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A Horror Story Every Woman Must Read
Rozaneh Magazine ^ | July/August 2002 | Liz Weltch

Posted on 08/31/2002 1:51:52 PM PDT by LibWhacker

A Horror Story Every woman Must Read

by Liz Weltch

Glamour

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How could a human being - let alone a husband - disfigure a person in this way? It happened to Zahida Parveen, and it happens to thousands of other female victims of "honor violence" each year in Pakistan.

It was a seemingly ordinary night three years ago when Zahida Parveen, then 30, was asleep in a room with her two small children. Her family was poor, but she was happy with her life with Mehmood Iqbal, her husband of four years. All that changed in an instant when she was forced out of bed, viciously attacked and left for dead, her face mutilated beyond recognition. Her attacker: her 35 -year-old husband, who did it because he was convinced his wife was having an affair.

As awful as this incident sounds, it's even worse when you consider that it's not uncommon. Parveen lives in Pakistan, a country where such attacks on women - known as honor violence - take place too often. There's a saying in Pakistan that honor is like a person's nose. "If a person dishonors you, they say that person has cut off your nose," explains Riffat Hassan, Ph.D., a Pakistani-born Islamic theologian who teaches at the University of Louisville in Kentucky. "It's a metaphor, but in Pakistan people actually do it," Parveen is living proof of that. Today, with her husband n jail in Pakistan, Parveen agreed to give Glamour an exclusive interview and retell her tragic tale.

An Attack with no warning

Recuperating from her reconstructive surgery, Parveen sits curled up on a leather chair in the suburban Maryland home of Nasim Ashraf, M.D., the kidney specialist and Pakistani expatriate who arranged for Parveen to have her face reconstructed. Shakir, Parveen's younger brother, is perched protectively beside her.

Parveen looks like a child. At just 4'11", her 78-pound frame practically disappears beneath her black floral shalwar kameez, the billowy pants and ankle-length dress that is Pakistan's national dress. A black-and-white-checked scarf is wrapped loosely around her head, and every so often it slips down to reveal the wavy black hair covering the severed lobes that were once ears. Her prosthetic eyes are just a week old, the two brown-pupiled glass globes held tentatively in place by a few thin strips of surgical tape affixed to the outer lids. A gauze pad is taped to the bridge of what was once her nose, now a gnarled mass of scar tissue marked by two jagged holes.

Aseela Ashraf, Dr. Ashraf's wife, arrives and pat Parveen gently on her bony back before sitting down. The two women have become close and Parveen now has two people she trusts to translate and fill in details that are too painful for her to talk about.

Parveen's first arranged marriage took place when she was about 16, which is common in Pakistan. Luckily, Parveen liked her firs husband. "We had a very good time together," she says. "He was a decent person." But it took many frustrating years of trying before she became pregnant. "When I found out I was with child, I was so happy. Then my husband died of a heart attack before our son was born," she remembers matter-of-factly, as if tragedy is an accepted fact of her life.

Parveen moved back in with her mother to deliver the child. At first, she didn't want to remarry. But soon, a local matchmaker approached Parveen's family about Mehmood Iqbal, a barber living in a nearby village. "I was excited t meet him," Parveen says, shrugging her tiny shoulders. She married him, taking her one-year-old son to live with her new husband, and three years later, she gave birth to a daughter. My husband was fine the first four years of our marriage, " Parveen insists. "If there was something wrong with him, I would not have stayed." The one thing that struck her was that Iqbal was unusually quiet. "He would only sit and listen," she recalls, as if that might explain why he came undone. But when asked why she thought her husband went on to commit such a heinous act, Parveen answers, "It was the devil."

