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Kasur back in spotlight as remains found of 3 minor boys killed after suspected sexual assault

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The remains of three minor boys whom police suspect were murdered after being sexually assaulted were found on Tuesday in Punjab's Kasur district, which has garnered international attention for recurring incidents of child sexual abuse in recent years.

According to police, two of the children were reported missing in Kasur's Chunian tehsil last month while the third had gone missing two days ago. On the indication of a local worker, police found the body of one of the boys and the skeletal remains of the other two at a deserted place in Chunian Industrial Estate area.

It wasn't immediately clear how the three children were killed but Kasur District Police Officer (DPO) Abdul Ghaffar Qaisrani said police suspected the victims were sexually assaulted before being murdered. More information will become evident once the postmortem examination of the remains is completed, he added.

Residents in Chunian told DawnNewsTV that five children — one of them aged 12 and another eight years old — in the area had gone missing in recent months; the remains of three of them have now been found.

Police collected evidence from the area as an investigation into their deaths went underway.

DPO Qaisrani said three teams had been formed to investigate the cases and a mobile lab of the Punjab Forensic Science Agency had also arrived in the area to collect evidence. He said they were hopeful that the culprit(s) will be arrested within a day or two.

Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar took notice of the children's deaths and sought a briefing from the Punjab police chief. Inspector General of Police Arif Nawaz Khan directed the Kasur DPO to submit a report into the incident.

The deaths are an uneasy reminder of the horrific rape and murder of six-year-old girl Zainab Ansari — a case which sparked widespread outrage and protests across the country after the minor's body was found in a trash heap in Kasur in January 2018.

The heinous nature of the crime had seen immediate riots break out in Kasur — in which two people were killed — while #JusticeforZainab became a rallying cry for an end to violence against children.

Imran Ali, who was convicted for Zainab's rape and murder, was executed nine months after the child's death.

Asked why child abuse cases continue to repeatedly surface in Kasur, DPO Qaisrani said there was a need to "study the broader aspect" of why incidents such as these were still taking place despite the fact that Zainab's killer and rapist was executed for his crimes.

"Police is playing its part and will continue to do so, but we will also have to check the other (societal) factors," he added while speaking to DawnNewsTV.

Over 10 children abused every day

A report by the NGO Sahil had revealed earlier this year that reported cases of child abuse increased by 11 per cent in year 2018 compared to 2017, with more than 10 children suffering some form of abuse every day in Pakistan last year.

The report, titled 'Cruel Numbers 2018', had found that cases of child sexual abuse specifically witnessed a rise of a significant 33 per cent when compared with the reported cases of 2017.

One of the authors of Sahil's previous report, Mamtaz Gohar, had told Dawn that although child abuse cases were expected to fall in the wake of the Zainab rape and murder case, they had unfortunately increased.

“However, another view is that the Zainab murder case gave victims’ families courage to speak out rather than hide incidents of sexual abuse. The good thing is that, soon after that case, a drastic change has been noticed in the attitude and behaviour of families towards such cases,” he had said.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1505729
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The pictures and video of the dead are too horrific to share. But these are the four young boys who remain missing. 6 boys have been abducted over a three month period from the same area <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/kasur?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#kasur</a> <a href="https://t.co/cUlIrG4Zck">pic.twitter.com/cUlIrG4Zck</a></p>— Zarrar Khuhro (@ZarrarKhuhro) <a href="https://twitter.com/ZarrarKhuhro/status/1173981230121050112?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 17, 2019</a></blockquote>
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Who are these "powerful people" that are allegedly behind this child pornography racket?

Absolutely sickening.
 
Who are these "powerful people" that are allegedly behind this child pornography racket?

Absolutely sickening.

There is a worldwide ring. Many high-level celebrities and politicians are possibly involved in it.
 
This area Kasur needs one of the biggest raids in the history of mankind.

A sickening place!
 
Protests erupted in Kasur on Wednesday, a day after the remains of three minor boys, whom police suspect were murdered after being sexually assaulted, were recovered in Kasur's Chunian tehsil.

Protesters closed roads in Chunian and burned tires while chanting slogans against the police. The demonstrators also surrounded the Chunian police station as they protested against lack of arrests and incidents of child abduction.

Four children — aged between eight and 12 years — had been missing since June with 8-year-old Faizan disappearing on Monday night.

Many locals attended Faizan's funeral prayers offered today.

Before Faizan, 12-year-old Muhammad Imran of Rana Town went missing on June 3, while 9-year-old Ali Husnain and 8-year-old Suleman Akram of Ghausiabad went missing on August 8 and Aug 17, respectively.

