Senior police officials take action over Rajanpur rape case

By
Ilyas Raza
Senior police officials take action over Rajanpur rape case

RAJANPUR: Taking action on a story aired by Geo News over a rape case, senior police officials on Saturday asked local policemen to take DNA test of a child a 13-year-old rape victim had given birth to and her alleged rapist.

On Thursday Geo News reported that a 13-year-old rape victim gave birth to a child in November last year, the only proof that could lead the court to her alleged rapist.

A* was raped last year at her Quran teacher’s house allegedly by 40-year-old Kashif.

Not bowing down to the backward traditions of the area, where often such incidents are hushed the victim’s father, a labourer, spoke out. After finding out that his daughter was pregnant he filed a case in the court, and decided to bring the child in this world so that it could count as evidence in the court.

Amendments in the rape law last year make DNA test for victims mandatory, penalise the police for delaying investigation, and allow victims to testify in court through an in-camera session.

Chairperson Human Rights Commission Pakistan (HRCP) Zohra Yousuf said that in this particular case the child will serve as crucial evidence. “After October 2016 the law makes DNA test compulsory in all rape cases. In this case it should not be difficult to establish a link,” she said.

Women rights organization Aurat Foundation director Mehnaz Rehman said that giving birth to the child was a "bold move" by the family. She said that in this case the rapist should be punished and expenses for the child should be borne by the state. "Even if the rapist- the child's biological father- pays for his expenses, he should have no contact with the child," she said.

Rajanpur, a city in south west Punjab is marred by social inequalities where large landowning families live alongside an extremely poor landless population.

*Name hidden to protect privacy