Photo: IRIN. A study found that the police and others were sometimes reluctant to believe stories of incest (file photo)
Source: IRIN
LAHORE, 7 June 2012 (IRIN) - Sidra Bibi*was a young girl living with her
parents and siblings in the Pakistani city of Lahore when she suffered
sexual abuse, and the trauma has lived with her over the years.
“My mother, my father, my aunts and my uncles all connived to protect my
paternal grandfather, who was abusing me, my sister and our female
cousins since we were six or seven years old,” Sidra, now 30 and
married, told IRIN. The grandfather, she added, asked the girls to
masturbate him, then committed anal penetration on Sidra and her cousin.
“We were asked to keep quiet as the truth would destroy the family,”
said Sidra, who is certain the matter was discussed among the adults in
the family, but no action taken as “my grandfather was a respected
elder”. Sidra has also never told her husband what she experienced, but
says she is “very protective” of her own small daughter.
Sidra is just one victim. According to media reports, sexual abuse is
not uncommon in Pakistan and ranges from harassment to incest.
Some traditional leaders, however, deny that sexual abuse happens.
“Look, these things don’t happen here. It is all Western propaganda.
Muslim women here are safe at home, and I always advise people to ensure
their daughters, wives and sisters stay home - except for school, or
maybe to visit a close relative. They are unsafe beyond their homes,”
said Maulvi Abdul Haq, a prayer leader at a local mosque.
However, Sahil, an anti-child abuse NGO based in the capital Islamabad,
says 2,303 cases of child sexual abuse were reported in the national
press in 2011, including 56 cases of incest.
Cover-ups
Saad Ahmed Khan, programme officer (media) for Sahil, told IRIN: “Even
now, this is an issue people cover up because of the social stigma and
pressures involved… We are certain many, many more cases occur than are
reported, sometimes because they occur in remote areas where the media
cannot reach, and in other cases because people prefer not to speak
out."
Aliya Abbas, a head teacher at a private school in Lahore, recalled a
seven-year-old pupil who complained about sexual abuse inflicted by her
older brother. “Her mother insisted the child was lying, and when I told
her there were signs of abuse in terms of her behaviour, she removed
her from my school. I often wonder how that child has fared and if she
ever spoke of her experience again,” he said.
Experts say the effect of this forced silence can be traumatic. “Sexual
abuse, especially incest, can leave very deep scars - even though these
may on the surface be invisible,” Ghazala Sumair, a psychiatrist, told
IRIN. “I have treated traumatized adult women, who are unable to
articulate what happened to them even 20-30 years after the incest they
suffered. This bottling up of a deeply emotional event just makes
matters worse.”
“I have never spoken to anyone about what happened. Even my mother never
mentions it. The events were too shameful," said Sidra.
Obstacles to justice
In 2011, a study
by the international human rights monitoring NGO Equality Now!, found
that victims of sexual violence faced “numerous obstacles in their
pursuit of justice”.
The study said the police, medical examiners and others were reluctant
to believe stories about incest, which means even those who report cases
struggle to obtain support. "Societal stigma presents obstacles at the
family and community level as well as the justice system," the study
noted.
"To be associated with such a crime is considered a source of shame, and
families cover up the incident to protect themselves. Upon trying to
seek justice rape victims are often treated in a dismissive manner,
accused of lying or having somehow brought the crime upon themselves."
Pakistan, according to the UN Childrens’s Fund (UNICEF),
has the second largest number of out-of-school children in any country -
nearly 25 million. Of these, seven million are of primary school-age
and 60 percent are girls.
*not her real name