Gulf News

Cost of a child’s life: Two parrots?

In death, may you find the childhood you never had, little Zahra

- BY MEHR TARAR ■ Mehr Tarar is a writer, columnist and TV presenter. Twitter: @mehrtarar

May in death you find childhood you never had, little Zahra

Pakistan’s electronic and social media are too busy with the political warfare of the government and the opposition, and the devastatio­n of coronaviru­s to devote a great deal of time and attention to dead children.

Her date of birth is unknown. As she lay unconsciou­s, connected to a ventilator in ICU, her body had multiple signs of violence. On her right cheek was a bruise, bluish. On the left side of her stomach, under the ribs, were bruises, bluish, and some that suggested she had been dragged across the floor.

Her left wrist was bruised On both her legs, on the inside of her thighs, were bruises. Her left ankle was swollen and bruised. There was vaginal bleeding. On her vagina, there were signs of violence.

She had been brought to the ICU of Bahria Hospital, Phase 8, Rawalpindi, at 6.30pm on May 31, 2020.

She did not regain consciousn­ess. She died at 2.30am. It was June 1, 2020. She was eight years old. Her name was Zahra. She did not have a second name. No photograph of Zahra before May 31, 2020 exists. What’s in a name?

Media — electronic, social, print — called her “Zohra Shah.” Amid the noise about the enormity of the tragedy of her death, verificati­on of her real name became inconseque­ntial. Posthumous­ly, she is “Zahra Bibi.” As with many children from underprivi­leged background­s who exist without a second or a family name, the word “bibi” (respected woman”) is suffixed to her name.

Pakistan, on hearing the news of the death of another little girl, was shocked and grieved. It was the biggest news of the day. For a few hours. A couple of days. Social media erupted in grief and outrage. “Justice for Zohra Shah,” hashtagged and viralled, dominated the timelines of the famous and the ordinary on Twitter. The photograph of a Baloch child was shared, mistaking her for “Zohra Shah.” The fake photo with the fake name.

Nameless children

That also ended soon. Pakistan’s electronic and social media are too busy with the political warfare of the government and the opposition, and the devastatio­n of coronaviru­s to devote a great deal of time and attention to dead children. Especially if the dead children do not have a real name. Or a face.

She did have a face. I saw two photos. In the first photo I saw of Zahra, her eyes were covered with two pieces of taped gauze, the tube in her mouth held tight with thin strips of gauze. Zahra looked like a little boy with her closely cropped hair. According to the people she worked for, the perpetrato­r and the accomplice, his wife, her head was shaved because she had lice. Instead of using lice removal lotion or shampoo, they shaved her head.

In the second photo, her unusually long, thick eyelashes curl as if to protect her eyes. As if to provide shade to the deep bruise on her left cheek. Her thin face is pale. Deathly. Her mouth has a cut. She is dead.

Daughter of the conductor of a public minibus, Zahra was from a village in Muzaffarga­rh. She had four brothers and two sisters. About four-five months ago — from the time of her death — she started working for Hassan Siddique, and his wife, Umme Kalsoom, in their house in Bahria Town, Phase 8, Rawalpindi. That job was to be the last one of her very short life. What she did before that job remains unclear. Her family did not visit her once. Hassan is a property dealer and a seller of exotic birds. They have a five-month-old boy.

After the arrest of his parents, he lives with his paternal grandmothe­r. His life has changed even before he can speak or walk.

Daily-wage earner

Hassan, when he brought Zahra from her home, told her parents that she would play with their son, and he and his wife would take care of her every need, including clothing and education. Like millions of poor families who have many children and little or no money, and who unable to educate their children are forced to let them become daily-wage earners or domestic help, Zahra’s parents trusted a complete stranger to provide a good life to their child. In the few months that she was with the Siddique family, Zahra was mistreated, punished, and beaten, her head was shaved, and she remained in dirty clothes.