Locals say a fifth child is also missing.

Inspector General Punjab Police Arif Nawaz Khan said that many individuals are being investigated with regards to the incident, adding that three different investigation teams are working in Chunian.

The inspector general said that the Punjab Forensic Science Agency (PFSA) will conduct a DNA test of the three minors and it will be matched the DNA of the suspects.

Khan said he was getting constant updates on the case and added that an example would be made out of the suspects.

A wave of shock and terror gripped Chunian when the police recovered the bodies on Tuesday. Locals suspected a racket was behind the killing of minor boys after rape.

One of the bodies was identified as that of Faizan, while the remains were believed to be of Ali and Suleman. Police are yet to find any clue about Imran's whereabouts.

District Police Officer (DPO) Abdul Ghaffar Qaisarani said that the sexual assault would be confirmed after a medical report was issued. However, the possibility of murder after rape could not be ruled out. He denied the presence of any racket.

Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar also took notice of the incident and sought a report from the inspector general of police. He also demanded the killers be traced at the earliest.

The development came after scores of people staged a protest demonstration in Kasur on Monday against what they called the failure of the Chunian police to recover the missing minors and curb the incidence of child abduction. They had dispersed after the local administration assured them of resolving the cases.

In the last few years, Kasur has been rocked by multiple incidents of abuse, rape and killing of children. The deaths are an uneasy reminder of the horrific rape and murder of six-year-old girl Zainab Ansari — a case which sparked widespread outrage and protests across the country after the minor's body was found in a trash heap in Kasur in January 2018.

Imran Ali, who was convicted for Zainab's rape and murder, was executed nine months after the child's death.

In 2015, Kasur’s Hussain Khanwala village had attracted worldwide attention when a child pornography ring was busted. Hundreds of video clips had emerged showing a gang forcing dozens of minor boys and girls to perform sexual acts and filming them. The gang had also used the videos to blackmail families of the children and extorted millions in cash and jewellery from them.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1505906/p...rder-of-3-minor-boys-suspected-sexual-assault
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="ur" dir="rtl">اب <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@ImranKhanPTI</a>مدینہ کی ریاست کو چلانے کا وقت آپہنچا ہے۔ جو سندھ اور پنجاب میں ہورہا ہے، اس پر دل خون کے آنسو روتا ہے۔ کیا پنجاب میں آپکی ٹیم میں بہتر، تجربہ کار بندہ نہیں؟مدینہ کی ریاست میں زیادتی کرنے والوں کو سرعام پھانسی دی جاتی، وقت آگیا ہے کہ ہمیں بھی یہی کرنا ہوگا#Kasur</p>— Shahid Afridi (@SAfridiOfficial) <a href="https://twitter.com/SAfridiOfficial/status/1174226723682082816?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 18, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Protests on going in full force in Churian, <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Kasur?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Kasur</a> regarding the sexual assault and murder of a minor boy. <a href="https://t.co/hQhyqkDsPM">pic.twitter.com/hQhyqkDsPM</a></p>— Alia Chughtai (@AliaChughtai) <a href="https://twitter.com/AliaChughtai/status/1174219764123807750?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 18, 2019</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-conversation="none" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This video comes in from a prostestor - I am not present my self but have spoken to a few people who are protesting against Punjab Police from whom the video comes from. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Kasur?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Kasur</a> <a href="https://t.co/yhVJAK6Xj3">pic.twitter.com/yhVJAK6Xj3</a></p>— Alia Chughtai (@AliaChughtai) <a href="https://twitter.com/AliaChughtai/status/1174221306876874752?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 18, 2019</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">On the Kasur incident: There will be accountability for all. Those who do not perform in the interest of the common man will be taken to task. Following actions have so far been taken by the Punjab police & the provincial govt:<br><br>1) DPO Kasur being removed.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1174345970424995845?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 18, 2019</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-conversation="none" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">2) SP investigation Kasur surrendered, charge sheeted and being proceeded against. <br><br>3) DSP and SHO suspended.<br><br>4) Major overhaul in Kasur local police on the cards. <br><br>5) Formal probe ordered under Addl IG.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1174345973100896256?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 18, 2019</a></blockquote>
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Kasur case: Police suspect serial killer at large

Police have detained 20 suspects as they investigate the possibility of a serial killer being behind the suspected murder and sexual assault of three boys in Kasur that has a history of child abuse and abduction.

The body of eight-year-old Muhammad Faizan was found on an industrial estate after he went missing on the way home from nearby shops. The remains of two more boys were found nearby.

Media reported three other children from the area had been missing since the middle of the year and another child had disappeared late last week after the bodies were found.