Actually, honor killings are part of the fabric of Pakistani married life. "Once a woman is married, it's culturally believed that she belongs to her husband and is supposed to be obedient - her behavior reflects on him," explains Sheila Dauer, director of Amnesty International USA's Women's Human Rights Program. Though honor violence takes place in other predominantly Islamic countries - including Jordan, Egypt and Turkey - Pakistan has received the most attention for these crimes. More than 850 women in Punjab ( a Pakistani region) were victims of honor killings in 1998 and 1999 alone, according to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. Amnesty International estimates that many more cases go unreported. Honor violence comes in many forms: Women have been shot, burned, strangled and mutilated with razors, axes and knives. The causes vary as well, from having affairs to asking for a divorce to talking to a man who's not a family member.

Left For Dead

Parveen, however, says she had no inkling that her husband was jealous. Any yet, on the night of December 20, 1998, he woke her and ordered her into the common room of their three-room home in Sukho, a rural village about an hour north of Islamabad, Pakistan's capital. There, Parveen, who was then three months pregnant with Iqbal's second child (but still weighed less than 100 pounds), saw a rope hanging from the raters, Iqbal, a stocky man, ordered Parveen to lock the bedroom door, but she refused, worrying that the children might wake up and call for her. "The kids are dead to you," he said. "You are no longer their mother."

Holding her captive, Iqbal accused Parveen of having an affair. Parveen insisted that she had never been unfaithful to him, but Iqbal didn't listen. Instead, he gagged her, bound her feet and hands and hung her upside down from the ceiling. As he beat her with a wooden ax handle, blood began to drip from her arms and legs. Then Iqbal, a barber by profession, traded his ax for a razor. He cut off the lower lobes of her ears, then sliced her nose at the base. "He next used a metal rod to poke out my eyes," she continues, "and then put his finger inside each socket to make sure nothing was left." Parveen hooks her skinny index finger in the air, makes a half-circle motion for effect and then holds her head with both hands as if the memory hurts. When Iqbal finished mutilating her, he cut the rope, causing Parveen to fall to the floor like a limp rag doll "He left me for dead," Parveen says, " and then he took our daughter and left." Parveen crawled across the floor, found a blanket, wrapped it around herself and passed out.

When she came to, the next morning, she heard her son crying. Realizing he was locked in the bedroom, Parveen began to shout for help. Two neighbors quickly arrived and, seeing the bloody mess, sent for the police. "They saw everything," Parveen explains. "The blood, the rope,. And I gave them a full statement." The worst moment, however, was when Parveen's son saw his mother's body caked in blood, her face mutilated and oozing. He crouched in the corner and began to wail. There was nothing she could do to comfort him.

That morning, Parveen's son went to stay with her mother, and Parveen was eventually taken to a government hospital. He story was published in two local newspapers, prompting Tehmina Daultana, then the Minister for Social Welfare, Women Development and Special Education, to visit Parveen in the hospital. Parveen credits Daultana with Iqbal's arrest, a rare occurrence given that few men who engage in honor are ever punished. "She threatened the police station," Parveen explains. "She said, 'If you don't find him and put him in jail, I'll have you all fired.'" Several days later, Iqbal was arrested at his sister's home and incarcerated without bail, and Parveen's daughter went to live with Parveen's mother and son. When Parveen heard the news, she was happy for the first time since the horrific incident. But that moment was fleeting.

Will I get my sight back?

The first few months in the hospital were difficult. Parveen had to wait for the cuts o her tongue to heal before she could eat solid food and her mutilated face throbbed with pain. The Crisis Center - an organization that offers medical, legal and psychological counsel to abused women - added her to its long list of tragic clients in need of help. One of the many ways the Crisis Center helps rehabilitate these women is by financing reconstructive surgery. The Center made arrangement for Parveen to get a new nose, but when she found out she wouldn't get her sight back, Parveen refused the operation. "What's the point of any surgery if I will never be able to see my children again?" she lamented

Parveen has never seen her youngest daughter, whom she gave birth to in the hospital in July 1999. Afar seven months in the hospital, Parveen finally left to live with her mother and children. Although she was happy to be home, it was a rude awakening. Her face resembled a ghoulish mask. "Her daughter was afraid of her, and that really hurt Zahida," Aseela Ashraf explains. "She told me that her daughter refused to sleep with her." Parveen's son, who was seven, was more understanding, but he would often come home in tears after other children teased him about his mother's condition. "It broke her heart," Dr. Ashraf explains. Though Parveen rarely ventured outside, when she did, she often overheard people wondering aloud what she had done to deserve the way she looked.

