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Child sex abuse in Pakistan’s religious schools is endemic

Child sex abuse in Pakistan’s religious schools is endemic

Kathy Gannon, Zarar Khan, Asim Tanvir and Riaz Khan

Yesterday

PAKPATTAN, Pakistan (AP) — Muhimman proudly writes his name slowly, carefully, one letter at a time, grinning broadly as he finishes. He’s just 11 years old and was a good student who had dreams of being a doctor.

School frightens him now. Earlier this year, a cleric at the religious school he faithfully attended in the southern Punjab town of Pakpattan took him into a washroom and tried to rape him. Muhimman’s aunt, Shazia, who wanted only her first name used, said she believes the abuse of young children is endemic in Pakistan’s religious schools. She said she has known the cleric, Moeed Shah, since she was a little girl and describes him as an habitual abuser who used to ask little girls to pull up their shirts.

“He has done wrong with boys and also with two or three girls,” Shazia said, recalling one girl the cleric brutalized so badly he broke her back.

An investigation by The Associated Press found dozens of police reports, known here as First Information Reports, alleging sexual harassment, rape and physical abuse by Islamic clerics teaching in madrassas or religious schools throughout Pakistan, where many of the country’s poorest study. The AP also documented cases of abuse through interviews with law enforcement officials, abuse victims and their parents. The alleged victims who spoke for this story did so with the understanding only their first names would be used.

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Pakistani student Muhimman, 11, who was allegedly abused by a cleric, sits with his parents in the south Punjab town of Pakpattan, Pakistan.

There are more than 22,000 registered madrassas in Pakistan, teaching more than 2 million children. But there are many more religious schools that are unregistered. They are typically started by a local cleric in a poor neighborhood, attracting students with a promise of a meal and free lodging. There is no central body of clerics that governs madrassas. Nor is there a central authority that can investigate or respond to allegations of abuse by clerics, unlike the Catholic Church, which has a clear hierarchy topped by the Vatican.

The government of Prime Minister Imran Khan has promised to modernize the curriculum and make the madrassas more accountable, but there is little oversight.

Police say the problem of sexual abuse of children by clerics is pervasive and the scores of police reports they have received are just the tip of the iceberg. Yet despite the dozens of reports, none have resulted in the conviction of a cleric. Religious clerics are a powerful group in Pakistan and they close ranks when allegations of abuse are brought against one of them. They have been able to hide the widespread abuse by accusing victims of blasphemy or defamation of Islam.

Families in Pakistan are often coerced into “forgiving” clerics, said Deputy Police Superintendent Sadiq Baloch, speaking in his office in the country’s northwest, toward the border with Afghanistan.

Overcome by shame and fear that the stigma of being sexually abused will follow a child into adulthood, families choose instead to drop the charges, he said. Most often, when a family forgives the cleric the investigation ends because the charges are dropped.

“It is the hypocrisy of some of these mullahs, who wear the long beard and take on the cloak of piety only to do these horrible acts behind closed doors, while openly they criticize those who are clean shaven, who are liberal and open minded,” Baloch said. “In our society so many of these men, who say they are religious, are involved in these immoral activities.”

‘I WANT THIS MULLAH HANGED’

Police officials say they have no idea how many children are abused by religious clerics in Pakistan. The officials said clerics often target young boys who have not yet reached puberty in part because of the restrictive nature of Pakistan’s still mostly conservative society, where male interaction with girls and women is unacceptable. The clerics for the most part had access to and trust with boys, who are less likely to report a sexual assault.

Eight-year-old Yaous from Pakistan’s remote northern Kohistan region is one of those boys.

Yaous’ father was a poor laborer who had no education and spoke only the local language of his area, yet he wanted to educate his son. He had heard of a religious school in Mansehra, several hundred kilometers (miles) south of his village, where other boys from the area had gone. Too poor to even own a phone, his father went for months without speaking to his son.

Yaous is small for his eight years. His features are slight. In an interview with the AP, with his uncle interpreting, Yaous’ tiny body shivered as he told of his ordeal.

It was near the end of December last year — a holiday at the madrassa. Most of the students had left. Only Yaous and a handful of students had stayed behind. His village was hours away, and the cost of transportation home was too much for his parents.

The other students had gone to wash their clothes and Yaous said he was alone inside the mosque with Qari Shamsuddin, the cleric. The sexual assault was unexpected and brutal. The boy said Shamsuddin grabbed his hand, dragged him into a room and locked the door.

“It was so cold. I didn’t understand why he was taking my warm clothes off,” Yaous said, his voice was barely a whisper.

