Bangkok Post

PRESSURE GROWS TO BAN ‘VIRGINITY TESTS’ IN PAKISTAN RAPE CASES

- By Zofeen Ebrahim in Karachi

It is two months since Shazia underwent a so-called virginity test during a rape examinatio­n at a Karachi hospital, but the Pakistani teenager is still visibly traumatise­d.

She winces as she describes how the doctor carried out the “two-finger test” (TFT), in which a doctor inserts fingers into the vagina, ostensibly to determine if a woman or girl is sexually active.

“She put her finger and then something else inside me. I screamed loudly as it hurt a lot and told her to stop, but she continued and said angrily that I will just have to bear it,” said Shazia, whose real name the Thomson Reuters Foundation has withheld.

Women’s rights campaigner­s in Pakistan have long fought for virginity testing to be banned, arguing it is degrading, and that a woman’s sexual history has no bearing on whether she has suffered rape.

The World Health Organizati­on said in a 2018 report the tests had “no scientific merit” and were painful and humiliatin­g, and called for a global ban.

In Pakistan, a series of legal rulings has raised hopes of an end to the practice, most recently in January when a court in Punjab, the country’s most populous province, declared the test illegal, upholding a challenge by a group of campaigner­s.

It is over a decade since Pakistan’s Supreme Court ruled that a rape complaint cannot be dismissed on the basis of a virginity test.

But women working in the Pakistani judicial system said the tests were still widely used, blaming a lack of resources as well as deep-seated misconcept­ions about sexual violence.

Summaiya Syed Tariq is a police surgeon who has been working with assault survivors in Sindh province since 1999, carrying out rape examinatio­ns, conducting autopsies and presenting evidence in court.

She stopped carrying out two-finger tests in 2006 after becoming aware of the damage they can do, and has been working to raise awareness ever since.

But with just 11 female medical workers available to carry out rape exams in the whole of Karachi — Pakistan’s biggest city with more than 16 million inhabitant­s — Tariq said the two-finger test was often regarded as a “quick fix”.

“The issue of virginity, or how ‘habitual’ a woman may be to the ‘act,’ should never be a considerat­ion for the examiners,” she said in comments on WhatsApp.

“Commercial sex workers can be raped too. The charge of rape, per se, should be enough to carry out an examinatio­n and investigat­ion and past sexual history should not be taken into considerat­ion.”

Many human rights organisati­ons have condemned virginity testing as inhumane and unethical, and it is banned in many countries.

India’s government issued guidelines in 2014 saying the test “had no bearing on a case of sexual violence”, though women’s rights campaigner­s have said it is still being used.

In Afghanista­n, a study last year found that forced gynaecolog­ical examinatio­ns were being conducted in contravent­ion of a 2018 law that requires either the consent of the patient or a court order.

Pakistan’s president announced a ban in December as part of a series of measures to strengthen laws on sexual violence following a public outcry over the gang rape of a woman who was stranded after her car ran out of fuel.

But those measures will soon expire unless parliament votes them into law.

Mirza Shahzad Akbar, an adviser to Prime Minister Imran Khan, said the measures were expected to be presented to parliament after elections to the upper house, which were held on March 3.

Pakistan’s minister for human rights, Shireen Mazari, tweeted her support for a ban last month, calling the practice “demeaning and absurd”.

She was responding to a Lahore high court ruling that virginity tests should not be carried out. The judge called it a “humiliatin­g practice which is used to cast suspicion on the victim, as opposed to focusing on the accused”.

A similar challenge is now being heard in the high court of Karachi, the capital of Sindh province, where Tariq works.

Last year she selected 100 rape cases in Sindh at random to see whether two-finger tests had been conducted. She found 86 of the victims had, like Shazia, been subjected to the test.

Shazia said the medic who carried out her test appeared angry and in a hurry.

The man accused of raping her is in custody, but she and her family have had to leave the neighbourh­ood where they lived due to the stigma that surrounds rape in Pakistan.

She is receiving help through lawyer Asiya Munir, who works with campaign group War Against Rape (WAR), and believes the two-finger test is a factor in Pakistan’s low conviction rate for rape.

Less than 3% of sexual assault or rape cases result in a conviction in Pakistan, according to the Karachi-based group.

“It is very traumatisi­ng for a person already in a state of shock,” said Munir, criticisin­g what she called the “almost accusatory tone” of many rape investigat­ions.

“I am certain there has to be a more dignified and less humiliatin­g way of finding the truth.”

“I am certain there has to be a more dignified and less humiliatin­g way of finding the truth”

ASIYA MUNIR Lawyer with War Against Rape

 ??  ?? People carry signs to protest against a gang rape that occurred along a highway and to condemn violence against women and girls, in Karachi in September last year.
People carry signs to protest against a gang rape that occurred along a highway and to condemn violence against women and girls, in Karachi in September last year.
 ??  ?? Women carry signs as they take part in a march demanding equal rights, ahead of Internatio­nal Women’s Day in Karachi on March 6 last year.
Women carry signs as they take part in a march demanding equal rights, ahead of Internatio­nal Women’s Day in Karachi on March 6 last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand