Rape of Kainat Soomro January 2007, Mehar
Reporting cases of abuse in Pakistan is not only a taboo, law enforcers often act as a hindrance in getting the victims justice.
To illustrate this problem, the report details the case of a survivor, whose case received international attention.
Kainat Soomro was an eighth grader when she was abducted and gang-raped by men, who were allegedly under the protection of a local landowner.
The HRW reports that after escaping captivity, when Soomro tried to get a criminal case, the police initially refused.
“After persistent attempts to register their case, several members of her family were falsely accused and arrested for murder. Kainat Soomro told Human Rights Watch that her brother was murdered in 2010; she believes the police were complicit in his death.”
“Instead of helping us, the police harassed us.” she told the researchers.
She further alleged that the police summoned her brother under the pretext of recording his statement, “but instead headed him over to her rapists, who murdered him.”
Years later Soomro is waiting for justice to be served. “My family and I have been struggling for justice for nine years and the police have always acted as a hindrance.”
Harassment of Rehman*
2014, Quetta
Since the day he called off his daughter's wedding, Rehman, and his family, live in constant distress.
He told HRW that at a very young age his daughter was engaged to a man named Quddus.
With time Rehman realised that Quddus was not a “good man” and had the reputation of being a “local thug”.
Wanting the best for his daughter, Rehman broke off the engagement.
This did not sit well with Quddus, who started to harass Rehman’s family and threatened to kill his only son.
Scared, Rehman immediately went to the police station to launch a complaint.
“I should have known better.” he told HRW.
"The station house officer (SHO) had close ties with Quddus and it was commonly known that they had engaged in several criminal activities together. I continue to live in fear.”
*Pseudonym
Click to see more Discrimination of bonded labourers 2015, Umerkot
Speaking of how vulnerable bonded labourers or are in Pakistan, the report shares a latest figure from the Global Slavery report:
Pakistan has the third-highest number of people in modern slavery in the world, and “debt bondage is the most prevalent form of modern slavery.”
To detail how law enforcer ostracises these labourers, the report gives the example of a hari .
He told HRW that after the landowner’s men attacked both him and his son, he attempted to file a FIR at a local police station.
When multiple police stations refused to lodge the FIR, claiming that the matter did not fall under their jurisdiction, the labourer went to the court.
After the court ordered the complaint be lodged, the landowner started using pressure tactics.
“…the landowner approached another police station and accused me of stealing his motorcycle. As he is a man of influence, the police registered his complaint despite the fact that I was lying injured in the hospital at the time.”
The police continues to harass him and his family.
As for his own complaint: “Of course, there has been no progress...”