An Act of Bravery

More than a year after the attack, Parveen's case went to trial. Parveen went to court only to testify, concealing her face with dark glasses and a scarf wrapped around her head. On the witness stand, Parveen told her story. "She was very brave," remembers Nahida Mahboob Elahi, a volunteer lawyer for the Crisis Center who headed Parveen's case. "You should have seen the look of surprise on her husband's face. I don't think he realized she'd have enough courage to come forward." Iqbal maintained his innocence throughout, claiming he was forced to act as he did to save his honor. Parveen wasn't present for his testimony, but she recalls, "I did hear his voice in the crowd one day. Every time I remember that moment, I shiver."

On July 21, 2000, Mehmood Iqbal was convicted of attempted murder. "He got five years for attempt to kill, three yeas for cutting off her nose, three years for gouging out her eyes, one and a half years for her ears and one and a half years for cutting her tongue, " Elahi explains. "All of the offenses run consecutively, which adds up to 14 years." Though 14 years sounds like a slap on the wrist considering the crime, in Pakistan it's considered a life sentence, explains Dr. Ashraf, as life spans are shorter and prison conditions harsher than in the United States. In addition to jail time, Iqbal was fined for each of Parveen's mutilated body parts - a total of 1,090,000 rupees, or approximately $17,000.

Amnesty International USA's Dauer is amazed that Iqbal wound up in prison at all. "There are so many cases where men aren't indicted, let alone convicted and put in jail," she says. Cris Toffolo, Ph.D., Amnesty International USA's consultant on Pakistan, adds these startling statistics: "The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reviewed newspapers in Lahore in 197 and discovered result of domestic violence - only six people were arrested. No one was convicted. In 1998, 183 women died of burn injuries in Punjab. Only three people were arrested." Still, there's hope. General Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's military leader, assumed power in 1999 and vowed to eradicate honor violence. Dauer would like Musharraf's words translated into legislation: "The government must criminalize honor killings as murder.

The Road to recovery

Dr.Ashraf first read about Parveen in The Washington post on May 8, 2000, and called the journalist to see how he could help. "I wanted to do something to right this horrific wrong," Dr. Ashraf explains. "I also wanted to show the world that this barbaric behavior is not tolerated by Pakistanis." To that end, Dr. Ashraf traveled to Pakistan in July 2000 to meet Parveen. She was living with her three children, her mother, her brother, his wife and their three children - all on Shakir's meager barber's salary. Despite having read the account of the attack, Dr. Ashraf was shocked to see how badly mutilated Parveen was. Her eyelids had atrophied and literally attached themselves to the sunken curve of her empty sockets. "It's incredible," he insists, "that she survived."

When Dr. Ashraf asked Parveen to come to the United States for surgery her firs question was, "Will I be able to see:" "Of course the answer was no," says Dr. Ashraf, "but I told her it would help her children tremendously psychologically." Still, she was hesitant. "I didn't want to go alone," explains Parveen. But she finally agreed when dr. Ashraf arranged for Shakir to accompany her to Maryland. "She did it for her children," Aseela Ashraf is convinced. "She said there were many times when she wanted to die, but she worried about who would take care of the children."

Parveen arrived in Maryland on January 7. 2001, depressed and socially paralyzed. "Those first few weeks were very difficult," Aseela Ashraf explains. "Zahida did not say much. She was homesick, and at first she had a hard time sleeping. " Parveen agreed to come for only six months, a timetable that limited Craig Duresne M.D., the chief of plastic surgery at Fairfax Hospital who had agreed to do Parveen's surgery for free. rather than give her a new nose and earlobes, which would have taken several surgeries and up to a year and a half of rehabilitation, dr. Duresne decided to use prosthetics.

