Women
and religious minorities under the Hudood Laws in Pakistan
Naeem
Shakir, Advocate, Lahore High Court, Pakistan
Despite
international treaties, covenants, human rights declarations, movements at
global or local levels and resistance against repressive laws, norms, customs,
administrative
measures and policies, fundamental human rights continue to be enormously
violated in the world in general, and throughout Asia in particular. The
weaker
and marginalised sections of society are more vulnerable and hardest-hit. In
Pakistan, religious minorities and women have suffered tremendously
because
of state legislation, especially on account of the Hudood Laws. General
Zia-ul-Haq promulgated these laws to introduce the punishments of hadd into
criminal
law, in order to bring it into conformity with the injunctions of Islam as set
out in the Holy Quran and Sunnah. These laws include the
I.
Offence of Zina (Enforcement of Hudood) Ordinance 1979;
II.
Offences against Property (Enforcement of Hudood) Ordinance 1979;
III.
Prohibition Enforcement of Hadd Order IV 1979;
IV.
Offence of Qazf (Enforcement of Hudood) Ordinance 1979; and,
V.
Execution of the Punishment of Whipping Ordinance 1979.
These
laws were supposedly made to Islamise Pakistani society, and provide justice to
the people. However, in the process, the military adopted administrative
and
legislative measures in an arbitrary, non-democratic and sectarian manner.
Apart from legislation on religious lines, a religious court was established by
amending
the Constitution. The introduction of a new court, the Federal Shariat Court,
not only jeopardized the whole judicial system of the country but impaired
the
independence of the Parliament as well, because it was empowered to annul any
regulation found repugnant to the Holy Quran and Sunnah in its judgement.
Ironically,
these provisions and the Islamic punishments—which included stoning to death,
amputation of hands and feet and flogging in public—were also made
applicable
to non-Muslim citizens of the country. Minorities have been consistently
raising their voices against the application of a Shariah to which they do not
belong.
Women too have been very critical about the enforcement of these laws, particularly
against the law relating to adultery and rape.
The
Offence of Zina (Enforcement of Hudood) Ordinance 1979 (the Ordinance) has been
the most contentious piece of legislation because of its conceptual
inaccuracies,
textual errors, religious and gender discrimination, and of course, abuse in
application of law. A brief examination of the law will help capture the
vulnerable
situation felt by women and religious minorities in Pakistan. But unless the
text of the law is laid before the reader, it cannot be properly appreciated.
Therefore
the text is given hereunder.
The
Offence of Zina (Enforcement of Hudood) Ordinance, 1979
An
Ordinance to bring in conformity with the injunctions of Islam the law relating
to the offence of zina
WHEREAS
it is necessary to modify the existing law relating to zina so as to bring it
in conformity with the Injunctions of Islam as
set
out in the Holy Quran and Sunnah;
AND
WHEREAS the President is satisfied that circumstances exist which render it
necessary to take immediate action;
Now
THEREFORE, in pursuance of the Proclamation of the fifth day of July 1977
(C.M.L.A. Order No. 1 of 1977), and in exercise
of
all powers enabling him in that behalf, the President is pleased to make and
promulgate the following Ordinance:-
1.
Short title, extent and commencement.
(1)
This Ordinance may be called the Offence of Zina (Enforcement of Hudood )
Ordinance, 1979.
(2)
It extends to the whole of Pakistan.
(3)
It shall come into force on the twelfth day of Rabi-ul-Awwal, 1399 Hijri, that
is, the tenth day of February 1979.
2.
Definitions.
In
this Ordinance, unless there is anything repugnant in the subject of context,
(a)
"adult" means a person who has attained, being a male, the age of
eighteen years or, being a female, the age of sixteen
years,
or has obtained puberty;
(b)
"hadd" means punishment ordained by the Holy Quran or Sunnah;
(c)
"marriage" means marriage which is not void according to the personal
law of the parties, and "married" shall be construed
accordingly;
(d)
"muhsan" means-
(i)
a Muslim adult man who is not insane and has had sexual intercourse with a
Muslim adult woman who, at the time he
had
sexual intercourse with her, was married to him and was not insane; or
(ii)
a Muslim adult woman who is not insane and has had sexual intercourse with a
Muslim adult man who, at the time she
had
sexual intercourse with him, was married to her and was not insane; and
(e)
"tazir" means any punishment other than hadd, and all other terms and
expressions not defined in this Ordinance shall have the same meaning as the
Pakistan
Penal Code, or the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898.
3.
Ordinance to override other Laws.
The
provision of this Ordinance shall have effect notwithstanding anything
contained in any other law for the time being in force.
