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2 Eylül 2008 Salı

Five women buried alive

Five women buried alive
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information from a remote area of Balochistan province, that five women were buried alive, allegedly by the younger brother of Mr. Sadiq Umrani, the provincial minister and a prominent leader of the Pakistan People's Party, the ruling party. However, police have still not arrested the perpetrators after one month of the incident.

CASE DETAILS:


The Umrani tribe is mainly concentrated in the Jafarabad and Naseerabad districts of Balochistan provice that are about 300 kilometers from Quetta city, the provincial capital. Mr. Sadiq Umrani, the provincial minister for housing and construction, was elected to the Balochistan Assembly in the February 18, 2008 elections from Dera the Murad Jamali constituency of district Naseerabad.
The incident of the women being buried alive occurred in a remote village, the Baba Kot, 80 kilometers away from Usta Mohammad city of Jafferabad district. It is believed that due to the influence of the minister and his brother the incident was not reported in the media.

According to the information received, five women were Ms. Fatima, wife of Umeed Ali Umrani, Jannat Bibi, wife of Qaiser Khan, Fauzia, daughter of Ata Mohammad Umrani, and two other girls, aged between 16 to 18 years. They were at the house of Mr. Chandio at Baba Kot village and to leave for a civil court at Usta Mohammad, district Jafarabad, so that three of the girls could marry the men of their choice. Their decision to have marriage in court was the result of several days of discussions with the elders of the tribe who refused them permission to marry. The names of two younger girls were not ascertained because of strong control of tribal leaders in the area.

As the news of their plans leaked out, Mr. Abdul Sattar Umrani, a brother of the minister, came with more than six persons and abducted them at gun points. They were taken in a Land Cruiser jeep, bearing a registration number plate of the Balochistan government, to another remote area, Nau Abadi, in the vicinity of Baba Kot. After reaching the deserted area of Nau Abadi, Abdul Sattar Umrani and his six companions took the three younger women out of the jeep and beat them before allegedly opening fire with their guns. The girls were seriously injured but were still alive at that moment. Sattar Umrani and his accomplices hurled them into a wide ditch and covered them with earth and stones. The two older women were an aunt of Fauzia and the other, the mother of one minor. When they protested and tried to stop the burial of the minors that were plainly alive, the attackers were so angry that they also pushed them into the ditch and buried all alive. After completing the burial, they fired several shots into to the air so that no one would come close.

The minors were educated and were studying in classes from 10 to 12. They were punished for trying to decide about their marriages.

After one month the police have still not registered the case and it is difficult to get more detailed information. The provincial minister is so powerful that police are reluctant to provide details on the murder. When the AHRC contacted Mr. Sadiq Umrani, provincial minister, he confirmed the incident by saying that only three women had been killed by unknown persons. He denied his or his brother's involvement. He went on to say that the police will not disclose any information about the case as to do so now would be implicate themselves. However, concerned officers of two different police stations have confirmed the incident and explained that no one is providing any information. Also as they could not find the graves of the victims it is difficult to register the case. The victim's family members have since left the place and their whereabouts are unknown.

The alleged perpetrator, Mr. Abdul Sattar Umrani, the brother of the provincial minister, was also involved in murder of three persons, including one young woman, in January 2006. That case was similar in that a school teacher, Mr. Mohammad Aslam, was going with his lover in a taxi to a civil court to court marry. The perpetrators stopped them at Manjo Shori, sub district Tumboo, District Naseerabad and killed all three persons by gun fire. The dead included the taxi driver, Mr. Jabal Aidee. The police were unable to institute a murder case for five months until the intervention of Mr. Iftekhar Choudhry, the deposed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and also the deputy speaker of Senate. But only one person was arrested and the perpetrator Abdul Sattar Umrani remained at large.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

Every year in Pakistan hundreds of women, of all ages and in all parts of the country, are reported killed in the name of honour. Many more cases go unreported. Almost all go unpunished. The lives of millions of women in Pakistan are circumscribed by traditions, which enforce extreme seclusion and submission to men many of whom impose their virtually proprietarily control over women with violence. For the most part, women bear the traditional male control over every aspect of their bodies, speech and behaviour with stoicism, as part of their kismat (fate), but exposure to media, the work of women's rights groups and the greater degree of mobility have seen the beginnings of women's rights awareness seep into the secluded world of women.