The operation, took about 6 hours. When the surgery was finished, Parveen had grooves in her skin where the prosthetics would slide in. It took several weeks for the swelling to go down before other prosthetic specialists could mold her new ears, eyes and a nose. But slowly, Aseela Saw a shift in Parveen's attitude, not to mention her appetite. "She gained 11 pounds while she was here ," Aseela says with a smile. What a transformation!"

But each week when she called her family - her mother and children would take the calls at their cousin's house, which had a phone - she would sink back into depression. "Zahida missed her children terribly and needed to get back t them," explains Aseela Ashraf. After only four months, Parveen asked if she could go home.

Trying to fulfill her wish, the doctors worked at full speed. Aseela Ashraf points to the day that Parveen got her new nose as pivotal in her recovery. "I almost started crying when they put it on her," Aseela remembers. "She asked me, 'How do I look' I told her she looked beautiful. You cannot imagine the smile on her face."

On May 7, five months after arriving in the United States, Parveen arrived back in Pakistan to a throng of local reporters. "She was in al the newspapers," says Aseela Ashraf, who spoke to Parveen week after her return. "She told me she came out of the airport pushing her luggage on a cart and gave interviews to all of the Journalists. "But the greatest thrill for Parveen was her children's reaction to her new face. "She was so happy," Aseela recalls. "She said, 'My daughter brought me a comb and asked me to comb her hair.' That was the same daughter who would not sleep with her."

Parveen's case is hopeful proof that Pakistan's views on honor violence are shifting. She's also proof of the human spirit's resilience. Dr. and Aseela Ashraf visited Parveen in her village in June, and neither could get over her transformation. "Previously," Dr. Ashraf says, "she had no self esteem and thought she was less than human. Now the entire village comes to visit!: If it was Iqbal's intent to shame Parveen along with brutally disfiguring her, he failed miserably. Astoundingly, since hearing of her return he has, according to Parveen, sent her messages looking to reconcile. She plans to respond to her husband's pleas with divorce papers as soon as they are in order. In the meantime, she wants to move forward. "It's more important that my suffering saves other women from this sort of thing in the future," she says. "Every time I hear about the birth of a female child, I worry about the powers working against her." She pauses a moment, then adds, "But at the same time, I know women can face anything. They have the strength.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: islam
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1 posted on 08/31/2002 1:51:52 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker
That this kind of horror could exist on earth ...

I'm speechless.

2 posted on 08/31/2002 2:01:45 PM PDT by IronJack
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To: LibWhacker
The religion of peace.
3 posted on 08/31/2002 2:04:39 PM PDT by AppyPappy
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

To: IronJack
I saw this on 20/20 or dateline just recently.....it's amazing that there is such an attitude against women in this world....I am lucky to be born in the age where we are treated equally...allowed to vote,etc.

{Idea: I wonder if there are any reperations to be had over this} :}

5 posted on 08/31/2002 2:06:36 PM PDT by Sungirl
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To: Sungirl
....I am lucky to be born in the age where we are treated equally...allowed to vote,etc.

....I am lucky to be born in the age a country where we are treated equally...allowed to vote,etc.

6 posted on 08/31/2002 2:11:24 PM PDT by Cagey
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To: IronJack
"That this kind of horror could exist on earth ..."..

This is truly unbelievable. I really can't even IMAGINE what kind of human could do something like this. I am sick. Where is God?

7 posted on 08/31/2002 2:14:21 PM PDT by ChasingFletch
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To: ChasingFletch
Where is God?

Why, is God a suspect? God didn't do this- and that's coming from an agnostic. If there be a God, why should he solve this problem for us when we possess the means to do so ourselves? I want God, if he's there, to intervene when an enormous asteroid is about to crack our planet in half. Starvation, muslim terrorism, disease- he's already given us the brains to do something about these things- we just need to do it.

