IN a year of political and economic turmoil, the collective conscience of the country was put to test early in the year when a in the Punjab town of Kasur, the body of a seven-year-old girl was found dead in a garbage dump. As it turned out, it was a rape-and-kill story. Police, as is usual, said it had any clue. Others complained that it simply wanted to sweep the whole thing under the rug. Zainab Amin had gone to the local seminary on January 4 before she disappeared. The year clearly got off to a wrong start. Her parents were not in the country, having gone perform Umrah. Her maternal uncle filed an FIR and five days after Zainab’s disappearance, the unthinkable was conveyed to the family. But was it really ‘unthinkable’ for the locals – at least the local police? After all, it was the 12th such incident in the city’s two-kilometre radius within a year.
The innocence of Zainab jolted the nation like little else had done earlier. The locals were furious. The nation at large was enraged. Headlines screamed blood. People took to the streets and #JusticeforZainab became a rallying cry for millions online. Imran Ali, the culprit, was eventually caught, prosecuted and hanged after a lengthy yet speedy trial, bringing a semblance of closure in a case in which the family members, and not the police, collected the crucial evidence that finally led to the arrest in the first place.
Closure though it was, the ghastly crime was – and is – a wake-up call on the social scale. It is surely not a one-off case. During the course of the year itself, other equally horrifying cases were reported from Karachi slums to Mardan, Dera Ismail Khan, Bahawalpur and Taxila. How many would have gone unreported, unnoticed is more than mere conjecture.
Such cases highlight the collective failure of society to protect its children. The reasons behind the crime remain prevalent and so the matter remains relevant. People are scared at the thought of leaving their children out of their sight. Neighbours, once a trusted entity in society, have become suspects. Even relatives. No child is safe. People have talked – and they had reason to talk – of a civil law that is lax and its implementation even more so. A step in that direction may well be a fitting tribute to Zainab’s memory.