Christian girl chained up in cattle pen for five months after forced marriage to Muslim
A Christian girl has been taken into care in Pakistan after allegedly being abducted by a Muslim man who forced her marry him and kept her chained up in a cattle pen.
The girl spent five months chained up in the pen in the yard of her 45-year-old captor’s home, where she was forced to work all day clearing the animals’ dung, her family claim.
They said that when rescued by police last month, she had cuts on her ankles left by the shackles put on her by captor, who is also said to have raped her repeatedly.
The case has now been taken up by human rights groups, who say the family’s initial complaint to police went ignored for three months. They claim that every year, hundreds of girls from Pakistan’s Christian and Hindu minority groups are abducted and forced into Muslim marriage, with the justice system often turning a blind eye for fear of offending Islamic hardliners.
They say that Britain, which gives £302 million in aid last year to Pakistan, should insist that more is done to counter prejudices against minorities and challenge institutionalised tolerance of sexual abuse.
In November, the Telegraph reported on the case a 14-year-old girl allegedly kidnapped by a Muslim man who then used threats of violence to make her sign false papers consenting to marriage.
When she escaped from his custody, a court initially ruled the marriage legal and returned her to her abductor’s home. She is now in hiding, with the British charity Aid to the Church in Need petitioning Boris Johnson to allow her to seek asylum in Britain.
Mr Johnson previously spoke out in favour of Britain granting asylum to Asia Bibi, a Christian woman who spent ten years on death row in Pakistan on trumped-up blasphemy charges.
The most recent case involves a girl from the city of Faisalabad, in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province, who was allegedly abducted from near her home on June 12 last year. The Telegraph knows her identity but is not disclosing it to preserve her privacy.
In a statement to Aid to the Church in Need, her father said that she had been raped multiple times. He added: ““[she] has told me she was treated like a slave. She was forced to work all day, cleaning filth in a cattle yard. 24-7, she was attached to a chain.”
He claimed that despite his repeated pleas, it was not until September that police allowed him to file an official complaint. One police officer allegedly called him a “chuhra”, a term of derision for Christians that translates loosely as “latrine cleaner”. Another officer, he said, threatened to register a blasphemy case against him.
He also disputed the findings of a court-commissioned medical report – carried out to assess whether the girl was underage – which found she was around 16 or 17. His daughter’s birth record proved she was only 12, he said. The court has placed the child in a women’s refuge pending further inquiries.
John Pontifex, of British-based charity Aid to the Church in Need, which campaigns on behalf of persecuted Christians worldwide, said the case “called into question” the effectiveness of UK overseas aid.
“Pakistan has for many years been the top recipient of UK aid and the premise for it has been the need to tackle extremism, abuse of girls and people from minority faiths,” he said. “Yet when push comes to shove, cases such as this show that Pakistan is doing very little both to help the victims and bring the culprits to justice.” (The Telegraph, UK)
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