8 posted on 08/31/2002 2:19:06 PM PDT by Prodigal Son
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To: AM2000; mikeIII
Our allies in the war on "terror?"

What kind of man does it take to do this to the mother of his children?

9 posted on 08/31/2002 2:19:23 PM PDT by keri
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To: IcelandicConservative
NO comparison. I am trying to get what your thinking but just can't.
10 posted on 08/31/2002 2:20:12 PM PDT by alisasny
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To: Cagey
....I am lucky to be born in an age and a country where we are treated equally NOW...allowed to vote,etc.

(It wasn't always that way here either....we weren't equal to men and treated unfairly...well..not me...so I won't be able to retrieve any reperations against the men in the country... :)

11 posted on 08/31/2002 2:21:32 PM PDT by Sungirl
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To: ChasingFletch
I really can't even IMAGINE what kind of human could do something like this.

I guess the correct answer is, a muslim. How democrats could in good conscience obstruct Dubya's war effort against these savages is beyond me; these are the conditions under which we can all expect to live in the future if Islam is permitted realize its dream of world conquest.

12 posted on 08/31/2002 2:23:35 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: ChasingFletch
The creature who did this, and those like him, are not human, rather they are homo sapien males.

The difference between them and human men is as wide as that between a feral alley cat and a lion.

Humanity is more than DNA...


13 posted on 08/31/2002 2:25:08 PM PDT by Long Cut
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To: LibWhacker
What kind of evil is at work to create a man capable of such brutality? Thank you for posting this. It gives me even more reason to be grateful for all that I have.
14 posted on 08/31/2002 2:27:09 PM PDT by McLynnan
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To: keri
What kind of man does it take to do this to the mother of his children?

(Here's a hint: think "islam"). And the human detritus we're talking about here is no kind of a "man", not even close. Exactly what it is, I'm not sure, and I'm not even sure I want to know. But it is VERY obvious what needs to be done with it. (hint: think "dirt nap")

15 posted on 08/31/2002 2:27:34 PM PDT by MarineDad
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To: LibWhacker
terrible.....

and what culture are we accepting into our country (by the 100's of thousands?) And what are we expected to do with those cultures? Tolerate them. Accept them. Celebrate them, even.... Diversity is good for us, remember.

And, when our daughters marry into some new culture.... when she ends up like this poor woman..... will we still tolerate, accept and celebrate this wonderful diversity?

16 posted on 08/31/2002 2:29:58 PM PDT by Minutes
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To: keri
"what kind of MAN..." Manhood, like humanity, is about FAR more than sex.

It is past time when we all realize that certain actions, attitudes, and behaviors render an individual's humanity null and void, along with any right to breathe our oxygen.

The world would never miss animals like this.


17 posted on 08/31/2002 2:31:03 PM PDT by Long Cut
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To: keri
There's no need to rag on Pakistan for this.. Pakistan isn't alone in this kind of brutality. You'll hear similar stories from all over southern Asia and the Middle east... it stems from a culture that puts 'image' over all else.. anything that ruins it is a 'humiliation' and must be avenged.. it's all just so sad..
18 posted on 08/31/2002 2:31:19 PM PDT by AM2000
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To: Sungirl
I am lucky to be born in an age and a country where we are treated equally NOW...allowed to vote,etc.

I know what you mean. And Sungirl, watch out when you use "NOW" in all caps for pete's sake! Someone will accuse you of being a card carrying member.

Speaking of NOW, where are they on issues like the one in this article? They may give a little lip service, but their primary goal and all of their effort is to expose the evil white male who happens to be American.

19 posted on 08/31/2002 2:31:47 PM PDT by Cagey
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To: Minutes
Multiculti and Diversity Bump
20 posted on 08/31/2002 2:31:55 PM PDT by StockAyatollah
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To: AM2000
You'll hear similar stories from all over southern Asia and the Middle east...

