Violence against women rampant: HRW

Published January 19, 2006

NEW YORK, Jan 18: Violence against women in Pakistan remained “rampant” in 2005, with President Pervez Musharraf sparking a global outcry with his remarks on rape, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Wednesday in its annual report.

Gen Musharraf’s government was too busy consolidating its own power and violating human rights in pursuit of the US-led “war on terror” to take any action to help women, the US-based organisation said.

It highlighted the cases of Mukhtaran Mai, a gang-rape victim banned from going to the United States so she would not “malign Pakistan”, and a female doctor who said a government official coerced her to leave the country after she was allegedly raped by an army officer.

Gen Musharraf later said that getting raped had become a “money making” concern and that many Pakistanis felt it was an easy way to get a foreign visa and emigrate, the group said.

“Despite the international and domestic condemnation, President Musharraf has not apologized for these remarks or withdrawn them,” it said.

The report further accused Pakistan of failing to overturn laws that make it almost impossible to prove rape, and for not tackling the deaths of hundreds of women in so-called “honour killings”.

Separately, the “war on terror” in Pakistan since 2001 had “involved serious violations of human rights,” the report said, with suspects often being detained without charge.—AFP

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