4.
Zina.
A
man and a woman are said to commit ‘zina' if they willfully have sexual
intercourse without being validly married to each other.
Explanation:-
Penetration is sufficient to constitute the sexual intercourse necessary to the
offence of zina.
5.
Zina liable to hadd.
(1)
Zina is zina liable to hadd if:-
(a)
it is committed by a man who is an adult and is not insane with a woman to whom
he is not, and does not suspect himself to be married; or
(b)
it is committed by a woman who is adult and is not insane with a man to whom
she is not, and does not suspect herself
to
be, married.
(2)
Whoever is guilty of zina liable to hadd shall, subject to the provisions of
this Ordinance,-
(a)
if he is a muhsan, be stoned to death at public place; or
(b)
if he or she is not a muhsan, be punished, at a public place, with whipping
numbering one hundred stripes.
(3)
No punishment under sub-section (2) shall be executed until it has been
confirmed by the Court to which an appeal from the order of conviction lies;
and
if the punishment be of whipping, until it is confirmed and executed, the
convict shall be dealt with in the same manner as if sentenced to simple
imprisonment.
6.
Zina-bil-jabr.
(1)
A person is said to commit zina-bil-jabr if he or she has sexual intercourse
with a woman or a man, as the case may be, to whom he or she is not
validly
married, in any of the following circumstances, namely:-
(a)
against the will of the victim,
(b)
without the consent of the victim,
(c)
with the consent of the victim, when the consent has been obtained by putting
the victim in fear of death or of hurt, or;
(d)
with the consent of the victim, when the offender knows that the offender is
not validly married to the victim and that
consent
is given because the victim believes that the offender is another person to
whom the victim is or believes herself or
himself
to be validly married.
Explanation:-
Penetration is sufficient to constitute the sexual intercourse necessary to the
offence of zina-bil-jabr.
(2)
Zina-bil-jabr is zina-bil-jabr liable to hadd if it is committed in the
circumstances specified in sub-section (1) of section 5.
(3)Whoever
is guilty of zina-bil-jabr liable to hadd shall subject to the provisions to
this Ordinance,-
(a)
if he or she is a muhsan, be stoned to death at a public place; or
(b)
if he or she is not muhsan, be punished whipping numbering one hundred stripes,
at a public place, and with such other
punishment,
including the sentence of death, as the Court may deem fit having regard to the
circumstances of the case.
(4)
No punishment under sub-section (3) shall be executed until it has been
confirmed by the Court to which an appeal from the order of conviction lies;
and
if the punishment be of whipping until it is confirmed and executed shall be
dealt with in the same manner as if sentenced to simple imprisonment.
7.
Punishment for zina or zina-bil-jabr where convict is an adult.
A
person guilty of zina or zina-bil-jabr shall, if he is not an adult, be punished
with imprisonment of either description for a term
which
may extend to five years, or with fine, or with both, and may also be awarded
the punishment of whipping not exceeding
thirty
stripes:
Provided
that, in the case of zina-bil-jabr, if the offender is not under the age of
fifteen years, the punishment of whipping shall be
awarded
with or without any other punishment.
8.
Proof of zina or zina-bil-jabr liable to hadd.
Proof
of zina-bil-jabr liable to hadd shall be in one of the following forms,
namely:-
(a)
the accused makes before a Court of competent jurisdiction a confession of the
commission of the offence; or
(b)
at least four Muslim adult male witnesses, about whom the Court is satisfied,
having regard to the requirements of tazkiya
al-shuhood,
that they are truthful persons and abstain from major sins (kabair), give
evidence as eye-witnesses of the act of
penetration
necessary to the offence:
Provided
that, if the accused is a non-Muslim, the eyewitnesses may be non-Muslims.
Explanation:-
In this section "tazkiya-al-shahood" means the mode of inquiry
adopted by a Court to satisfy itself as to the credibility
of a
witness.
9.
Case in which hadd shall not be enforced.
(1)
In a case in which the offence of zina or zin-bil-jabr is proved only by the
confession of the convict, hadd, or such part of it
as
is yet to be enforced, shall not be enforced if the convict retracts his
confession before the hadd or such other part is
enforced.
(2)
In case in which the offence of zina or zina-bil-jabr is proved only by
testimony, hadd or such part of it as is yet to be
enforced,
shall not be enforced, so as to reduce the number of eyewitnesses to less than
four.
(3)
In the case mentioned in sub-section (1), the Court may order retrial.
(4)
In the case mentioned in sub-section (2), the Court may award tazir on the
basis of the evidence on record.
10.
Zina or zina-bil-jabr liable to tazir.