You can add South America to that list too.

21 posted on 08/31/2002 2:33:29 PM PDT by Cagey
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To: LibWhacker
And the twinkies in the alleged "news" media tell me I'm supposed to be opposed to the death penalty.

There are people who deserve to die. And should.

22 posted on 08/31/2002 2:34:14 PM PDT by Fintan
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To: Sungirl
...won't be able to retrieve any reperations against the men in the country...

Although you'd like to, you closet liberal!

23 posted on 08/31/2002 2:34:51 PM PDT by Right To Life
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To: Fintan
There are people who deserve to die. And should.

True. Those who brutalize/torture others.

24 posted on 08/31/2002 2:37:20 PM PDT by Right To Life
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To: Right To Life
Hey... I'll take money from an old man to help him ease his guilty conscience. :}
25 posted on 08/31/2002 2:37:29 PM PDT by Sungirl
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To: IcelandicConservative
Sorry, Ice, not even close.
26 posted on 08/31/2002 2:38:08 PM PDT by Let's Roll
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To: Cagey
And Sungirl, watch out when you use "NOW" in all caps for pete's sake!

EWww....didn't catch that..you're right...I can't stand those wo'MEN'.

27 posted on 08/31/2002 2:38:55 PM PDT by Sungirl
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To: IronJack
I'm trying to figure out what exactly the author means by this title. Does she mean, in a feminist sense, that all men are beasts and this could happen to any woman? Or, does she mean (which would be the correct meaning!), that the third world and false religions are barbaric and that western values are superior? Just curious....
28 posted on 08/31/2002 2:39:15 PM PDT by Pining_4_TX
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To: Cagey
Speaking of NOW, where are they on issues like the one in this article? They may give a little lip service, but their primary goal and all of their effort is to expose the evil white male who happens to be American.

Salient point. NOW is so anti-Anglo, that they gives atrocities elsewhere substantially less press. Exceptions noted, but generally speaking.

29 posted on 08/31/2002 2:39:56 PM PDT by Right To Life
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To: Sungirl
Hey... I'll take money from an old man to help him ease his guilty conscience.

When you put it that way, it sounds way more reasonable. :o)

30 posted on 08/31/2002 2:41:03 PM PDT by Right To Life
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To: Pining_4_TX; Khepera; goodieD
...the third world and false religions are barbaric and that western values are superior...

I vote for that position!

31 posted on 08/31/2002 2:42:14 PM PDT by Right To Life
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To: Cagey
How about the American father who set his son on fire in a California motel. The custody dispute wasn't going his way. The boy is all grown up now and the saddest thing I heard was when he said he wouldn't want to have children in case they looked like him. He was so young when his dad set him on fire, he didn't realize that his children wouldn't be disfigured as he was.

Evil exists everywhere.....

32 posted on 08/31/2002 2:43:20 PM PDT by OldFriend
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To: LibWhacker
As he beat her with a wooden ax handle, blood began to drip from her arms and legs. Then Iqbal, a barber by profession, traded his ax for a razor. He cut off the lower lobes of her ears, then sliced her nose at the base. "He next used a metal rod to poke out my eyes," she continues, "and then put his finger inside each socket to make sure nothing was left."

Good Lord...Words escape me.
33 posted on 08/31/2002 2:45:37 PM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: Right To Life
"...the third world and false religions are barbaric and that western values are superior..."

Can she say something like this in a public forum? I mean, won't she run afoul of some "controlling legal authority" or another? There's gotta be some kind of hate crime lurking in there somewhere...

34 posted on 08/31/2002 2:46:15 PM PDT by MarineDad
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To: MarineDad
In a PC world, it is a cathartic thing to say...,
35 posted on 08/31/2002 2:49:28 PM PDT by Right To Life
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To: LibWhacker
As awful as this incident sounds, it's even worse when you consider that it's not uncommon. Parveen lives in Pakistan, a country where such attacks on women - known as honor violence - take place too often.