“Recovering the three bodies from the same spot indicates that there might be a serial killer involved in this episode,” regional police officer Zulfiqar Hameed told Reuters.

District Police Officer Zahid Nawaz told Reuters on Monday that DNA samples of the 20 suspects held in custody had been sent for testing.

Hundreds of people demonstrated about the killings last week, blocking off streets and damaging shops.

“I nurtured my child for eight years, I cannot bear this, I want justice,” Amtal Salam, the mother of Faizan, told Reuters on Thursday in the living room of her family home that overlooks the grave of her young son.

Chunian district is located in the south of Lahore, which has been hit by waves of sexual assault and violence against children, which many locals say has continued due to a culture of impunity and lack of action in finding perpetrators.

Videos of hundreds of local children being sexually assaulted were found circulating in 2015, a senior child protection official at the time called the worst child abuse incident in Pakistan’s history.

Last year, the body of a 7-year-old Zainab was found in a garbage dumpster, which police said was the 12th incident of a girl being abducted, raped and killed in Kasur in a year, and sparked violent protests. A man was convicted of the murder and executed.

Child advocates say Pakistan has a serious problem with child abuse, with child protection watchdog Sahil reporting more than 3,800 cases of sexual abuse and violence against children cases in 2018.

“Child abuse is a huge, huge challenge, not just in Kasur, but these cases are coming in a lot and are being reported in Punjab on a daily basis,” said Sarah Ahmad, chairperson of the Child Protection and Welfare Bureau for Punjab, the province in which Kasur is located.

Locals say children are fearful of going outside.

“Announcements have been made that parents should escort their children to school,” said Shehnaz Bibi, a woman from a village near Chunian. “The children are afraid to go to the mosques; they are afraid to go to school.”

Prime Minister Imran Khan has vowed law enforcement will be held accountable and said a major overhaul of district police was underway as well as an investigation into the incident.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2064024/1-kasur-case-police-suspect-serial-killer-large/
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">We are appointing Zainab’s father as focal person for child abuse (voluntary) in Kasur district. <a href="https://t.co/ujhBZCirkE">pic.twitter.com/ujhBZCirkE</a></p>— Sarah Ahmad (@SarahAhmad_PTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/SarahAhmad_PTI/status/1176437067133464576?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 24, 2019</a></blockquote>
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Similar incident happened last year. So more than a year another incident surfaces. This has a communal angle and should be investigated
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Police arrests the Kasur child rapist. <br><br>The rapist’s own father turned him in. <br><br>Massive respect for the father.</p>— Maria Memon (@Maria_Memon) <a href="https://twitter.com/Maria_Memon/status/1177149430547570688?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 26, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Punjab CM announces arrest of 'serial killer' behind murders of minor boys in Kasur

Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar on Tuesday announced that the serial killer behind the murders of four minor boys in Kasur district has been identified.

Addressing a press conference in Lahore, the chief minister said that 27-year-old Suhail Shehzad had been identified using polygraphic and DNA testing.

The suspect has been arrested and is expected to be produced before an antiterrorism court in Lahore tomorrow.

"Geo-fencing for 1,649 suspects was done and DNA samples of 1,543 were tested," said Buzdar, as he revealed details of the police probe conducted to unearth the suspect's identity. He said that semen on the clothes of one boy and blood on the clothes of another matched with samples of the suspect.

The chief minister confirmed that the suspect was behind all four cases of sodomy and murder which had shaken Kasur last month and shone fresh light on the continued prevalence of child sexual abuse in the country. "The case against him will be pursued in an anti-terrorism court where hearings will be held on a daily basis," he announced.

"I have instructed the prosecutor general to oversee the case," declared Buzdar, adding that he, too, will follow it closely. "I assure the families of the victims that they will get justice."

According to the Punjab inspector general of police, the suspect is a resident of Rana Town in Chunian — the tehsil where the remains of the minor boys were discovered— and committed the crimes in June, August and September.

Four children — aged between eight and 12 years — had gone missing since June with the latest, Faizan, 8, disappearing on the night of September 16.

The remains of three of them were found on September 17 from sand dunes near Chunian bypass.

Chief Minister Buzdar had taken notice of the incident and sought a report from the Punjab police chief.

Meanwhile, protests were held to express concern over lawlessness and failure of police to protect the lives of people.

In the last few years, Kasur has been rocked by multiple incidents of abuse, rape and killing of children. In January 2018, six-year-old Zainab Ansari was found dead in a trash heap near Shahbaz Khan Road, five days after she went missing. Hers was the 12th such incident to have occurred within a 10-kilometre radius in Kasur over a 12-month period. Her death had sparked nationwide protests and outrage.

