Pakistan: Cause for optimism
Pakistan: Cause for optimism as national assembly prepares to pass Acid Control and Burn Crime Prevention Bill
By Rebecca Buckwalter-Poza
Last week, the government of
Pakistan announced it would push the National Assembly to
pass the long-awaited Acid Control and Burn Crime Prevention
Bill this month. The bill, first introduced in January 2010
While passage is nearly certain, it remains to be seen whether the government will make a sincere attempt to implement this legislation - and, moreover, how effective its effort at enforcement may be.
Over the past few years, acid terrorism has begun to
provoke international concern While the motivations behind such acts vary,
perpetrators choose acid for simple reasons: it is cheap and
widely available, assault with acid is penalized relatively
lightly or goes unpunished, and victims who do not die are
marked, often disabled for life. When it does not kill, acid
leaves victims in agony --disfigured, deformed, and
sometimes blinded. Their limbs may be fused in the position
they held when burned. For those with access to medical care
surgery may lessen complications and reduce disfigurement,
but survivors struggle to overcome both physical and mental
injury and social stigma for the rest of their lives. In
Southeast Asia, girls may be attacked In Pakistan, the number of acid-related crimes is
rising. Last year, ASF The breakdowns that
reduce the likelihood of an acid attack being punished begin
at the local level. Many assaults go unreported, but when
victims do report acid attacks, the police may demand a
bribe to investigate, refuse to investigate, or accept a
bribe from the attacker to drop the case. In court, the
prosecution and judiciary are susceptible to the same
extralegal influences and pressure to adhere to social
norms. Illegal out-of-court settlements routinely deprive
victims of formal justice and keep acid attacks out of the
judicial system entirely. The text of the preamble "Whereas it
is necessary to make provisions to specifically criminalise
acid related violence by providing tougher and stricter
penalties, speedy trial of such heinous offences and for
matters connected therewith and incidental thereto;
and Whereas to further control the import, production,
transportation, hoarding, sale and use of acid to prevent
the misuse of acid as a corrosive substance and for the
purpose of treatment and rehabilitation of acid victims and
to provide legal support to them and for matters connected
therewith and incidental thereto." The legislation India and
Cambodia have been debating passing similar legislation If passed,
Cambodia's law Tentative progress in Bangladesh suggests cause
for optimism. In 2002, Bangladesh enacted specific, strict
legislation restricting the accessibility of acid.
Improvement has come slowly -- 146 individuals
Legislative reform will not necessarily translate to
substantive change in Pakistan, but it marks progress. The
National Assembly of Pakistan follows the Supreme Court of
Pakistan in demonstrating specific, formal opposition to
acid terrorism, laying the foundation for the cultural and
social changes that must accompany legal reform. Initially,
acid attacks were associated almost exclusively with honor
killings and the punishment of women suspected of immoral
conduct or acts of defiance, such as not wearing the hijab.
Opponents to the Acid Control and Burn Crime Prevention Bill
see the legislation as a restriction of their right to
discipline family and take action against perpetrators of
immoral conduct. Meanwhile, critical supporters claim that
the bill addresses the ideal with little regard for the
real, disregarding the deficiencies of government
infrastructure and social context. A Pakistani attorney
involved in its drafting, Faisal Fareed, points to the
disjunction between the legislation's mandate for free
medical care and rehabilitation and the lack of medical
facilities capable of providing such care. Despite its
flaws and the obstacles ahead, the Acid Control and Burn
Crime Prevention Bill represents an opportunity to make
remarkable progress in combating acid terrorism in Pakistan.
Its successful passage may also signal receptivity to the
involvement of civil society and international organizations
in policy reform. In passing this bill, the Pakistani
government puts progress ahead of politics. About AHRC:
The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional
non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human
rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded
in 1984. ENDS