But if women begin to exert these rights, however tentatively, they often face more repression and punishment: the curve of honour killings has increased parallel to the rise in the awareness in rights. State indifference, discriminatory laws and the gender bias of much of the country's police force and judiciary have ensured virtual impunity for perpetuators of honour killings. It is paradoxical that women who enjoy such a poor status in society and have no standing in family should become a focal point of a false and primitive concept of family honour, which they are accepted to uphold at the expense of their inclinations and preference in the matters of marriage. [Honour Killings in Pakistan by Neshay Najam]

Originally a Baluch and Pashtun tribal custom, honour killings are founded in the twin concepts of honour and commodity of women. Women are married off for a bride price paid to the father. There is no concept for girls to get marriage on their own choice and if it is found then, they are killed in the name of honour. (Please also refer to LESSON Series 35 May 2004 of Human Rights Correspondence School)

SUGGESTED ACTION:

Please write letters to the following mentioned authorities demanding to file the case of murder of five women by burial alive by the perpetrators.

Please be informed that the AHRC has also written letters to the UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions calling for an intervention in this case.

To support this appeal, please click here!

Asian Human Rights Commission


Posted by Joanne_Jowan on Thursday, August 14, 2008 (22:26:08) (747 reads)

ICAHK Monthly Round-up: August 2008

Hello,

Early member of this site will remember that ICAHK staff used to send out a monthly round-up of stories and articles, until pressures of time and other work meant that we were unable to continue. I am now pleased to restart the service with a monthly round-up for August:

PAKISTAN

In Pakistan five women were buried alive in a horrific mass 'honour' killing, allegedly by the brother of a Minister for the Pakistan People's Party. Three girls were killed because they proposed marrying by their own choice, and two older women were also killed because they tried to protect the younger ones. The Asian Human Rights Commission has asked for action on this case. Senator Israr Ullah Zehri condoned the murders as 'Baloch tradition' stunning other senate members. Further investigaions have been ordered into these crimes.


IRAN

Iran has succumbed to international pressure, including pressure from ICAHK members, to suspend some sentences of death by stoning. However, we share reservations as expressed by campaigners against stoning who point out that as long as stoning remains within Iran's penal code, there will always be a possibility that this sentence will be passed:


Although the draft code stipulates that the prosecutor or judge may determine if stoning will reflect poorly upon the regime in a particular case and may therefore commute the sentence to execution or whipping, there are no standards by which the judge or the prosecutor could base his decision. Neither is there a clear-cut definition of the authority of the judge or prosecutor. The ambiguity of the law in this regard means that anyone is at risk of being arbitrarily sentenced to die by stoning. “Don’t forget. One cannot remove the punishment of stoning from the law” Mr. Jamshidi was quoted during his press interview on 4 August 2008, according to Sanaz Allah Bedashti, a reporter for www.meydaan.net.


Also in Iran, around 2000 people protested against the police action in freeing Ali Nejati, who slit his daughter's throat in the street. He was unhappy with her wish to divorce a man chosen for her when she was just 14 years old.


EUROPE

European feminists united to criticise Tariq Ramadan's campaign against forced marriage. French organisations ASFAD, GAMS, Elélé, MFPF, le Réseau "Agir avec elles" and Voix de femmes, (which include Turkish and Algerian women's groups) issued a statement criticising the lack of acknowledgement of the psychological, physical and sexual violence involved in forced marriage offences, while in Germany, Necla Kelek claims that the campaign counterproductively extols the very atttitudes that underpin forced marriage by using statements such as 'In family cultures, the family is more important than the individual. The family understands itself as a unit and a whole and is recognized as such…Each member must act in the interest of the family,’ and 'In this group, honour is a collective possession, and the responsibility is carried by all the family members, whatever their place in the family hierarchy.

'Sevdiğimle evlenirim' diyen 5 genç kızı canlı canlı gömdüler


Senatör Zehri

Pakistan'ın Belucistan eyaletinde yaşanan olay için bir senatör Geleneğimiz' dedi..






Pakistan'ın Belucistan eyaletinde kendi seçtikleri erkeklerle evlenmek istediklerini söyledikleri için 5 kız aileleri tarafından önce vuruldu, sonra diri diri toprağa gömüldü. Ülkede insan hakları derneklerini ayağa kaldıran bu korkunç namus cinayeti sonrası, eyaleti Senato'da temsil eden Israr U. Zehri'nin şok açıklaması geldi: Bunlar yüzyıllardır devam eden gelenekler... Tepkiler üzerine İçişleri Bakanlığı'ndan Rahman Malik "Burası Avrupa toplumu değil. Bizler farklı toplumlarız. Ama kadınlara karşı ne din ne de kültür adına şiddet hoş görülür" açıklaması geldi. Ancak bu da insan hakları örgütlerini ve muhalif medyayı tatmin etmedi. 5 kızın toprak altında bulunduklarında hâlâ nefes aldıkları ancak hastaneye yetiştirilemeden öldükleri öğrenildi. Protesto gösterilerine rağmen birçok Pakistanlı siyasi bunun Belucistan eyaletinin kendi kuralları olduğunu söylüyor. Ülkede her yıl 1000'den fazla kadının namus cinayetine kurban gittiği söyleniyor.