Parveen's case is hopeful proof that Pakistan's views on honor violence are shifting.

Right, it's accepted, happens a lot and very few go to jail for it. But Pakistan's views are changing?!? Not. This sickens me to the core.

36 posted on 08/31/2002 2:51:34 PM PDT by technochick99
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
They should put this woman's torturer in a small room with the woman's father, and the woman's father's baseball bat.
37 posted on 08/31/2002 2:51:51 PM PDT by Right To Life
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To: OldFriend
The difference is that that kind of violence is not institutionalized here. Nor is it sanctioned by anyone, much less the Church. But in Pakistan and other islamic countries it has been sanctioned for centuries. Only now are they trying ever so gingerly to put lipstick on that pig, and only then when outsiders are looking on.
38 posted on 08/31/2002 2:57:30 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
At least he didn't do what Richard Ramirez did....
39 posted on 08/31/2002 2:59:55 PM PDT by M. Peach
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To: LibWhacker
"Iqbal accused Parveen of having an affair."

Geez, all I did was divorce the woman and give her
the house.. things are extreme over yonder, huh?

40 posted on 08/31/2002 3:00:00 PM PDT by humblegunner
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To: OldFriend
The diff is there is cultural acceptance of one and not the other.

A Dad who douses his six year old son in gasoline and lights a match is not accepted by anyone anywhere in this culture.
41 posted on 08/31/2002 3:03:26 PM PDT by SarahW
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To: AM2000
I think it's acceptable to rag on *any* country that enables and condones such as this. (Especially if that country has a dictator we are doing business with.)

I take your point, though.

42 posted on 08/31/2002 3:09:43 PM PDT by keri
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To: keri
I think it's acceptable to rag on *any* country that enables and condones such as this.

Good point. And for those who don't think Pakistan condones this sort of behavior, I invite you to investigate the efforts of Pakistani human-rights activists who have been trying to outlaw 'honor killings' for a very long time. I will do some research myself on this and see if I can post some links to this thread.

43 posted on 08/31/2002 3:12:03 PM PDT by AM2000
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To: LibWhacker
Please, please, please, dear friends. We must be compassionate, tolerant and understanding of Islamic traditions and customs which are different from ours. Who are we to say that their way is wrong and ours is right? There are no absolutes, as our moral relativist democRAT friends tell us. Can't we all just get along?
44 posted on 08/31/2002 3:16:26 PM PDT by Salvey
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To: LibWhacker
God, that's horrible! So she got a new nose? I wish the article showed the after photo. Thank God for Western technology. I read an article last year in "World & I" about Vietnam. I guess over there they have the odd incident where the throw acid on women's faces --though now I can't remember if it was domestic violence or for political reason. But anyhow, it's horrible.
45 posted on 08/31/2002 3:23:17 PM PDT by Sally II
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To: keri
It looks like my information was a bit outdated. Here's a report from the Washington Tiems, dated August 16, 2002. Apparently, the last Pakistani dictator (General Zia) made certain legal changes that made honor killings more prevalent. Also, some time in 1999 (I got the date from the sigi.org site), the Pakistani Senate under a democratic government refused to outlaw honor killings. If my memory serves correctly, that refusal was due to opposition from MPs in the Pakistani tribal areas (the same region al qaeda is regrouping in as we speak).

However, today, it looks like Musharraf (the current Pakistani dictator) is doing something to stem the tide.. more power to him. Read on..

source: The Washington Times


Musharraf targets abuse of Pakistani women

By Ralph Joseph
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The recent gang rape of a woman as punishment by members of another tribe has brought international attention on the gross abuses and humiliation faced by Pakistani women since former military dictator Gen. Mohammed Zia ul-Haq tried to reintroduce Islamic law in 1979.

