Gulf News

Pakistan’s deathly silence in tackling rape

Imran Khan’s government has not shown enough resolve or empathy in response to the roadside sexual assault on a woman in front of her kids

- BY SYED TALAT HUSSAIN |

Pakistanis are not new to national shocks. Floods, earthquake­s, terrorist massacres, horrific crimes against women, children and vulnerable men — the list of soul-searing news is long. But there is something extra tragic about the last week’s roadside rape of a mother of three.

To begin with, the horror itself is unspeakabl­e. The victim’s car ran out of gas around midnight and as she sent distress calls out to the Motorway Police, the rapists descended on her, dragged her out of the car and after committing the beastly crime, left her in the thicket along with her kids next to the road’s hard shoulder. They also took away money, jewellery and credit cards. After long dreadful hours, she was found by the local police in medically critical condition holding on to her children. One account of her first engagement with the police suggested that she asked the rescuers to shoot her dead as she did not want to face anyone after her ordeal. It beggars the imaginatio­n what she must have gone through in that terrible moment of misfortune and what deep scars her children must have suffered being eyewitness­es to the tragedy.

What followed was sadder at another scale. The head of the city police in whose partial jurisdicti­on the heinous event took place used the classic victim-blaming argument to explain the circumstan­ces of the crime by saying that the woman, a resident of France visiting her relatives, should not have travelled at night, and that she should have checked her gas meter before setting out.

■ Syed Talat Hussain is a prominent Pakistani journalist and writer. He tweets at @ TalatHussa­in12

Controvers­ial policeman

As the outrage spread and more and more voices asked for his transfer, the Imran Khan government did the unthinkabl­e: it deputed its powerful advisers and ministers to defend the police officer. “You did not understand what he meant,”, said one. “He did not break any law by making this statement,” said another. The chief minister of Punjab, the province where it all happened, refused to condemn him in a television interview even though the host repeated his question four times. It was only in the face of the rising tide of resentment and anger that he grudgingly admitted three days later that the police officer must explain his position. Government representa­tives insist that the police officer, who still holds the post, is a competent person. His official records tell an exact opposite story, however. He is marked ‘B’ in quality of work and ‘C’ in integrity. The national selection and promotion board recently found him unfit to be promoted to the senior rank.

For the government to rally behind the victim-blaming and controvers­ial policeman and not throw its full weight behind the victim’s family could only have divided the national discourse about this national shame. Unlike

the past when most such events brought hearts and minds together in grief or in demanding swift action, this time gutters of gross speculatio­n started to flow. One twitter account holder with 42,000 plus followers asked what if the woman was a blackmaile­r and the event was a conspiracy against the Imran government and its favourite officers.

Misogynist­ic attitudes

For a country over-conscious of its internatio­nal image and whose powerful civil and military rulers generally go blue in the face complainin­g about how the world does not see the good side of the nation, this is not a pretty picture to portray. Nor should a government that has made a career out of mentioning “Islamic values” in its official communicat­ions be seen to be going against the grain of decency and commonsens­e by encouragin­g the idea that a woman driving on motorway with her children is easy pickings for rapists. And yet this is precisely the message that the government has sent out not just to the world but to its own citizens as well.

This is in part because deeply-entrenched misogynist­ic attitudes pervade the echelons of social, political and economic power but remain hidden behind a façade of gender equality and endorsemen­t of the global convention­s on the rights of women. But this is primarily because politics and not principles drives leadership’s commitment to what they profess in public. When two years ago a minor child, Zainab Ansari, was raped and brutally murdered, the present government’s top leaders, then in the opposition, led a groundswel­l of public emotion and demanded that the chief minister of the province should resign. Imran Khan issued special video message to express his sympathy for the victim’s family. The army chief offered the army’s help in investigat­ion and forensics.

In sharp contrast to that tidal wave of big words and strong slogans, there is deathly silence in tackling repeats of such crimes against women and minors. Since Zainab’s rape and murder dozens of similar incidents have happened without prompting calls for soul searching and pre-emptive action.

The symbolism of this apathy and opportunis­m is damning. Clearly, Pakistan’s political conscience wakes up only when it is politicall­y convenient; for the rest of the time it remains happily comatose — just like the security and rescue system was when a helpless woman was being raped on the roadside in front of her children under the open Pakistan sky.

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The cycle of unimaginab­le cruelty continues
SCAN ME The cycle of unimaginab­le cruelty continues

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