(1)
Subject to provisions of section 7, whoever commits zina or zina-bil-jabr which
is not liable to hadd, or for which proof in either of the forms mentioned
in
section 8 is not available and the punishment of qazf liable to hadd has not
been awarded to the complainant, for which hadd may not be enforced
under
this Ordinance, shall be liable to tazir.
(2)
Whoever commits zina liable to tazir shall be punished with rigorous
imprisonment for a term which [may extend to] ten
years
and with whipping numbering thirty stripes, and shall also be liable to a fine.
(3)
[Subject to sub-section (4), whoever] commits zina-bil-jabr liable to tazir
shall be punished with imprisonment for a term
which
shall not be less than four years nor more than twenty five years and shall
also be awarded the punishment of whipping
numbering
thirty stripes.
(4)
When zina-bil-jabr liable to tazir is committed by two or more persons in
furtherance of common intention of all, each of such
person
shall be punished with death.
11.
Kidnapping, abducting or inducing women to compel for marriage, etc.
Whoever
kidnaps or abducts any woman with intent that she may be compelled, or knowing
it to be likely that she will be
compelled,
to marry any person against her will, or in order that she will be forced or
seduced to illicit inter-course, shall be
punished
with imprisonment for life and with whipping not exceeding thirty stripes, and
shall also be liable to fine; and whipping not
exceeding
thirty stripes, and shall also be liable to fine; and whoever by means of
criminal intimidation as defined in the Pakistan
Penal
Code, or of abuse of authority or any other method of compulsion, induces any
woman to go from any place with intent that
she
may be, or knowing that it is likely that she will be, forced or seduced to
illicit inter-course with another person shall also be
punishable
as aforesaid.
12.
Kidnapping or abducting in order to subject person to an unnatural lust.
Whoever
kidnaps or abducts any person in order that such person may be subjected, or
may be so disposed of as to be put in
danger
of being subjected, to the unnatural lust of any person, or knowing it to be
likely that such person will be so subjected or
disposed
of, shall be punished with death or rigorous imprisonment for a term which may
extend to twenty five years, and shall also
be
awarded the punishment of whipping not exceeding thirty stripes.
13.
Selling person for purposes of prostitution, etc.
Whoever
sells, lets to hire, or otherwise disposes of any person with intent that such
person shall at any time be employed or used for the purpose of
prostitution
or illicit intercourse with any person or for any unlawful and immoral purpose,
or knowing it to be likely that such person will at any time be
employed
or used for any such purpose, shall be punished with imprisonment for life and
with whipping not exceeding thirty stripes, and shall also be liable to
fine.
Explanation:-
(a)
When a female is sold, let for hire, or otherwise disposed of to a prostitute
or to any person who keeps or manages a
brothel,
the person so disposing of such female shall, until the contrary is proved, be
presumed to have disposed of her with the
intent
that she be used for the purpose of prostitution.
(c)
For the purposes of this section and section 14 "illicit intercourse"
means sexual intercourse between persons not united by
marriage.
14.
Buying person for purposes of prostitution, etc.
Whoever
buys, hires or otherwise obtains possession of any person with intent that such
person shall at any time be employed or
used
for the purposes of prostitution or illicit intercourse with any person or for
any unlawful and immoral purpose, or for knowing it
to
be likely that such person will at any time be employed or used for any such
purpose, shall be punished with imprisonment for
life
and with whipping not exceeding thirty stripes, and shall also be liable to
fine.
Explanation:-
Any prostitute or any person keeping or managing a brothel, who buys, or hires
or otherwise obtains possession of a
female
shall, until the contrary is proved, be presumed to have obtained possession of
such female with the intent that she shall be
used
for the purpose of prostitution.
15.
Cohabitation caused by a man deceitfully inducing a belief of lawful marriage.
Every
man who by deceit causes any woman who is not lawfully married to him to
believe that she is lawfully married to him and to
cohabit
with him in that belief, shall be punished with rigorous imprisonment for a
term which may extend to twenty-five years and
with
whipping not exceeding thirty stripes, and shall also be liable to fine.
16.
Enticing or taking away or detaining with criminal intent a woman.
Whoever
takes or entices away any woman with intent that she may have illicit
intercourse with any person, or conceals or detains
with
intent any woman, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for
a term which may extend to seven years and
with
whipping not exceeding thirty stripes, and shall also be liable to fine.
17.
Mode of execution of punishment of stoning to death.
The
punishment of stoning to death awarded under section 5 or section 6 shall be
executed in the following manner, namely:-
Such
of the witnesses who deposed against the convict as may be available shall
start stoning him and, while stoning is being
carried
on, he may be shot dead, whereupon stoning and shooting shall be stopped.