The couple who promised to give her a good life never treated Zahra with kindness. They did not have any other domestic help. The wife did the cleaning, cooking and other chores. In the words of Hassan and his wife, Zahra was “dirty”. That, in simpler words, means she didn’t shower or change her clothes often. They complained that she was of no use to them. That she was a liability. They didn’t give her a fixed salary. They did not buy her anything. She slept on a mattress in the living room of their five-marla house. They shaved her head when she had lice. They beat her very frequently. The perpetrato­rs told the investigat­ing officer that they wanted to send Zahra back to her village but could not do so because of the transporta­tion lockdown due to coronaviru­s.

Zahra did return to her village in the time of coronaviru­s. In a coffin.

The telltale signs

After her death it was discovered that Zahra had scars on her legs, arms, all over her body. Scars that revealed the hard beatings the little child received on a regular basis. Light slaps, light beatings do not leave marks.

One day, Zahra was cleaning a cage that had two precious parrots. During the cleaning, the birds flew away. Hassan’s wife called him to inform him that Zahra had freed the birds. He came home, and he beat her. Zahra lost consciousn­ess. Hassan brought her to the Bahria Hospital, Phase 8, left her there, and fled.

On May 31, 2020, Hassan beat Zahra. The 35-year-old, 5’8, man unleashed hell on the tiny, thin eight-year-old Zahra. Worse than how grown men beat men their size and age in movies, in real life violent scenarios. He hit her with a stick. He kicked her. He kicked her all over her body. In her ribs, in her stomach, on her pubic area, on her legs, on her calves. The wife watched. No one heard Zahra’s screams. No one helped Zahra.

After his arrest, a video was found in Hassan’s phone. In that video, Zahra was in a cage. That was one of her punishment­s. One time? Repeated? There is just one video. It was a medium size cage generally used for keeping roosters.

When asked if the couple after their arrest expressed any remorse, any shame, one high-level police officer said: “Verrrrry little.” A junior officer said: “To an extent.” A child was dead. The perpetrato­rs reacted. Zahra was a “dirty child”. Zahra was “shararti”.

A police officer said, “Both of them had tortured her on multiple occasions.”

The police found a “little steel rod” from the site of violence. It remains to be verified if it has been used for beating Zahra.

The most-repeated word by all the investigat­ing officers for Hassan’s violence on the eightyear-old Zahra is “torture.”

On being informed, Zahra’s mother and paternal grandfathe­r arrived. Lamenting the death of their child, they demanded justice. The police, after the post-mortem, handed over the body to the griefstric­ken family. They are in touch with them to give them regular updates on the investigat­ion. The post-mortem report is confidenti­al until the report of the DNA sample of the culprit sent to the Punjab Forensic Science Agency, Lahore, is available.

Crimes against children

Countless children in Pakistan work as domestic help. In a developing country where twentyfive per cent of the population still survives under the official poverty line, child labour, despite being illegal, is the norm.

The police in Zahra’s case have shown an extraordin­ary sense of responsibi­lity. They filed a case without any complaint from anyone.

According to Sub-Inspector Sajjad-Ul-Hassan, Public Relations Officer and spokespers­on of the Rawalpindi police, “On receiving informatio­n regarding the incident, the Rawalpindi Police promptly reached the hospital. Without waiting for the medical report, the police, on the directions of CPO Rawalpindi Muhammad Ahsan Younas, registered a case against Hassan Siddique and his wife under sections 324/376/34 PPC. The police became the complainan­t as waiting for Zahra’s parents living in Muzaffarga­rh might have delayed the legal process.

“When the little girl Zahra passed away in the hospital, the police immediatel­y added section 302 PPC in the FIR. The perpetrato­rs, the husband and wife, were arrested.

“The police have conducted the DNA test of Hassan Siddique, polygraph tests of the couple, forensic analyses of the couple’s cell phones, and voice-matching test of Hassan for verificati­on of the authentici­ty of the video found in his cell phone. All steps are taken to ensure that every bit of evidence is collected against the perpetrato­rs of this brutal act.

I cry each time I think about the little girl who was killed for freeing — accidental­ly, on purpose, I’ll never know — two parrots.

May you live in love and light and laughter and happiness, little Zahra. May in death you find the childhood you never had, little Zahra.

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© Gulf News

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