Home  
0
0

Contact Us

Feedback Form

About Us

Web Links

Visit this group

Ponzi Capitalism and the Deepening Moral Crisis

The Roller Coaster: The Communist Party in the 1940s

Rebuilding the Labor Movement in the 21st Century, an Interview with Scott Marshall

Police Escalate Attacks on First Amendment Rights

Public Option: Worth the Fight

Our Socialist Inheritance and Future

Past, Present and Future: The Politics of Reform in the Era of Obama

Needed: Constitutional Amendment for the Right to a Earn a Living Wage

Why Should Grassroots Liberals Consider Marxism?

Is That Specter Really Collapsing?

Carlo Tresca: The Dilemma of an Anti-Communist Radical

The Brief, Revolutionary Life of Joe Hill

Movie Review: Giải phóng Sài Gòn

Review: Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth

Poetry, November 2009

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2006 – online /July – August 2006 /Jul. 3 – Jul. 9 Print | Send to friend

Pakistan: Over a thousand women freed under change in law



click here for related stories: human rights
7-10-06,9:36am


ISLAMABAD, 10 Jul 2006 (IRIN) - Women prisoners in Pakistan freed under an amendment to a controversial Islamic law began to be released over the weekend.

President General Pervez Musharraf amended the law, which has been on the statute book since 1979, on Friday. The change means women convicted of adultery or sex outside marriage can be released on bail rather than having to serve prison sentences.

The long-awaited amendment to the Hudood Ordinance would affect thousands of female prisoners, Pakistan’s Minister for Women’s Affairs, Sumaira Malik, told journalists in the capital, Islamabad.

“President Musharraf has taken a bold decision to protect the rights of women and save them from the misuse of Islamic laws,” Malik said. More than 1,300 women left a number of penal institutions on Saturday as a result of the change in the law.

Under the Hudood Ordinance - passed under the military dictatorship of the late General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq - women could be sentenced to death if found guilty of having sex outside marriage. The ordinance did not allow for women to be released on bail and specified a mandatory prison sentence for such offences.

Currently some 6,500 women are incarcerated in Pakistan awaiting trial on Hudood Ordinance charges, which critics say are blatantly discriminatory against women.

The government said it would provide legal and financial assistance to help rehabilitate those women released as a consequence of the changes.

Musharraf put his signature to the legal amendment during a meeting of female parliamentarians that he chaired.

During Friday’s meeting, Musharraf also indicated the government’s intention to scrap the Hudood Ordinance completely, according to those in attendance.

“The government will undo all those un-Islamic and inhuman laws enacted in the name of religion, Malik added.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) welcomed the move, but in a statement released on Monday, said the amendment did nothing to address the systemic flaws in the country's legal system.

“HRCP reiterates its stance that there is a need to repeal laws, particularly the Hudood Ordinances, which result in hundreds of women being unjustly jailed each year. The widespread abuse of power by police and the courts is also an issue that needs to be urgently addressed.

Ever since its promulgation, the Hudood Ordinance has been a source of controversy between liberals and conservatives in Pakistan. While religious hardliners like political party Jamaat-e-Islami are committed to protecting what they perceive as being divine rules, many civil society organisations and womens’s organisations have struggled to pressure successive governments to repeal them.


» PA Home » PA Online Edition July Print Edition » PA Subscribe






blog comments powered by Disqus
Take a Stand
( 10/01/2003 18:49 )


newcatcher@cpusa.org