18.
Punishment for attempting to commit an offence.
Whoever
attempts to commit an offence punishable under this Ordinance with imprisonment
or whipping, or to cause such an
offence
to be committed, and in such attempt does any act towards commission of an
offence, shall be punished with imprisonment
for
a term which may extend to one-half of the longest term provided for that
offence, with whipping not exceeding thirty stripes, or
with
such fine as is provided for the offence, or with any two of, or all the
punishments.
19.
Application of certain provisions of Pakistan Penal Code, and amendment.
(1)
Unless otherwise expressly provided in this Ordinance, the provisions of
section 34 to 38 of Chapter II, sections 63 to 72 of Chapter III and Chapters
V
and VA of the Pakistan Penal Code, shall apply, mutatis mutandis, in respect of
offences under this Ordinance.
(2)
Whoever is guilty of the abetment of an offence liable to hadd under this
Ordinance shall be liable to the punishment
provided
for such offence as tazir.
(3)
In the Pakistan Penal Code,
(a)
section 366, section 372, section 373, section 375 and section 376 of Chapter
XVI shall stand repealed; and
(b)
in section 367, the words and comma or to the unnatural lust of any person,
shall be omitted.
20.
Application of Code of Criminal Procedure 1898 and amendment.
(1)
The provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, hereafter in this
section referred to as Code, shall apply, mutatis
mutandis
in respect of cases under this Ordinance:
Provided
that, if it appears in evidence that the offender had committed a different
offence under any other law, he may, if the Court is competent to try
that
offence and award punishment therefor, be convicted and punished for that
offence.
Provided
further that an offence punishable under this Ordinance shall be triable by a
Court of Sessions and not by a
Magistrate
authorized under section 30 of the said Code and an appeal from the order of
the Court of Sessions shall lie to the
Federal
Shariat Court:
Provided
further that a trial by a Court of Sessions under this Ordinance shall
ordinarily be held at the headquarters of Tehsil in
which
the offence is alleged to have been committed.
(2)
The provisions of the Code relating to the confirmation of sentence of death
shall apply, mutatis mutandis, to confirmation of
sentence
under this Ordinance.
(3)
The provisions of section 198, section 199, section 199A or section 199B of the
Code shall not apply to the cognizance of
an
offence punishable under section 15 or section 16 of the Ordinance.
(4)
The provisions of sub-section (3) of section 391 or section 393 of the Code
shall not apply in respect of the punishment of
whipping
awarded under this Ordinance.
(5)
The provisions of Chapter XXIX of the Code shall not apply in respect of
punishments awarded under section 5 or section 6
of
this Ordinance.
(6)
In the Code, section 561 shall stand repealed.
21.
Presiding Officer of Court to be Muslim.
The
Presiding Officer of the Court by which case is tried, or an appeal is heard,
under this Ordinance shall be a Muslim.
Provided
that, if the accused is a non-Muslim, the Presiding Officer may be a
non-Muslim.
22.
Saving.
Nothing
in this Ordinance shall be deemed to apply to the cases pending before any
Court immediately before the commencement
of
this Ordinance, or to offences committed before such commencement.
This
legislation has played havoc with the lives of women in Pakistan due to the
inherent flaws and lacunas in the text, and because it has been applied in bad
faith
by prosecuting lawyers, both public and private. The National Commission on the
Status of Women, a statutory body of the federal government of Pakistan,
has
recognized this fact in that 80% of women languishing in jails are there as a
result of the ambiguities in this legislation with regards to adultery, rape,
kidnapping
and abduction.
Rape
is endemic in Pakistan. The 2002 annual report of the Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan observes that 'one woman is being raped every two hours,
and
one woman is gang-raped every eight hours' Most of the cases go unreported
because of social taboos and the stigma that the wretched act carries against
a
woman. For those who do come forward, they face immense legal and
administrative obstacles to having their cases heard.
The
Commission recently assigned a Special Committee, consisting of judges, lawyers
and Islamic scholars, , among whom the author was a member, to review
the
Hudood Laws. The Special Committee has taken serious exception to the lacunas,
abuse and flawed application of the legislation and has made
recommendations
that would bring about radical changes in the statute, and make it inapplicable
to non-Muslim citizens of the State. Some areas of the
Ordinance
that the Special Committee took particular exception to are as follows.