As Yaous remembered what happened, he buried his head deeper into his jacket. The cleric grabbed a stick, he said. It was small, maybe about 12 inches. The first few sharp slaps stung.

“The pain made me scream and cry, but he wouldn’t stop,” Yaous said. The boy was held prisoner for two days, raped repeatedly until he was so sick the cleric feared he would die and took him to the hospital.

At the hospital, Dr. Faisal Manan Salarzai said Yaous screamed each time he tried to approach him. Yaous was so small and frail looking, Salarzai called him the “baby.”

“The baby was having a lot of bruises on his body — on his head, on his chest, on his legs, so many bruises on other parts of his body,” Salarzai said.

Suspicious, Salarzai ordered Yaous moved to the isolation ward where he examined him, suspecting he had been sexually assaulted. The examination revealed brutal and repetitive assaults.

But Solarzai said Yaous’ uncle refused to believe his nephew was sexually assaulted, instead he said the boy had fallen down. “He said the uncle finally said: ‘If news spreads in our area that he has been sexually assaulted it will be very difficult for him to survive in our area.’”

“He was not willing to talk about it or even think that he was sexually assaulted,” said Solarzai. But the evidence was overwhelming and the doctor contacted the police.

The cleric was arrested and is now in jail. Police have matched his DNA samples to those found on Yaous. But despite the arrest, fellow clerics and worshippers at the Madrassah-e-Taleem-ul-Quran mosque located in a remote region of northwest Pakistan dispute the charges. They say Shamsuddin is innocent, the victim of anti-Islamic elements in the country. The clerics and worshippers also say the accusation is part of a conspiracy to discredit Pakistan’s religious leaders and challenge the supremacy of Islam, a rallying cry often used by right-wing religious clerics seeking to enrage mobs to assert their power.

Yaous’ father, Abdul Qayyum, said he was ashamed he had not spoken to his son in more than three months before the attack happened.

“I want this mullah hanged. Nothing else will do,” Qayyum said.

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Mohammad Iqbal talks to her daughter Misbah, center, who was allegedly abused by her religious teacher in Leiyah, Pakistan.

‘FORGIVE ME’

Young boys are not the only victims of sexual abuse by religious clerics. Many young girls like Misbah, who is from a deeply conservative south Punjab village of Basti Qasi, have also been targeted by religious leaders.

Her father, Mohammad Iqbal, isn’t exactly sure how old Misbah is. He thinks she is 11 because in rural Pakistan many births are not registered or are registered much later, and it is just a guess when children are born. They share their small cinderblock structures with several goats and an extended family made up it seems of mostly children who play tag and run around the dirt compound. Misbah, who struggled for words, said she was raped in the mosque next door, where she had been studying the Quran for three years.

The assault happened one morning after she stayed behind to sweep the mosque. The other children had been sent home and the cleric, someone she trusted, asked Misbah to help.

“I had just began to clean when he slammed shut the mosque door,” she said in her native Saraiki language. “I didn’t know why and then he suddenly grabbed me and pulled me into a nearby room. I was screaming and shouting and crying. She couldn’t say how long the assault went on. All she could remember was screaming for her father to help her but he wouldn’t stop, he wouldn’t stop, she repeated.

It was her uncle, Mohammed Tanvir, who rescued her. He had been on his way to college but stopped at the mosque to use the washroom. He noticed a pair of child’s shoes outside the door.

“Then I heard screaming from inside, she was screaming for her father,” Tanvir said. He smashed the door down saw his niece sprawled and naked on the floor. “It looked as if she had fainted,” he said. Her blood-stained pants were in a corner. The cleric knelt at his feet.

“‘Forgive me’ he kept saying to me,’” Tanvir recalled. The cleric was arrested but freed on bail.

‘SUCH A BEAST SHOULD NOT NE SPARED’

In the wake of the attempted rape of Muhimman, the young boy who had proudly showed his writing skills, his aunt said there has been a concerted attempt to silence the family.

“The village people say these are our spiritual leaders and the imams of our religious places, and refuse to kick him out,” Shazia said

After the attack on her nephew, she said, the villagers came to their home and pleaded with them to forgive the cleric, Moeed Shah, who had fled the area.

“They all came to our home and they know we are poor and he is an imam and they said we should forgive him but we won’t,” Shazia said. She said her father, Muhimman’s grandfather, refused.

Shah has yet to be arrested, even though the assault was filmed by several village boys who broke down the door to the washroom and frightened Shah away as he tired to rape Muhimman.