Among the more horrific abuses in focus, besides rape, are such customs as "vani," in which teenage girls may be bargained away to settle feuds, and "honor killings," in which a woman may be killed by members of her family if she is perceived to have dishonored them by eloping or having an illicit affair.

Domestic violence, also widespread, includes instances of women being brutalized and often disfigured by violent husbands and in-laws. Together, these practices make Pakistani women among the most abused in the world.

While such practices are only now being brought into focus by domestic and foreign media, human rights lawyers say they have been battling them in the courts for more than 20 years, since Gen. Zia attempted to "Islamize" Pakistani law by military ordinance in 1979.

Today, another military dictator, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, who does not share Gen. Zia's views, is attempting to roll back some of the damage done by Gen. Zia.

Steps taken by Gen. Musharraf include a campaign to make women more aware of their rights, and administrative reforms that have made it possible for human rights violations to be quickly taken up in courts of law.

Before these reforms were introduced, "you would not even have heard of these cases" coming to light, a federal Justice Ministry official said in an interview in Islamabad.

The official, who did not want to be identified, said Gen. Musharraf has given the judicial authorities new powers to initiate legal action against rights abusers in cases where the victims are considered too weak or frightened to initiate action.

However, some of the facts coming to light make clear that Gen. Musharraf and his officials have a mountain of work ahead of them.

The damage done by Gen. Zia's hasty military ordinances included the legitimization of some ancient tribal laws and practices that treated a woman as the property of a man.

Gen. Zia's military decrees took away from the courts and the police the right to interfere in a "family affair" if a man kills a wife or daughter who has "dishonored" him, or barters away a daughter as compensation for murdering another man.

"A few years ago, the Senate refused to condemn the murder of women on the justification of preserving honor," said lawyer and human rights activist Asma Jahangir. "The freedom of women is still considered a 'strange' idea among [people] who consider them their property."

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reports that 150 women were sexually assaulted between January and June this year, while 82 women were murdered and 40 others were victims of "honor killings" across the country.

Some Pakistani newspapers and magazines, doing their own research, have come up with even higher figures. The Lahore-based Independent weekly said that in May, "honor killings topped the table of motives behind women murders, registering 37 cases" just in Punjab province, where the gang rape occurred.

The Karachi-based monthly Newsline, edited by female journalist Rehana Hakim, says that in 2001, 352 women who complained of rape were brought to Karachi's Civil Hospital for medical examination. About one-tenth of those cases were registered by the police.

The story of Mukhtaran Bai, who was gang raped in the village of Meerwala on June 22, might never have come to light had not a journalist heard about it a week later when a local landowner was trying to persuade her and her father to take legal action.

Days after the story was splashed across the globe, Pakistan's outraged Chief Justice Riaz Ahmed took action under one of Gen. Musharraf's reforms.

He acted to have legal proceedings initiated against those suspected to be involved, including the local police officer who had failed to register the woman's complaint.

Justice Ahmed's orders set in motion action by other ranking officials, including Punjab Gov. Khalid Maqbool, a retired army lieutenant general. At least four persons have been charged in the case.

46 posted on 08/31/2002 3:27:26 PM PDT by AM2000
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To: IcelandicConservative
EQUALLY AS HORRIBLE as Lorena Bobbit's little temper tantrum.

No this is much worse

47 posted on 08/31/2002 3:28:07 PM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Sally II
The throwing acid on their faces thing is very common in Bangladesh, today. Mostly by jilted men at the women who rejected them.
48 posted on 08/31/2002 3:28:30 PM PDT by AM2000
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To: Kaslin
A nose isn't nearly as vital as a penis :-)
49 posted on 08/31/2002 3:29:11 PM PDT by AM2000
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To: Pining_4_TX
It looks like the article was originally published in Glamour, a women's fashion magazine, so the title is probably just to draw readers' attention. I'm glad that Glamour is publishing serious stuff like this. It had gotten really dumbed-down.
50 posted on 08/31/2002 3:57:44 PM PDT by bleudevil
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