Under
the Ordinance, sexual intercourse is adultery whether it is with or without the
consent of a woman who is not married with a man. The result has been that
whenever
a woman has complained of rape, particularly if coming from a village, she has
been roped into the offence. Her statement that she has been engaged
in
sexual intercourse has been treated as a confession allowing her to be charged
with the offence of zina. At the same time, it is virtually impossible for her
to
prove
that she was raped, and did not engage in the sexual act voluntarily, because
section 8 of the Ordinance requires evidence of at least four adult male
Muslim
eye witnesses who have physically seen the act of penetration. But the matter
does not end here. The credibility of the witnesses has to be measured and
tested
in the light of the Islamic principle 'tazkiya tu shahood' which requires a
witness to be a person who abstains from major sins as described under the
injunctions
of Islam.
Pregnancy
is considered to be absolute proof of having committed the offence. Jehan Mina,
a 15-year-old, was sentenced to 100 stripes after she was found to
be
pregnant. Her two male relatives had raped her. The Federal Shariat Court,
while taking a 'charitable view' reduced the number of stripes to 10. Safia
Bibi’s
case
brought shame to the whole nation when the world media flashed the news. Safia
Bibi is blind, and so she was unable to identify her rapist, and thus was
sentenced
as her pregnancy served as absolute proof against her. Ironically, the
judgement records that 'taking a lenient view due to Safia Bibi’s blindness,
she is
sentenced
to 30 stripes only' Fahmida was the first woman who was sentenced to 100
stripes along with Allah Bakash, who was awarded punishment of death by
stoning.
Zafran
Bibi was sentenced to death by stoning for committing the offence of zina in
April 2002. This is another case that embarrassed all, including the state
functionaries,
as the world media once again exposed the shameful situation for women in
Pakistan. The female victim was sentenced but the male accused was
acquitted
for lack of evidence. According to Zafran Bibi, her brother-in-law Jamal Khan
repeatedly raped her while her husband Niamat Gul was in jail. Her
pregnancy
again amounted to 'evidence' of her crime. Her father-in-law Zabta Khan lodged
the report but in order to save his other son he accused a neighbour,
Akmal
Khan, of the offence.
This
Ordinance also creates a gender imbalance, as the age for criminal liability is
18 for a male and 16 for a female, or if on attaining puberty. The rationale
adopted
by the authors of the Ordinance may have been that girls develop earlier than
boys. But an essential ingredient in the commission of an offence is the
intent
to commit the offence. How can a girl of 11 or 12 years, having attained
puberty, be expected to understand the implications of adultery, or rape, if
enticed
away
and abused?
There
is a difference of opinion among Muslim scholars on the punishment of hadd.
Most agree that Hadd is punishment as provided in the Holy Quran. However,
a
few maintain that—and the Ordinance follows this argument—'Sunnah' (the
practice of the Prophet) is also a source of law upon which such punishment can
be
given.
The punishment of stoning to death for adultery has been drawn not from the
Holy Quran but from the Sunnah. Therefore this debate is very crucial for the
determination
of this punishment, which underpins the whole Ordinance. Likewise, the offence
of zina-bil-jabr has been derived from the Sunnah, as the offence
of
rape is not mentioned in the Holy Quran.
Religious
minorities have been hard-pressed under the rigours of this law, on which even
Muslim scholars are in disagreement, particularly with regards to
marriage.
The concepts of marriage and divorce among the citizens of other religions are
not the same as Muslims. Polygamy is allowed in Islam whereas other
religions
strictly forbid it. Some provisions of the Divorce Act applicable to minorities
are in conflict with the Ordinance. Yet, section 1(2) of the Ordinance says
that
it
shall extend to whole of Pakistan, and section 3 declares that its provisions
shall have effect notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the
time
being
in force. These provisions are repressive, arbitrary and discriminatory, as
despite being based on the Injunctions of Islam (as set out in the Holy Quran
and
Sunnah),
they have been imposed on non-Muslim citizens as well.
All
laws are subject to the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
Whereas article 227 of the Constitution provides that all existing laws shall
be brought
in
conformity with the Injunctions of Islam, however, article 227(3) has declared
that, "Nothing in this Part shall affect the Personal Laws of non-Muslim
citizens or
their
status as citizens." Therefore, the provisions of the Ordinance overriding
other statutes offend the spirit of the Constitution. It may be recalled that
in 1991 a
federal
statute was promulgated whereby Islamic Shariah became the supreme law of the
land. Section 1(4) of the Enforcement of Shariah Act lays down that,
"Nothing
contained in this Act shall affect the Personal Laws, religious freedom,
traditions, customs and way of life of the non-Muslims." Therefore this
law that
has subjected
non-Muslims to repression and discrimination for the last 24 years should be
invalidated on these grounds alone.
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