The prime suspect, Imran Ali, had been arrested on January 23, 2018, and on June 12 the Supreme Court had turned down his appeal against the death sentence, noting that he had admitted to committing similar offences with eight other minor victims. Ali was subsequently executed in October last year.

In 2015, Kasur’s Hussain Khanwala village had attracted worldwide attention when a child pornography ring was busted. Hundreds of video clips had emerged showing a gang forcing dozens of minor boys and girls to perform sexual acts and filming them. The gang had also used the videos to blackmail families of the children and extorted millions in cash and jewellery from them.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1508398/p...-killer-behind-murders-of-minor-boys-in-kasur
 
A Lahore antiterrorism court on Wednesday remanded the suspect behind the murder of four minor boys in Chunian, Suhail Shehzad, into police custody for 15 days.

The court also ordered a medical exam of the suspect.

The hearing was presided over by Judge Abdul Qayum Khan. Deputy prosecutor general Abdul Rauf Watoo was also present.

The suspect was brought in with a black hood over his head, prompting the presiding judge to ask why this had been done so, for which security reasons were cited in response.

"What is your name?" the court asked the suspect. "Do you wish to state anything for the record?"

"Please do not let the police beat me up in custody," Shehzad pleaded before the court.

The investigation officer, in his statement to the court, said that the suspect had been brought to court in pursuance of an FIR registered against the sexual assault and murder of one of the four boys. The cases registered for the other three boys were being probed by a joint investigation team, he explained.

Shehzad's arrest was announced by Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar a day earlier via a detailed press briefing in which the methods used to unearth the suspect's identity were disclosed.

The chief minister confirmed that the suspect was behind all four cases of sodomy and murder which had shaken Kasur last month and shone fresh light on the continued prevalence of child sexual abuse in the country. "The case against him will be pursued in an anti-terrorism court where hearings will be held on a daily basis," he had announced.

Four children — aged between eight and 12 years — had gone missing since June this year with the latest, Faizan, 8, disappearing on the night of September 16.

The remains of three of them were found on September 17 from sand dunes near Chunian bypass.

Chief Minister Buzdar had taken notice of the incident and sought a report from the Punjab police chief.

Meanwhile, protests were held to express concern over lawlessness and failure of police to protect the lives of people.

In the last few years, Kasur has been rocked by multiple incidents of abuse, rape and killing of children. In January 2018, six-year-old Zainab Ansari was found dead in a trash heap near Shahbaz Khan Road, five days after she went missing. Hers was the 12th such incident to have occurred within a 10-kilometre radius in Kasur over a 12-month period. Her death had sparked nationwide protests and outrage.

The prime suspect, Imran Ali, had been arrested on January 23, 2018, and on June 12 the Supreme Court had turned down his appeal against the death sentence, noting that he had admitted to committing similar offences with eight other minor victims. Ali was subsequently executed in October last year.

In 2015, Kasur’s Hussain Khanwala village had attracted worldwide attention when a child pornography ring was busted. Hundreds of video clips had emerged showing a gang forcing dozens of minor boys and girls to perform sexual acts and filming them. The gang had also used the videos to blackmail families of the children and extorted millions in cash and jewellery from them.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1508578/s...r-boys-remanded-in-police-custody-for-15-days
 
In Pakistan's Kasur, child rapes and killings continue unabated

Kasur, Pakistan - Nine-year-old Faizan Muhammad stepped out of the mosque where his family lives in the small central Pakistani town of Chunian on a warm September evening.

Hours later, he had still not returned home, and his family began to fear the worst.

The next morning, a local driver found his body in a barren field a few kilometres away, the fourth victim of a series of child kidnappings and murders in the area located in northern Punjab state.

Muhammad's body was not alone, however. Alongside him, police found human remains and skeletons, later identified to belong to the three other boys who were kidnapped, raped and murdered between June and September this year.

After a two-week hunt, during which police took DNA samples from more than 1,700 people in the area, they narrowed down their search to just one suspect: Sohail Shahzad, a local rickshaw driver.

Shahzad confessed to the murders, saying he would take his rickshaw around town in the evening, just as the summer's scorching temperatures began to drop and children came out of their homes to play.

He would offer the boys Rs 100 (roughly $0.60) and a rickshaw ride. Once they hopped on, he would rape and strangle them to death, his confessional statement to police says.

Cases of missing children are not new in Kasur district, where Chunian is located. There have been a spate of recent child kidnappings, rapes and assaults reported in recent years.

Kasur – under the microscope after a child pornography ring was broken up here in 2015 – illustrates how Pakistan's newly strengthened child protection laws and authorities have failed to stop such crimes.

