of extra-judicial killing and causing
injuries to five persons by a tribal jirga and were ordered to pay
1.2 million rupees in compensation.
There has been no serious effort by the state to contain the jirga
system. In 2000, the commissioner of Larkana prohibited the holding
of jirgas. The order was defied with impunity, as the jirga leaders
carried on regardless without informing the district authorities.
When the commissioner was transferred, his successor withdrew his
orders. Perhaps, above all, the jirga system has been sustained
by the deficiencies in the country's judicial system. Quick access
to justice is still not guaranteed to citizens, particularly those
living in traditionally neglected rural areas. Recourse to police
action has its own hazards, while litigation in courts is an expensive
and lengthy affair. Court decisions do not inspire confidence either
in merit or impartiality and the state's policy of protecting the
feudal system under writes the tribal norms. In large cities, like
Karachi and Lahore, the jirga model has given rise to mafias. Gang-leaders
are approached to settle money disputes or to get houses vacated
by troublesome tenants. This form of quick justice is preferred
to protracted litigation while gang-leaders take their cue from
corrupt elements in the police. Finally, local communities are influenced
by the nature of the national dispensation. Authoritarianism at
the top legitimises authoritarianism at the tribal/community level.
The defenders of the jirga system offer many arguments in its favour:
parties do not have to leave their homes and go to the police and
courts that may be at a considerable distance. They do not have
to bribe the police and pay lawyers' fees. Matters are adjudicated
upon by the peers of the persons involved, cases remain within the
community and the shame generated by wider publicity is avoided.
All issues are promptly settled. The norms of settlement enjoy the
sanction of tradition and are accepted more willingly than state
laws that ordinary villagers cannot comprehend. If the objective
of dispute resolution is elimination of grievances, any means that
secure this objective should be accepted as just. These arguments
have received their fair share of state support.
Needless to say, there are even stronger arguments against the jirga
system. Different communities and tribes have different traditions.
The agriculturists and the mercantile community follow different
codes. Acceptance of jirga rule means allowing many parallel systems
of justice within the nation, contrary to the wisdom of ages which
enjoins a uniform code of justice, especially in criminal matters,
for the entire population of a state. All tribal codes in Pakistan
are rooted in patriarchy and ignore even Islamic codes of law, particularly
with regard to women. They do not recognise a woman's independent
identity. The murder of a woman can be avenged or compensation sought
for it, but a woman can neither be a member of a jirga nor a counsel.
Worst of all, she is treated as a commodity, comparable to money
or a piece of land, to be bartered away to secure a settlement.
A typical example of the symbiosis between jirga and patriarchy
is section 30 of the FCR which defines adultery as an offence that
can be committed only by a married woman. Why this special favour
to women if Penal Code provisions in rape and illicit sex are also
applicable?
Except for some rare tribal communities where class distinctions
have still not affected the status of individual members, most jirgas
are dominated by economically and socially dominant groups. A landlord-dominated
jirga may be able to do justice between two tenants but its capacity
to do justice between a tenant and a landlord (if the latter at
all agrees to submit himself to a jirga or panchayat) will always
be suspect. Religious, sectarian and political polarisation undermines
the non-partisan credentials of jirgas.
Mediation, adjudication or arbitration is only one part of dispute
resolution. The jirgas do not necessarily enjoy the support of penitentiaries,
resettlement/rehabilitation services, except for the tribal areas
where the state enforces the jirga verdict. Thus in settled districts,
disputes are settled only through fines or the surrender of land
and women. Except for the jirgas under the FCR where the penalties
they can impose are clearly mentioned and limited, unauthorised
jirgas are free to give any punishment. If a panchayat can sanction
gang-rape and execute it as well, there is no limit to the heinous
punishments that can be awarded. Some of the punishments that are
routinely carried out by jirgas, such as execution after summary
trial, demolition of houses, expulsion from homes, stoning to death,
or the barter of girls, are unacceptable to all norms of civilisation.
Two particular effects of the jirga system are of special significance.
If a jirga based on tribal tradition can be accepted as a legitimate
tribunal to dispose of criminal matters, a jirga on ideological
foundations can also be defended. This argument has led to the formation
of private Islamic tribunals in certain parts of the Frontier province.
Incidentally, the jirgas set up under Pakhtunwali do not admit Sharia
concepts into their deliberations and rely solely on traditional
custom. Breaking away from this tradition some conservative clerics
have formed tribunals where they claim to decide cases according
to the Sharia. Little objection can be taken to them if acceptance
of a system by the parties concerned is considered sufficient to
justify a forum. The second consequence of attaching legal sanctity
to the jirga system is allowing disputing parties to dispense justice
themselves. If belief, tradition or custom permits a man to kill
a woman of the family who has compromised his honour, evil customs
such as karo kari and siah kari will never be eliminated.
At a different level, the question of respect for tradition or tribal
culture has to be addressed. A community wishes to retain a code
which conflicts with contemporary human rights values. Should it
be allowed to observe its traditional norms? Forced modernisation
is counter productive but is nobody responsible for helping such
a community to advance to modern concepts of social behaviour? There
is a saying among jurists that no one has a right to opt out of
one's rights. Can the right to life, liberty or the pursuit of happiness
be surrendered by anyone? Can anyone in Pakistan be allowed to keep
slaves on the plea that his forefathers had slaves? Blind surrender
to tradition may well imply recognition of the tribal sardars' right
to maintain private jails. Besides, it may not be fair to examine
custom only in areas of its conflict with what is described as legislated
law. Yielding to custom in matters of criminal jurisprudence means
also yielding in the realm of politics and education and economy.
Going back to feudal ways of settling criminal disputes strengthens
the sardari system and endangers representative rule. It is impossible
to marry concepts of democracy, equality of citizens, gender equality,
religious tolerance, et al, with vestiges of feudal arbitrariness
that are often confused with law.
Alternative modes of settling disputes have been made by superior
judges and the Law Commission. An ordinance has just been issued
to authorise courts to try alternative means of deciding civil suits,
but all this is in accordance with the law. Neither any judge nor
the Law Commission has suggested an alternative course in criminal
matters; there is only a proposal to create new subordinate courts
for the disposal of minor criminal matters.
If the state and conscious sections of society wish the entire
population to be governed by a uniform, national and humane judicial
order, they have a multi-dimensional task on their hands. Jirga
law is only one aspect of tribal and feudal society. Those steeped
in its values have to be freed of its shackles by a multi-pronged
system of mass education, independent economic opportunity, and
the promotion of women's identity and independence. At the same
time the judicial system needs to be reformed to restore the people's
confidence in the justice it dispenses. Bad laws and manipulation
for political, sectarian and class ends have turned the judiciary
into shambles. The ruins need not only repair, but also renovation,
not to mention redesigning. The foremost task in this direction
is getting rid of the Zia legacy of irrational and cruel laws, the
abandonment of the decadent theory that the death penalty deters
criminals and the acceptance that peace can be secured by treating
women like chattel.
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