burning injustice: the face of violent extremism

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  • 8/9/2019 Burning Injustice: The Face of Violent Extremism

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    Burning injustice: the face of violent extremism in Pakistan

    PUBLISHED BYWOMEN WITHOUT BORDERS, 4 MAY 2010

    Last week, three Pakistani sisters, age 20, 16, and 14, had their lives irrevocably changed. Asthey walked from Kalat city to Pandarani village in the Baluchistan province, two motorcycliststhrew acid on them, causing severe burns over their faces and bodies. Two weeks earlier, twosisters in the same province suffered the same attack and they are only 11 and 13 years old.Their crimes? Not wearing hijabs and traveling unaccompanied by men. The BalochGhaeratmand Group, which was until recently unknown in the province, circulated a pamphlet in April that warned, Acid will be thrown on the faces of women and girls who step out of theirhouses without covering their faces People who fail to comply with these orders willthemselves be responsible for the consequences.

    Five victims in three weeks in one province of Pakistan: you could consider these attackscommonplace. Their attackers will probably not face punishment for their actions. And what canthe victims families do? What steps can the townspeople in this region take to prevent furtherattacks? The police claim not to know who is in the Baloch Ghaeratmand Group, and they do not know if the attackers were affiliated with the group. These five young women and girls willsuffer from the physical and psychological effects of these attacks for the rest of their lives, andthe towns and villages in this area will be subdued by the threat of violence, knowing that thereis no way to prevent or deter these attacks from happening again.

    This is violent extremism at its most insidious: controlling communities and individuals in thename of a radical ideology through the threat of violence. And as with all extremist groups,

    ideology is just an excuse to seize power through inhuman actions to commit acts that defyeven the most basic urges towards fellow feeling, and to do so in the name of an abstract principle that cannot be held accountable.

    If the victim survives, the effects of acid attacks are life-changing. Acid burns through eyes, skintissue, and bone. Usually, the victims are left blind and with permanent scar tissue. Their bonesare often fused together jawbones sealed tight, chins locked to chests, hands left permanentlycontorted in the position they held as they tried to deflect the splash. The psychological scars areeven worse. Depression, anxiety, shame these are part of the emotional aftermath of anyscarring injury, but victims of acid attacks are also often ostracized by their communities and

    even held responsible for incurring the attack they suffered. If the victims are married at thetime of the attack , their children are forced to assume their mothers caretaker roles, and if thehusband leaves, the children have to shoulder the heavy burden of caring for the family as well.If the victims are not married, they face a lifetime of dependency on the charity of their parentsand community and continued vulnerability to further attacks. Women who are lucky enough tohave money may be able to afford a series of operations that would incrementally replace skinon their face, restore partial sight in an eye, or realign bones fused together. With or without surgery, however, the victim of an acid attack will never look the way she did the day before theattack that woman is gone forever.

    The five women attacked in Baluchistan are only a small sample of a problem that is widespreadthroughout South Asia and growing. Pakistans acid attacks are mirrored by similar attacks inAfghanistan, Bangladesh, Cambodia, and India, and in recent years even in areas where acid

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    attacks have not been seen before, including Hong Kong, China, and the United Kingdom. Theattackers often cite political or religious grounds for their actions defying sharia or tribal law,attending school, not wearing a headscarf, leaving the house unaccompanied by a man, suspicionof adultery or immorality but the attacks are just as often grounded in petty vengeance. 22year old Manzoor Attiqa, also from Pakistan, was attacked by her in-laws when she did not washthe dishes. 13 year old Naila Farhat had acid thrown in her face by a rejected suitor and hisfriend, her science teacher at school. Haseena Husain, from India, had two liters of acid dumpedover her body by her boss when she refused his marriage proposal.

    Acid attacks are devastating for individuals, but their effects on communities and societies arecrippling for all women. How can women start businesses when walking unaccompanied down aroad can warrant a random attack by a stranger? How can they advocate for suffrage, equalrights, or protection from domestic violence when any dissenter can silence them throughviolence? How can women care for their families when access to education or medical care islimited by fear of reprisal? What will happen to the next generation, when all they see is

    lawlessness, violence, fear? What kind of adults will they grow up to be?

    The prevalence of acid attacks is a danger to the whole world. In societies where violence rules,violence will increase and spread beyond those boundaries. If countries cannot offer the next generation any hope for a future in which education or industry can lead to a job, a home, and afamily, even the best minds will be transformed by frustration and anger. Only extremist groupswill be able to offer security or upward mobility, and women will continue to suffer theconsequences.

    For more information about the most recent attack in Baluchistan, please see the BBC articlehere: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8653296.stm . For more information about theearlier attack, please see the article in Pakistani newspaper The News International here:http://www.thenews.com.pk/print1.asp?id=234246 .

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8653296.stmhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8653296.stmhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8653296.stmhttp://www.thenews.com.pk/print1.asp?id=234246http://www.thenews.com.pk/print1.asp?id=234246http://www.thenews.com.pk/print1.asp?id=234246http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8653296.stm