New laws, no implementation

Last year alone, over 3,800 cases of child sexual abuse were reported across Pakistan, a country of 207 million people, according to child rights organisation, Sahil.

The most vulnerable groups were identified as boys between the ages of six and 15 years old, and girls who are either infants or between 16 and 18 years old.

The numbers are not atypical for the region. In India's capital New Delhi alone, over 2,000 rape cases were reported in 2018, while in Bangladesh, a survey conducted last year said 87 percent of children had experienced sexual abuse.

India introduced the death penalty for child rapists last year in an attempt to control the rising number of cases.

In 2017, Pakistan's penal code was amended to address the endemic problem of child abuse. Laws were tightened with respect to child pornography, exposure of a child to seduction and child sexual abuse. Rights organisations, however, say not enough is being done.

"Our laws are certainly strong enough for convictions in child abuse cases," says Manizeh Bano, Sahil’s executive director. "The problem remains with implementation."

More recently, child-friendly courts have also been set up in parts of the country, where there are particular hours for children so they do not interact with adult criminals or suspects.

There are still, however, no counsellors to take care of a child's psychological needs, or staff trained to speak with victims of trauma, says Bano.

"When children come to court they should have a screen in front of them so they can testify without having to face their accuser," says Bano, adding that children should also be allowed to give their account on video if the laws are to be implemented in spirit.

At present, police in Punjab province, where Kasur is located, are working on some of these changes to make the investigation process easier on children, including visiting children at home rather than forcing them to come to police stations to record their statements.

'Hang him'

In a country where there is often little trust in the justice system, there is still anger among the victims' families.

Muhammad's father, a quiet man, speaks loudly only when he is asked what justice means to him.

"When the police have arrested him, then what are they doing? He needs to be hanged publicly, so people remember this can also be done to them," he says.

Rights groups say capital punishment does not deter crime - particularly crimes involving sexual assault - but for the victims' families in Kasur, it seems there is no other acceptable outcome.

Last year, six-year-old Zainab Ansari's body was found in a trash dump in Kasur's main town. Police say she was raped before she was killed. Imran Ali, a local man, was arrested and convicted for her murder in a high-profile trial following countrywide protests against the crime.

Residents here say they believe that it was only because Ali was not publicly executed that cases of child rape continue to occur in their district.

Police, however, caution that in order to ensure children's safety, authorities and parents need to take preventive measures, not reactive ones.

"We have a mob mentality, which is not going to make our society any safer for children. What we need to do, is increase awareness around sexual violence," says Sohail Tajik, a senior police official and investigator in the Chunian case.

Some of the plans authorities are discussing include using Friday prayer sermons at mosques to educate people regarding sexual abuse, a subject around which discussion remains taboo in South Asian societies.

Events are also being planned to educate parents and increase awareness about ways to keep children safer. Since Ansari's disappearance and murder, a number of such programmes have been held in schools across Kasur district.

While much has happened following Ansari's murder, however, her family says even Ali's execution last year failed to bring them closure.

"I can't bear seeing any news about child rape in Kasur. Every time such an incident happens, I feel like I'm hearing about Zainab for the first time," says Nusrat Amin, Ansari's mother.

For the victims of the latest child rapes and murders, too, their ordeal is far from over.

"I need my child's body back. I need to bury him […] I just need to bury him," says Farzana Hasnain, the mother of Ali Hasnain, a 10-year-old who went missing on August 17 and whose body was found alongside Muhammad's.

As police continue their investigations, the bodies of three of the four victims have yet to be handed back to their families.

The impact of the loss in Chunian is intensified by the poverty of these families. Many say they have barely earned any income in recent months, as they left their homes in search of their children. Today, they are still paying back loans taken to print out posters asking for information on their missing children.

Why Kasur?

Even in a country where sexual abuse is widespread, the violence and scale of recent incidents in Kasur have shocked people in in this Muslim-majority South Asian nation.

In 2015, journalists and police uncovered a massive child pornography ring in the town, which had made more than 400 videos of young boys engaging in sexual acts, and then blackmailed their families. Ansari was murdered last year, with the man convicted for her murder and rape also accused of raping at least eight other children.

At first glance, Kasur does not appear to be particularly more conservative than other parts of the country.
Women walk through its bazaars at night, and can be seen sitting at restaurants by themselves, which is not usually a common sight in other parts of the country.

"What differentiates Kasur from other parts of the country is the nature of brutality," says Tajik, the senior police official. "We have had serial rapists who have strangled their victims and dumped the bodies."

