• Login
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • International News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • International News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Times of Pakistan
No Result
View All Result
Home International News Asia

Fatal whipping exposes Bangladesh’s fatwa crimes

ToP by ToP
May 30, 2011
in Asia, International News
0
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Bangladesh: When Bangladeshi teenager Hena Akhter was raped by her cousin, their village council issued a fatwa ordering a public whipping as punishment — 101 lashes for her, 201 for him.Hena collapsed after 70 lashes and died six days later at home in the remote Chamta village in Shariatpur district, triggering a national outcry over the illegal penalty and the police cover-up that allegedly followed.“The council used a wet piece of cloth with a knot at one end to whip her. There was nothing I could do to stop them,” Hena’s mother Aklema Begum told AFP as she recalled her 14-year-old daughter’s fatal ordeal in January this year.”My brother-in-law saw it. When Hena first fell over after 30 lashes, they made her stand up again and kept going. She couldn’t speak or eat afterwards, and she was bleeding through her nose, ears and mouth.”Hena is buried in a simple grave next to her family’s small mud and plank house in a village that has no electricity or running water and is a 30-minute walk through rice paddies from the nearest paved road.Her death has highlighted Bangladesh’s struggle to regulate fatwas, religious decrees normally issued by Islamic scholars.

They were banned in 2001, but earlier this month the Supreme Court in Dhaka ruled that they could be issued on personal and religious matters if they did not impose physical punishment.Rights groups have criticised the latest ruling and said that villages far from Bangladesh’s secular courts have always continued using fatwas to sentence people to whippings in defiance of any national law.Hena’s case shows there is a degree of sympathy for such punishments, particularly in rape cases, due to a “mindset that always blames the woman,” said lawyer Salma Ali.Ali, who is representing Hena’s family in court, said that police, doctors and hospital staff colluded to conceal the real cause of Hena’s death, which they knew was illegal.An initial autopsy by local doctors found “no visible injury marks” on Hena’s body and the first police report did not record the death as murder, instead claiming Hena was having an extra-marital affair with Mahbub Khan, 45.”This was systematic violence against this girl,” said Ali. “Why didn’t the police record this case properly? Why didn’t the hospital treat her properly? Who paid money to get this covered up?”

A second post mortem found Hena had died of internal bleeding and the local doctors and police are now under investigation for the attempted cover-up.Khan and the seven-member village council who issued the fatwa have been arrested and are awaiting trial and Hena’s family have been given 24-hour police protection after receiving death threats.Reflecting rural Bangladeshis’ widespread ignorance of their own rights and justice system, Hena’s family said they had no idea that the village council did not have any legal authority to punish their daughter.Access to justice is so limited outside of the capital Dhaka that up to 80 percent of disputes are resolved by village councils — which are known as shalish — said Falzul Huq of the Madaripur Legal Aid Association.”Judiciary is very costly, time consuming and ringed with corruption,” he said, adding there were two million cases pending at the country’s courts.

“But (whipping) is illegal, and the law of the country should take care of it as they do not have the right to beat anybody or torture anybody in the name of shalish,” Huq said.In Hena’s case, the village council that issued the fatwa included the wife of her rapist and his sister-in-law but no one with even basic training in Islamic law, leading human rights lawyer Sara Hossain told AFP.Hossain, who is pushing for an outright ban, said the Supreme Court ruling has left a huge legal grey area by allowing fatwa on “religious issues”, but leaving it up to local preachers to decide what this covers.”The fatwa giver will say ‘I’m not making anyone be whipped or caned. People are doing whatever they’re doing based on what they feel, I just happen to have expressed a view’,” she said.In Chamta village, Hena’s family say they wish they had known enough at the time to prevent her punishment, and that they are determined to fight for justice.”Her memory is always with us, it is driving us,” her mother said. – Yahoonews

Previous Post

Younger Castro brother turns 80 in aging regime

Next Post

King approves 18 new salary scales for public sector

ToP

ToP

Related Posts

FO deplores India’s ‘public notice’ advising students not to pursue higher education in Pakistan
International News

FO deplores India’s ‘public notice’ advising students not to pursue higher education in Pakistan

by Top
April 26, 2022
Hina Khar, UAE minister discuss bilateral ties
International News

Hina Khar, UAE minister discuss bilateral ties

by Top
April 22, 2022
Attacks on mosques, businesses a precursor of full-blown Muslim genocide in India
International News

Attacks on mosques, businesses a precursor of full-blown Muslim genocide in India

by Top
April 21, 2022
UN chief calls for calm in Jerusalem after serious Palestinian-Israeli clashes
International News

UN chief calls for calm in Jerusalem after serious Palestinian-Israeli clashes

by Top
April 18, 2022
India’s noncompliance with UN Kashmir resolutions, arms buildup threaten South Asia peace: Pakistan
International News

India’s noncompliance with UN Kashmir resolutions, arms buildup threaten South Asia peace: Pakistan

by Top
April 7, 2022
Foreign interference in Pakistan’s internal affairs reported: Russian MFA spokesperson
International News

Foreign interference in Pakistan’s internal affairs reported: Russian MFA spokesperson

by Top
April 6, 2022
UNGA votes to again blame Russia for Ukraine humanitarian crisis; Pakistan abstains
International News

UNGA votes to again blame Russia for Ukraine humanitarian crisis; Pakistan abstains

by Top
April 6, 2022
Next Post
King approves 18 new salary scales for public sector

King approves 18 new salary scales for public sector

Popular Stories

  • Dancing On Ice

    Samia Ghadie Looks Stunning In Golden Ensemble At Dancing On Ice

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Suranne Jones gets hot and heavy on stage in raciest role to date

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • 9 Exotic Cat Breeds You May Have Never Seen Before

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Army Promotes Four Major Generals to Lt General Rank

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • McDonald’s Pakistan Serving Haram and Expired Chinese Meat!

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Times of Pakistan

About Times Of Pakistan

kralbetbetturkeyikimislibahis1xbetm.infohipas.infohttps://www.wiibet.com/restbetcdn.com

Other Categories

  • Beautiful Pakistan
  • Fashion News
  • Funny News
  • Viral Videos
  • Weird News

Recent Posts

  • Imran Khan finding another Saqib Nisar in the judiciary says, Maryam Nawaz
  • No concern yet monkeypox will cause pandemic: WHO
  • Petrol, and diesel in Pakistan still cheaper than UK, BD, India, UAE

Times Of Pakistan © 2021. Design & Developed by E2E Solution Providers.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • International News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In