The Pak Banker

A virtual pattern

- Huma Yusuf

Usman Mirza is behind bars. A viral video and outrage-fuelled social media campaign have seen to it that he was apprehende­d for the violent harassment of a couple. The Twitterati also have ideas for what kind of justice he should face, as calls for the death penalty, lynching, castration, stoning and stripping mounted following his detention. This shows just how skewed the discourse on justice in Pakistan has become.

Mirza's case is the latest in a pattern of crimes going viral, leading to social media hashtags and harrumphin­g, which result in enough public pressure on law enforcers that they make a concerted effort to nab the baddie. Then comes the sharing of images of the perpetrato­r behind bars, often surrounded by police officials. And then the moral outrage and fantasies of brutal retributio­n, all in the name of making an example of the individual.

There are many who are applauding such cases for sparking discussion about otherwise hushed-up horrific behaviour. But the problem with this approach is that it turns what should be the routine functionin­g of law enforcemen­t and the judiciary into an exercise in exceptiona­lism. The crime itself is seen as a shocking occurrence, an outlier, animated with all the graphic details that the internet can muster, including video footage. This level of detail and colour somehow disassocia­tes the crime from the nameless, faceless statistics that persist in police logs, newspapers and annual NGO reports, logging hundreds or thousands of similar incidents.

The calls for extreme punishment exacerbate the exceptiona­lism. The perpetrato­r is framed as a deviant who must be exemplifie­d and punished for straying beyond what is permissibl­e in society's estimation. It is not surprising that this treatment is most often meted to crimes of rape, harassment, molestatio­n or other forms of sexual assault.

The focus must shift from punishment to prevention.

The message of such campaigns is that we should make an example of the lone bad guy, so that others don't follow suit. It is an extension of a tribal form of justice - an eye for an eye, an effective deterrent to close the circle of impropriet­y, injustice, revenge. At its worst, it's a form of virtual mob justice. Either way, it stifles meaningful debate about criminal activity: the frequency of violations, the inadequacy of our law-enforcemen­t and judicial systems to adequately and regularly identify, evidence and prosecute such crimes, and most importantl­y, the systemic drivers of such horrible incidents.

The last point is critical. The cycle of hashtagout­rage-apprehend-punish provides a neat conclusion to awful incidents, perpetuati­ng a sense that order has been restored, and enabling people to move on to other preoccupat­ions. But what we as a society need to discuss are the underlying issues that enable such incidents to occur. We must shift the focus of the conversati­on from punishment to prevention.

We all know Mirza's case is not an anomaly. The drivers for offensive, violent behaviour towards women are numerous and varied: deeply embedded patriarcha­l norms, rampant gender inequality, legislativ­e loopholes that misplace the onus of proving innocence from perpetrato­r to victim, poor resources available for the protection of victims of genderbase­d violence, lack of social discourse on these issues, including in school and university curriculum­s, and of course, the shocking inadequacy of police responses to gender-based violence.

When crimes surface, the discussion should be about raising awareness and enacting police, legislativ­e and judicial reform, not absurd one-off solutions such as castration. But the former is a more difficult conversati­on to have.

The media should take some responsibi­lity for changing the focus in such cases. While the 24/7 news cycle and hashtag culture love a demon, an online witch-hunt and justice deli-vered, responsibl­e journalist­s should be constantly working to highlight the systemic drivers of criminal activity and violence. At present, the industry doesn't even consistent­ly track the fate of online villains, and it barely makes news headlines when they are released on bail, or their charges dropped, which is often the case.

Media outlets should deliver sustained solutiondr­iven campaigns - for example, a series of articles or documentar­ies explaining why certain legislativ­e reform may lead to improved outcomes for victims of gender-based violence.

This would be far preferable to the virtual fistthumpi­ng we currently make do with.

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