Men here say that sexual abuse and assault in Kasur is common, almost a rite of passage when growing up here.

Playing cricket on the street or stepping out to the playground meant being abused by older boys, says Waqas Khan, who runs a number of schools around Kasur. He says it was seen as a sign of masculinity for an older boy to have a child with him to perform sexual acts with.

Residents say societal reactions often vary when it comes to the gender of the child being abused. When a girl child is abused it's treated as a crime, but for the boys, it is seen in good humour, said community members.

In fact, Shahzad, the man linked to the rape and murder of the four boys in Chunian, spoke out following his arrest about his own history of suffering sexual abuse. He was abused for 12 years at the shop where he worked, he told police, who later arrested his former employer.

But for the families of the victims, who remain missing, closure is hard to come by.

"I won't even be able to see his face one last time," says Farzana Hasnain, mother of the 10-year-old who went missing in August. "There's nothing left, all that I'll see are his bones."
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/f...llings-continue-unabated-191028193228404.html
 
NA passes contentious resolution calling for public hanging of child sexual abusers

A resolution calling for the public hanging of offenders convicted for sexually abusing and murdering children was passed in the National Assembly on Friday with a majority of votes.

The session was presided over by Deputy Speaker Qasim Khan Suri.

The hand-written resolution, a copy of which is available with Dawn.com, referred to the "brutal killing of 8-year-old Iwaz Noor in Nowshera".

"Strongly condemning" the death, the signatories wrote: "This house [...] demands that to stop these shameful and brutal killings of children and give a strong deterrent effect, the killers and rapists should not only be given death penalty by hanging but they should be hanged publicly."

Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Ali Muhammad Khan presented the resolution in the parliament, which was passed by all lawmakers, apart from PPP's.

Raja Pervez Ashraf, PPP leader and former prime minister, said: "Ramping up the severity of punishments does not result in a reduction in crime."

"We cannot put public hanging into practice as it violates the laws of the United Nations," he added, reminding members of the parliament that Pakistan is a signatory to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

He was not the only one to raise his voice against the passing of the resolution. Minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry "strongly condemned" it.

"This is just another grave act in line with brutal civilisation practices. Societies act in a balanced way. Barbarism is not the answer to crimes [...] this is another expression of extremism," he wrote on Twitter.


Meanwhile, Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari clarified that the resolution "was not government-sponsored but an individual act".

"Many of us oppose it — our MOHR (Ministry of Human Rights) strongly opposes this. Unfortunately I was in a meeting and wasn't able to go to NA," she said, in a post on Twitter.


According to a report released by child rights organisation Sahil in September last year, 1,304 cases of sexual abuse of children were reported by the media in the country from January to June.

This means that at least seven children are abused every day.

With the issue continuing to remain widely prevalent, the government has been met with criticism for not taking any concrete measures to address flaws in the investigation of such cases or the implementation of the relevant laws.

Perspective: Why sexual abuse of children remains widely prevalent

Existing laws
Presently, multiple laws are available in the country for dealing with child-related offences.

Punjab was the first province where a law on child protection was enacted in 2004. The Punjab Destitute and Neglected Children Act, 2004, deals with a variety of issues related to child protection. The law gives a definition of ‘destitute and neglected child.’

Under this law, a child protection and welfare bureau has to be set up with wide-ranging functions. The bureau has also to set up child protection institutions in different areas.

The KP Child Protection and Welfare Act (CPWA) was enacted in 2010. This law is more comprehensive than that of Punjab. The KP law included several offences against children with prescribed punishments. The offences incorporated in the Act include: child pornography, sexual abuse, sale in child organs, corporal punishment and child begging and trafficking.

The KP Act provides for setting up of child protection bodies, including child protection courts, the Child Protection and Welfare Commission, child protection units on district level, child protection institute, etc.

The Sindh Child Protection Authority Act, 2011, was enacted in June 2011. This law makes it binding on the provincial government to establish Sindh Child Protection Authority, which is chaired by minister for social welfare. The authority has to set up child protection units and also appoint child protection officers. However, this law is not as comprehensive as that of KP and Punjab.

Balochistan Child Protection Act, 2016, was enacted in November 2016. This law includes definitions of different categories of violence against children, including mental violence, physical violence, sexual abuse and exploitation, etc. It provides for setting up of a child protection commission on provincial level and child protection units on district level.

Several important amendments were made in Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) and Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) through the Criminal Law (Second Amendment) Act, 2016, which was enacted in March 2016. Some of the provisions included in PPC are similar to the one available in KP CPWA, including offences related to exposure to seduction, child pornography, sexual abuse, etc.

