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It was a scene from hell. A young woman, her screams of terror drowned
by the jeers and raucous laughter from a 500-strong crowd, was dragged
to a mudhouse by armed men. Her father, a poor farm worker and an
uncle looked on in anguish, helpless to come to her aid in the midst
of armed, hostile tribesmen. Inside, while one of them held a gun
to her head, the others tore off her clothes. Four men gang-raped
her. This was no ordinary crime: it was justice - tribal style.
Mukhtar Mai had been gang-raped on the orders of a tribal jirga
as punishment for her brother's alleged affair with a woman of a
higher caste. One of the jirga members also participated in the
rape. It was around midnight when a battered Mukhtar emerged from
the house almost naked. The crowd started to disperse as she crawled
back to her house a few hundred yards away, helped by her father
Ghulam Fareed.
Wrapped in a brown shawl, the 18-year-old village teacher wept incessantly
as she recounted her ordeal. "I begged and pleaded with them
but they were like animals," said Mukhtar, who looked pale
as she struggled to come to terms with her ordeal.
For more than a week after the gang-rape on June 22 in this small
village in the feudal-dominated southern region of the Punjab, no
one took notice of the heinous crime that had been committed. The
poor farmer could not dare to challenge the powerful and politically
influential tribal jury. "They threatened us with dire consequence
if we reported the crime to the police," said Ghulam Fareed,
who is totally distraught by his daughter's humiliation. Another
version of the story holds that the boy had been sodomised by a
member of the Mastoi clan and the allegation of illicit relations
was concocted to preempt the boy's family from lodging a complaint.
It was only after a local newspaper reported the crime on June 30
that the administration finally took some action. The police, which
had earlier tried to cover-up the crime, made a belated attempt
to apprehend the culprits which, not surprisingly, was unsuccessful.
The main accused, including the members of the tribal jury, had
already fled. Six people who abetted the crime were arrested after
the Punjab provincial government sacked the local police chief.
The ordeal of Ghulam Fareed's family, who belongs to a socially
inferior Gujjar tribe, began when his 12-year-old son, Abdul Shakoor,
was accused of having an affair with a 22-year-old woman of the
higher caste Mastoi tribe. The boy was brutally beaten and detained
by the woman's family. Alleging that their honour had been violated,
they called for revenge. "Our honour can only be restored if
we disgrace one of the boy's sisters," they reportedly told
the tribal jury. Shakoor denied the allegation of having "
illicit" relations with the much older Salma Bibi. But his
plea of innocence was rejected.
The jury, dominated by the Mastoi tribesmen, ordered Fareed to produce
one of his daughters. The hapless man had no choice but to accept
the ruling. Mai, the eldest of his five daughters who gave Koran
lessons to the village children, agreed to go with her father. "I
never thought they will give such a ruling," said Mai. As the
jury passed the order, she pleaded in desperation, "I am like
your daughter, your sister. Don't do this to me." But her entreaties
fell on deaf ears. An elderly jurist joined two brothers and a cousin
of Salma in carrying out the inhuman verdict.
"My life was destroyed after that humiliation. I thought of
committing suicide," said Mukhtar. But the nationwide protest
and the government's promise to take action has given her some ray
of hope that she might receive some justice. " I want them
to be publicly hanged," she said.
The military government has ordered the arrest of the culprits and
tough action against the police officers involved in the apparent
cover-up. The villagers however, are skeptical that the main accused
will ever be punished. Despite the government's instructions, the
police is reluctant to take action against an influential feudal
and tribal lords who are allegedly providing shelter to the criminals.
Instead, it is reported that Fareed and Mai are being pressurised
by the police to change their statements. Villagers maintain that
gang rape is a common method of avenging "honour" in the
area, although the police deny this. Given that honour killings
of women - sometimes merely on the basis of suspicion - are particularly
common in tribal areas, the use of such bestial means of avenging
honour do not seem implausible.
A tribal jirga ( jury) may not have any legal sanction, but it continues
to operate in many parts of Pakistan where tribal and feudal systems
remain predominant. In remote rural areas, where people, with good
reason, have little faith in the police or the legal system, people
appeal to the jirga for resolution of inter tribal disputes and
matters related to "honour". Under a tribal code, women
are perceived as men's property and the repositories of their honour,
and thus a legitimate sacrifice where dishonour is to be redressed.
An inter tribal dispute is often resolved under the jirga system
by giving a woman in marriage to the rival group. In such a social
milieu, a woman's life, let alone her happiness, has little worth.
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