Mukhtar Mai Case: Supreme Court Rejects Appeal Against LHC Verdict. What Now?

Posted on April 21, 2011
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, People, Women
51 Comments
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Adil Najam

This is a sad and difficult post to write.

Today, the Supreme Court of Pakistan gave its verdict on Mukhtar (Mukhtaran) Mai’s appeal against an earlier verdict by the Lahore High Court (LHC).

The three-judge bench decided to uphold the LHC verdict. This means that the earlier decision will hold; of the six accused of Mukhtaran Mai’s gang rape, five are acquitted and a sixth will complete the life imprisonment that had already been awarded to him.

The exact wording and precise details of the judgment are not yet available, but here are the details as of now, as reported in Dawn:

ISLAMABAD: Upholding the Lahore High Court’s verdict, the Supreme Court’s three-judge bench acquitted five out of six suspects in the Mukhtaran Mai case on Thursday, DawnNews reported. However, the sixth suspect, Abdul Khalique will complete his life imprisonment sentence, the court stated in its verdict.

Speaking to journalists outside the Supreme Court, Mukhtaran Mai voiced a lack of confidence on the verdict and said that she that had lost faith in the judicial system. Human Rights organizations also condemned the release of the suspects in the Mukhtaran Mai case. When asked about a review of the Supreme Court’s verdict, Mukhtaran Mai said she would take a decision on the matter after conferring with her lawyers.

Mukhtaran Mai was represented by public prosecutor, Advocate Atizaz Hassan.

In the Mukhtaran Mai case, Police submitted a challan against 14 suspects in the Anti-Terrorism Court in July 2002. The court declared the death sentence to six suspects and released the other eight. After the verdict of the Anti-Terrorism Court was handed out, five suspects were released by the Lahore High Court’s Multan bench. Whereas, one suspect’s death sentence was changed to life imprisonment.

“I did not receive justice today, hence I have left my fate in the hands of God,” Mukhtaran Mai said while speaking to journalists from her house later. “The release of the suspects has put my life in grave danger,” she added.

We have written before about our respect for Mukhtar Mai, and how I have admired the grace and dignity under adversity that she has come to embody (here, here and here). I have detailed my own encounter with her and recounted how I saw this grace and dignity in practice. My view of her as a person and my dejection – certainly sadness, and even anger – at the decision of the three-judge bench cannot, therefore, be a surprise to anyone.

The verdict is not just a blow for Mukhtaran Mai (and the release of the accused could heighten the treats against her life) but it can and will be seen as another limp response to rape as a crime, a reflection of societal chauvinism, and a blow to womens’ rights in the country. Most importantly, the practical manifestation of the decision will be to deny closure to and to bring back into painful scrutiny the life of a woman who has already been through so much – too much – pain.

For all these reasons I am sad and angry at the decision. Of course, I realize that courts are meant to make decisions on the evidence available and the laws as stated (in principle, the system of justice works only if the idea that everyone – even the patently guilty – is innocent until proven guilty) and also that to accept the principle of an independent judiciary is also to accept the fact that the judiciary will sometimes make decisions that we will not like or agree with. Since I was not privy to the proceedings or to the details of the judgment from the three-judge bench, I do not know the legal minutia on which the judges made their decision. But, this is what I do know: I know that the social and political shadows of this decision will be deep and long – certainly for Mukhtaran Mai herself, but for all women, and for all of society in Pakistan.

For all these reasons, I believe that the next step has to be to go back to the courts. I hope that Mukhtaran Mai will not allow the case to die just yet. My understanding is that the three bench decision can still be appealed once before the full bench of the Supreme Court. I hope that Mukhtar and her legal team will do so.

I realize the emotional cost of such a decision on Mukhtaran, especially given just how long this case dragged in the Supreme Court the first time around. But I also know the importance of doing so, if only for advancing the judicial discourse on this important issue.

What happened to Mukhtaran Mai cannot be reversed, nor will society’s imbeded prejudices be over-turned by any one decision. But for those of us who believe that societal sanction for violence against women has to be over-turned, the battle for justice must go on; no matter how disheartened, sad or angry we may be at any one decision on any one day.

On the Twitter account in Mukhtar Mai’s name, a recent message read: “No court can weaken my resolve to stand against injustice.” I cannot agree with that sentiment more.

51 responses to “Mukhtar Mai Case: Supreme Court Rejects Appeal Against LHC Verdict. What Now?”

  1. Asim says:

    Oh Boy….here goes naan haleem again giving lecture on how some king did what 1400 years ago and what Quran says and what we do!

    Mister Naan Haleeem, if God made all these religions, dont ya think He would have done a better job and thought about future situations and conflicts? Now you are going to say that Islam is the only true religion…right? Then why didnt God release Islam before all the other religions and kept it the only religion on earth.
    Also, if Quran has answers to everything, then why muslims havent learnt anything from it in the past 1000 years and what reason do you have that muslims will learn anything from it in the next 1000 years?

    BTW, I am not expecting an educated answer from you!

  2. Today we have allowed the village elite a free hand to rape any woman in their village and get away with it. The feudal system wins and the poor lose their face yet again.

  3. Kazmi says:

    By the way, while I am disappointed in this decision, I think it shows society’s general attitude towards rape and women’s right, but there is no evidence that there was pressure or foul play in the decision.

  4. Kazmi says:

    I agree with Prof. Najam. But I also respect the court’s decision. I am ready to embrace a legal system where I will not always agree with a decision and also one where if I do not agree with the decision I will not condemn the entire system. I will try to make my case stronger the next time and keep pushing the courts. I am sorry to see some of my fellow liberals reacting to this decision with the same venom that right wingers show when anything goes against them. I am disappointed in this decision but I will continue seeking justice in the system and work for a better judiciary.

  5. AlixKhan11 says:

    Do people even realize that when a case goes to court, it does not mean that the verdict will always be guilty? The whole “innocent unless proven guilty”, “burden of proof”, “beyond a reasonable shadow of doubt” stuff, you know.

    To say “I know that the social and political shadows of this decision will be deep and long – certainly for Mukhtaran Mai herself, but for all women, and for all of society in Pakistan.” is honestly meaningless. Justice should always be administered based on the law of the land and it’s just application to all segments of the society.

    What I would like to know is *why* they were acquitted? Lack of proof? Coerced statements from police? Incompetent paper work by prosecution? If you want a just and fair society, this is what we should be asking rather than passing verdict on Mukhtar Mai/Judges.

    Actually, I will be very interested in knowing the conviction rate in our land of the pure for various crimes. I hold a suspicion that rape is a tough crime to prosecute in Pakistan with its lack of forensic labs. We probably need Bill Grissom from CSI. Just imagine: CSI: Lahore :p

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