Similarly, new sections 377A and 377B were incorporated in PPC in which a detailed definition of sexual abuse and its punishment are given.

In 2018, an amendment was made in Section 377B of the PPC to make the punishment for sexual abuse more stringent. It now provides imprisonment which shall not be less than 14 years and may extend to 20 years with minimum fine of Rs1 million.

Similarly, in the 2016 amendments the offence of child pornography was made punishable to minimum two years imprisonment and maximum seven years besides fine.

However, through amendments in 2018, the said offence was made punishable with at least 14 years imprisonment and maximum 20 years imprisonment with minimum fine of Rs1 million.

Moreover, in 2016 death penalty was introduced for raping a minor. The Criminal Law (Amendment) (Offences related to rape) Act, 2016, was introduced in 2016.

Under those amendments, a sub-section 3 was included in Section 376 of the PPC which provides: “Whoever commits rape of a minor or a person with mental or physical disability shall be punished with death or imprisonment for life.”

https://www.dawn.com/news/1533010/n...ng-for-public-hanging-of-child-sexual-abusers
 
Kasur policeman arrested for allegedly killing teenaged boy for refusing relationship

Khudian police have arrested a member of the Punjab Highway Patrol (PHP) police, who allegedly sexually harassed and later on Sunday shot dead an 18-year-old boy for allegedly refusing to have a relationship with him in Punjab's Kasur district, officials said on Tuesday.

The 18-year-old victim, who was shot dead near main Khudian bazaar in the limits of Khudian police station, is the son of a local prayer leader, on whose complaint a First Information Report (FIR) of the incident was registered.

Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar took notice of the incident and sought a report from the provincial police chief as outrage over the killing grew louder on social media. The chief minister, while condoling the bereaved family, assured them of justice, according to reports.

The deceased was a Hafiz-e-Quran and a member of the Jamiat Ahle Hadith. The suspect, 30, is an official of the patrolling police who was posted at Noorpur police post at Deepalpur Road.

Both the victim and the suspect were stated to be fast friends and they reportedly had relations in the past, Station House Officer Mohammad Ashraf told Dawn.

The deceased's father stated in the complaint that the suspect stopped his son at the corner of an alley while the latter was walking to a mosque for Fajr prayers on Eid day. The suspect threatened the teenager with his gun and warned that he would kill him if he (the deceased) did not agree to have sexual relations with him, the FIR said.

After the victim turned down the suspect's overture, the police official allegedly opened fire on him, resulting in an injury, according to the FIR, a copy of which is available with Dawn.

The complainant, who was nearby, said he and some other people tried to catch the suspect but he fled the scene while brandishing his weapon.

The injured victim was rushed to the Kasur District Headquarters Hospital where doctors referred him to Lahore General Hospital in critical condition. He later succumbed to his injuries at the Lahore hospital.

Police arrested the suspect soon after the incident and started investigations into the case from various angles.

Police officials said investigators will also look beyond the details in the FIR to dispense justice and claimed that the incident had nothing to do with any sect or religious element.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1559501/k...illing-teenaged-boy-for-refusing-relationship
 
Cousin allegedly rapes minor girl in Kasur

A man allegedly raped his 12-year-old cousin in Khara village. A case was registered against the accused nominated by the complainant. Muhammad Jamil, a resident of Mouza Khara, lodged a complaint in the Saddar Police Station that he went out of his house on Tuesday for work and his wife Shazia Bibi also went to the fields to arrange fodder for the cattle.

Jamil said his 12-year-old youngest daughter was at home when his nephew Zahid who often came to his house, arrived there and raped his daughter, taking advantage of her being alone.

The girl fainted after the assault. The complainant alleged that a woman, Rubina Bibi, had also accompanied the accused Zahid and the rape took place in front of her. Meanwhile, his wife Shazia Bibi also returned home.

Saddar police have registered a case under Section 376 against the accused on the complaint of Jamil.

Several rape cases have been reported in recent months in Kasur.

In January, police arrested a man for allegedly offering his minor daughter to another man for Rs500, who then tried to rape her.

The man who paid for sexual abuse was arrested by the authorities and a case was registered against both the suspects on the complaint of the minor’s mother.

The victim’s mother said her husband had called a man to their house and let him sexually abuse their 12-year-old daughter after receiving Rs500.

She said she was away for work when the incident happened. Her daughter told her about the incident when she returned, while both the suspects had managed to escape. Police took the victim to hospital for medical examination. They claimed it was an incident of attempted rape.

The suspect who paid the amount to the father had earlier been booked in a child abuse case in 2013 but was not punished. Police lodged the fresh case under sections 376 (rape), 371-A (selling person for the purposes of prostitution) and 371-B (buying person for the purposes of prostitution) of PPC against the suspects.

