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Afghanistan/South Asia
Pakistan rejects pro-women bill
2005-03-03
The Pakistan government has allied with Islamists to reject a bill which sought to strengthen the law against the practice of "honour killing". The parliament rejected the bill by a majority vote on Tuesday, declaring it to be un-Islamic. The bill was rejected after being declared un-Islamic by a majority vote.
"By Allan, Mahmoud, those tricky devils almost made me vote for something unIslamic! Phew, whatta close call!"
Law Minister Wasi Zafar told parliament that there was no need for further amendments in the country's penal code after an amendment bill was passed last December. However, the opposition - along with several women members from the government benches - has continued to call for further amendments, arguing that the law remained riddled with many loopholes despite the amendment. Tuesday's bill was introduced by Ms Kashmala Tariq, a member of the ruling Muslim League.

Under the so-called Islamic legislation enacted by General Zia ul Haq, Pakistan's Islamist military ruler in the 1980s, proven killers could seek or buy pardon from the victim's family under the Islamic principles of compromise. The law has remained essentially unchanged since then. Observers say that it has been grossly misused and has contributed directly to an alarming increase in the practice of "karo-kari" or the so-called honour killings. Once such a pardon has been secured, the state has no further writ on the matter.
Actually it hasn't been "misused", it's been used precisely as was intended.
Human rights agencies in Pakistan have repeatedly emphasised that most women falling prey to karo-kari were usually those wanting to marry of their own will. In many cases, the victims held properties that the male members of their families did not wish to lose if the women chose to marry outside the family. Government and independent researchers estimate that over 4,000 women have fallen victim to this practice in Pakistan over the last six years. In December last year, the government passed a bill making karo-kari punishable under the same penal provisions as murder. But it did not alter the provisions whereby the accused could negotiate pardon with the victim's family under the so-called Islamic provisions. These provisions often conflict with the Anglo-Saxon law inherited by Pakistan in 1947.
"Anglo-Saxon law! We'll have none of that in a proper Islamic republic! Mahmoud, bring me my sword and turban!"
Observers in Pakistan say that the defeat of Ms Tariq's bill is a clear indication of the influence that the conservatives still wield on policy-making in Pakistan, despite President Musharraf's liberal outlook.
Posted by:tipper

#1  There is a traditional solution to the problem of men treating women unfairly. Poison. When women in Pakistan realize that they can kill obnoxious men-folk, the death rate will jump. Even in ancient Rome, a particular plant had become so favored by housewives to off their husbands with, that a decree was made to eradicate every one of those plants for miles around the city.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2005-03-03 1:51:38 PM  

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