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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

[chottala.com] Female Killings in Pakistan 2010

Female Pregnancies aborted (after finding out Ultra Sound) plus Female Infanticide and plus Honor Killing the total Genocide Rate in Pakistan is 295 to 296 per day.
* God creates 106 to 108 Females on every 100 Males in Human Specie all around the world.

PAKISTAN

* Population 170 million.
* Population Growth Rate 2% a year or 3.4 million yearly increase in Population.
* Gender Ratio 92 Females to 100 Males.
* 3.4 /192 = 0.01770833 x 100 = 1.770833 million Male Population increase taken out of 3.4 million = 1.629,166 Female Population increase taken out 1.770833 million = 61,667 x 3/4 for another 6% = 46,270 plus 61,667 = 107,937 Females killed in 2010 divided by 365 = 295.71 Females were killed everyday in 2010. Please add another 2% in this for 2011 ratio.
.
Allaho Akbar Savages ...!

S U Turkman

From: churi1001 <churi1001@gmail.com>
Sent: Tue, September 13, 2011 6:13:00 PM
Subject: Fwd: A Pakistani Hero


In Pakistan, a woman is raped every two hours on average and two women die in "honour" killings every day.  The country has special legislation called hudood laws, stating that if a rape victim cannot provide four male witnesses to the crime, she will be subject to being punished for adultery.  By charging sexual assault, she has acknowledged illicit sex.

 

Last month, a group of educated middle-class women demonstrated in Lahore for equal right.  Among them was Asma Jahangir, a United Nations special rapporteur who is also the head of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan.  Police beat the women with clubs and tried to strip Jahangiur naked in public as a special humiliation.

 

This is the profoundly anti-egalitarian society that Mukhtar Mai,a victim of gang rape, confronts in her quest for justice.  This illiterate woman of 33 was raped on the orders of a village council in 2002.  The rape was allegedly ordered because her younger brother had been seen with a woman from another tribe.

 

In fact, it later came out in a separate trial that the brother, then 12 years old, had been raped by men from the same tribe as the woman.  The men who raped him are in prison.

 

This week, she appealed the March acquittal of her assailants to Pakistan's Supreme Court.  That court suspended the acquittals until it hears Mai's and the government's appeal.  No date has been fixed.

 

Fourteen men are now in custody, including eight acquitted at the original trial.

 

The courage and determination of Mukhtar Mai are all the more remarkable for the hostility shown to her by village society and the lower courts.

 

What happened to her is a disgrace, and by seeking redress, she has made herself a hero.


-The Montreal Gazette, July 2, 2005-





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