In October 2019, Kasur police nabbed a suspected child rapist over sexual assault and murder of four children in the district’s Chunian tehsil.

An investigation into the suspect’s past highlighted how childhood victims of sexual abuse can sometimes turn into predators themselves.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, the Kasur district’s top police officer said the suspect Sohail Shehzada had revealed during interrogation that he had been molested as a minor.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2255083/cousin-allegedly-rapes-minor-girl-in-kasur
 
At least three women and four children were allegedly raped in Punjab's Kasur district over the past two days, it emerged on Wednesday.

Additionally, one case of attempted rape was also reported from the city.

According to one complaint, a woman was gang-raped at gun point by seven men, who hailed from Bheela village. A first information report was filed at the Sheikhum police station with the victim's husband as the complainant, who said that this was the second time the suspects had raped his wife.

The complainant said that the suspects have locked his house and were forcing him and his family to leave the village. Investigation is under way but police are yet to arrest any suspects.

In another case, a man allegedly raped a 15-years-old girl in Noorpur Jattan village within the Sadar Chunian police station's jurisdiction. The victim was alone at her house when she was assaulted by the suspect, who belongs to the same village. An FIR of the incident was registered and the suspect has been arrested.

According to another FIR filed at the Chunian police station, a woman from Gidhpur village was sexually assaulted by a man when she was alone at her house. The suspect then fled the scene but was later arrested by the police.

Separately, a three-year-old boy was sexually abused by a 12-year-old in Rati Pindi village, according to an FIR registered at Kot Radha Kishan police station with the victim's father as the complainant. The juvenile suspect took the victim to the roof of his house where he was seen by some women from the village.

According to the complainant, the village council was forcing him to reconcile with the suspect, however the victim's father had refused. Police have arrested the suspect.

Another FIR was lodged at the Phoolnagar police station, according to which a four-year-old boy was raped by a man in the fields in the Bonga Balochan village. The child was lured into the fields by the suspect, who managed to escape after abusing the victim. He was later arrested.

A seven-year-old boy was allegedly sexually assaulted at an under-construction house in the Bhasarpura locality, which falls under the jurisdiction of B-Division police station. According to the FIR, the suspect took the child to the house where he subjected him to rape. The suspect is under arrest.

Another incident was reported from Hameed Town, where a man raped a 13-year-old boy who was his neighbour. An FIR was lodged at the City Pattoki police station, which said that the suspect took the victim to his house. The suspect has been arrested and investigation is underway.

Separately, a case of attempted rape was registered at Sadar police station. According to the FIR, the suspect tried to sexually assault his sister-in-law but fled after she screamed. An FIR was registered with the victim as the complainant and the suspect has been arrested.

Kasur in the spotlight
In the last few years, Kasur has been rocked by multiple incidents of abuse, rape and killings of children. As many as 251 cases of rape, gang rape and child abuse have been reported and cases have been registered in the first half of 2020 alone.

The district came into the spotlight in 2015, when a child pornography ring was busted in the district's Hussain Khanwala village. Hundreds of video clips had emerged showing a gang forcing dozens of minor boys and girls to perform sexual acts and filming them. The gang had also used the videos to blackmail the children's families and extort millions in cash and jewellery from them.

In 2018, nationwide protests broke out when Zainab Ansari, a six-year-old, was found dead in a trash heap near Shahbaz Khan Road, five days after she went missing. Hers was the 12th such incident to have occurred within a 10-kilometre radius in Kasur over a 12-month period.

The prime suspect, Imran Ali, had been arrested on January 23, 2018, and on June 12 of the same year the Supreme Court had turned down his appeal against the death sentence, noting that he had admitted to committing similar offences with eight other minor victims. Ali was subsequently executed in October, 2018.

In September last year, the city was shaken again when authorities recovered bodies of three minors from sand dunes near Chunian bypass.

According to police, two of the children were reported missing in Kasur's Chunian tehsil in July 2019, while the third had gone missing two days before his body, along with those of others, was recovered. On the indication of a local worker, police found the body of one of the boys and the skeletal remains of the other two at a deserted place in Chunian Industrial Estate area.

The main suspect, Sohail Shahzad, a resident of Chunian, was arrested on October 1, 2019 after his DNA matched with samples recovered from the remains of a victim. Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar had announced his arrest at a detailed press conference. He was convicted for kidnapping, raping and murdering a minor boy in Chunian and handed him the death sentences on three counts.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1585034/a...n-allegedly-raped-in-kasur-over-last-48-hours
 
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