Police say they are investigating and a charge has been filed, but Shah is a fugitive. Some of the neighbors near the mosque said police are not searching vigorously for him. They seemed angry but also resigned to the fact that he would not be jailed.

Muhimman’s aunt was inconsolable.

“Such a beast should not be spared at all,” Shazia said.

https://apnews.com/8fe530dc76beb1893b3b52af88cf99dd



they will burn in hell

Bulshit. Around 90% of seminary attendants had to face sexual harassment of sorts. Ask any madrassa student about his fellows, will spill the beans. The solution is simple have less babies and don't send kids to boarding---------. An overwhelming majority of those kids belong to poor background. Jammmi jaanday nay ty baado bahar sut dyndy nay


no

the solution is to enforce justice. they do this because they know they can get away with the crime
 
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Well if you want to discuss this topic in earnest, then here are my thoughts.

1. The child is the victim, I prepared my daughter at a very early age to recognize and react to potentially uncomfortable interactions with an adult. She is able to identify,respond to avoid danger.
2. Next I removed the stigma from potential abuse and encouraged open and honest communication. I am confident if god forbid she is assaulted she will talk to me and not suffer in silence.
3. My best friend is a child psychologist, and often with very few exceptions abusers are relatives or people the child knows and trusts. So all this malarkey of it can't happen in India/Pakistan/Bangladesh etc. is BS.

now...tell me what are you after?
Ma’am, I am guessing You didn’t get my POV of the debate, It is not about child abuse, it is about how this news is always shown on media with clear different intentions.

No sane person in the world would defend child abuse, It is the extreme low of mankind to indulge in such horrific activities, involving an innocent kid, Who doesn’t even know what is happening with them, a psycho pedophile satisfying his monstrous needs... Condemnable to the highest extent.

My point was that time to time, Media houses report this news with specific focus on maddrasas while evidently and clearly the well known child abuse scandals In Pakistan are from Kasur and how media vanished 2-3 days after any major incident happens, Why ?
Huge gangs are involved, political backing and money to media houses to keep low.

This was my point. Hope I have explained it.

Plus, In Pak, like I said before, These articles and newspapers seldom bring any major changes, People just scroll up and down, move on. Those who read, Feel sympathetic for 3 seconds and then...

So, instead of highlighting this again and again over the internet and portraying bad image of Pakistan deliberately, If they have such a humanitarian heart, stop taking money and bribes from others, arrange mass protests in front of government premises against such pedophilia act.

And guess what, a funny thing, First people condemn these acts, Then when Government decides to introduce punishment such as public hanging of these bastards, These same lot, sitting in media, use the chance to make articles against such hangings, Make money over that as well. Politics is a bad game you see...

And twitter ladies and men also go soft when these punishments are decided upon...
 
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Is that not allowed on PDF?

- PRTP GWD

@Mentee

Thanks for opening my eyes by mentioning 'Devadasi'. I didn't know.

HORROR!! HORROR!!

- PRTP GWD

But really what does it "PRTP GWD" mean?

Or you going to keep it eternal mystery game? :P
 
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Guys, please discuss the topic at hand with maturity. Else i will have to lock the thread. We need to go away from measuring dicks and actually understand that the issues are real and they need awareness.
 
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Thanks for opening my eyes by mentioning 'Devadasi'. I didn't know.

When you are approaching them?:lol::lol::lol:

@Mentee

Father of Madrassa Student: Maulvi Sahib, bacha aap ki ghalat harkaton ki shikayat ker raha hae.
Maulvi Sahib: Asseen tay onj e parhaana ae, jinj assaen parhay saan.
:lol::lol::lol:
 
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When you are approaching them?:lol::lol::lol:

@Mentee

Father of Madrassa Student: Maulvi Sahib, bacha aap ki ghalat harkaton ki shikayat ker raha hae.
Maulvi Sahib: Asseen tay onj e parhaana ae, jinj assaen parhay saan.
:lol::lol::lol:

Its getting hard for me to follow the political correctness code and not to say the obvious

Kareeb Kareeb ho jy :cheesy:
 
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Without accountability and with blind trust or showing too much reverence to anyone always results in such behavior in every religious or non-religious group.
There is far too much respect accorded to religious leaders without questioning them. In Pakistan, we need to grow up and improve for the sake of our society.
 
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I only want to know what it means, brother, when did I imply it's not allowed?
Is that not allowed on PDF?

- PRTP GWD

@Mentee

Thanks for opening my eyes by mentioning 'Devadasi'. I didn't know.

HORROR!! HORROR!!

- PRTP GWD
 
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