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Domestic violence in Pakistan

Domestic violence in Pakistan is an endemic social and public health problem. According to a study carried out in 2009 by Human Rights Watch, it is estimated that between 10 and 20% of women in Pakistan have suffered some form of abuse.[1][2] Women have reported attacks ranging from physical to psychological and sexual abuse from intimate partners.[3][4] A survey carried out by the Thomson Reuters Foundation ranked Pakistan as the sixth most dangerous country for women while India ranked 1st as the most dangerous country for women.[5] Given the very few women's shelters in the country, victims have limited ability to escape from violent situations.[2]

One of the main reasons why domestic violence is so prevalent in Pakistan is the deeply entrenched patriarchal norms that exist in the country. These norms place men in positions of power and authority over women and children, and they can make it difficult for women to assert their rights and seek help. In addition, the legal framework around domestic violence in Pakistan is weak, and the government has been criticized for not doing enough to protect women and children from abuse.[6]

Overview edit

Definition edit

As defined by the World Health Organization, domestic violence encompasses physical and psychological distress including sexual coercive acts towards primarily women by a current or former male intimate partner.[7]

The landmark Domestic Violence (Prevention and Protection) Act passed in 2012 by the Pakistani Senate defines domestic violence as including, “all acts of gender based and other physical or psychological abuse committed by a respondent against women, children or other vulnerable persons…”[8] The definition then further specifies assault, attempt at assault, criminal force, criminal intimidation, emotional, psychological, and verbal abuse, harassment, stalking, sexual abuse, physical abuse, and economic abuse as some of the actions that fall under domestic violence.[8]

Statistics edit

An estimated 5000 women are killed per year from domestic violence, with thousands of others maimed or disabled.[2] Lisa Hajjar, an associate professor at the University of California, describes abuse against women in Pakistan as "endemic in all social spheres".[9] In an observational study published in the Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences based on a convenience sample of 218 women in the gynecology wards of three hospitals, 97% of the interviewed women said they had been victims of some form of assault, ranging from verbal abuse or threatened, to being subjected to beatings or non-consensual sex.[10] A study by the United Nations found that 50% of married women have experienced sexual violence and 90% have been psychologically abused.[11] Studies by the Pakistan Nation Women's Division and Zakar et al. confirmed these statistics of high percentages of domestic violence in Pakistani households.[11][5]

Research has also shown high rates of domestic violence primarily in rural communities and Afghani refugees living in Pakistan.[12][13] A cross-sectional survey of 490 randomly selected women from a rural health center in Pakistan of reproductive age reported that 65% of those interviewed had experienced domestic violence.[12] A special report by the United Nations of the state of violence against women in Pakistan reported that Afghani refugees are left out of Pakistani services and of Pakistani statistics.[13] The report noted that violence against women like child abuse and domestic violence is considerably high, however, proper statistics on this population are difficult to obtain.[13]

Types of abuse edit

Physical violence edit

Dowry deaths edit

Dowry deaths have been described by the United Nations as a form of domestic violence in Pakistan.[14] Women are often attacked and murdered if their in-laws deem their dowry to have been insufficient.[15] Amongst dowry-related violence, bride burnings, also known as "stove deaths",[16] are widely reported. In 1988 a survey showed that 800 women were killed in this manner, in 1989 the number rose to 1,100, and in 1990 it stood at 1,800 estimated killings. According to the Progressive Women's Association, such attacks are a growing problem and, in 1994 on International Women's Day, announced that various NGOs would join to raise awareness of the issue.[17] Newspapers in Lahore in a six-month period (1997) reported on average 15 attacks a month.[18] Women's eNews reported that 4,000 women had been attacked in this manner in Islamabad's surroundings over an eight-year period, and that the average age range of victims was between 18 and 35, with an estimated 30 percent being pregnant at the time of death.[16] The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reported that about four women are killed in this manner every day, by either family members or husbands.[19] Shahnaz Bukhari, who runs the Progressive Women's Association in Islamabad, has said of such attacks: "Either Pakistan is home to possessed stoves which burn only young housewives, and are particularly fond of genitalia, or looking at the frequency with which these incidences occur there is a grim pattern that these women are victims of deliberate murder."[16]

Acid attacks edit

Acid attacks in Pakistan came to international attention after the release of a documentary by Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy called Saving Face (2012).[20] According to Shahnaz Bukhari, the majority of these attacks occur in the summer when acid is used extensively to soak certain seeds to induce germination.[21] Various reasons have been given for such attacks, such as a woman dressing inappropriately or rejecting a proposal of marriage. The first known instance of an acid attack occurred in East Pakistan in 1967.[22] According to the Acid Survivors Foundation, up to 150 attacks occur every year. The foundation reports that the attacks are often the result in an escalation of domestic abuse, and the majority of victims are female.[20]

Honour killing edit

A recent report noted that one in five homicides in Pakistan are attributed to honour killings.[23] The prevalence of such honour killings that have been reported are around 2,000 killings every four years.[23] Overall, out of all homicides of both men and women in Pakistan, honour killings of women constitute 21%.[11] Moreover, the perpetrator in most honour killings is the husband.[23] One study found as high as 92% of all honour killings are committed by the spouse.[23] The highest occurring reason in spousal honour killings was alleged extramarital affairs.[23] Much of the data has been collected by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan through newspaper reports, however, it is clear there needs to be more systematic research by a health agency is needed to assess this public health crisis and effectively plan for solutions as many cases go unreported.[23] Another analysis of this research states that a possible explanation of the high rate of honour killings towards married women could be attributed to the generally high statistics of domestic violence in Pakistan.[11]

Psychological abuse edit

Psychological abuse generally includes yelling, insulting, controlling behaviors, and threatening. In a study by Zakar et al., of 373 randomly selected married women of reproductive age interviewed in Pakistani ospitals, 60.8% reported as current victims of severe psychological violence with 15% having been victims in the past.[5] The percentage of women going through current psychological violence far surpassed the percentages of women going through current sexual (27.3%) and physical (21.7%) violence. Moreover, more than half of these participants, 54%, reported being currently in a poor state of mental health.

Factors edit

 
A young girl in a rural area of the Sindh province of Pakistan is selling these baskets her family has made for a living.

Poverty edit

Associated with poverty is illiteracy and social stigma against domestic violence.[24] Lack of an education due to financial reasons accompanies a lack of awareness about women’s rights.[25] Moreover, because mental health illiteracy is especially widespread in low-income areas, many women to not get appropriate treatment for the after effects of domestic violence.[5]

Patriarchalism edit

Another reason given for abuses is patriarchalism in Pakistani society, which marginalizes women’s role.[4] In some traditional societies, a man is considered to have the right to physically beat his spouse on his wish.[14] According to Rahel Nardos, it is "the dual constructs of women as the property of men and as the standard-bearers of a family's honour set the stage for culturally sanctioned forms of violence".[26] In some cases, women perpetuate patriarchalism and domestic abuse especially in regard to mothers-in-law.[25] Many women are expected to be homemakers and to perform key household duties, however, if a woman is not performing her duties by her mother-in-law's standards, the mother-in-law may seek to punish the woman through her son.[citation needed]

In analysis of data from 3,867 married or previously married women from the 2012 - 2013 Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey, association was found between the intergenerational transfer of spousal violence and cultural views of women.[27] Strikingly, 47% of these women agreed that beating of a spouse was justified if the wife had argued with her husband.[27] Statistics such as this prove that patriarchalism within the Pakistani society has led many Pakistani women to believe that domestic violence is normal or even at times justified. This idea is enforced by a study done of 759 Pakistani women between the ages of 25 and 60 years old in which 27% admitted they had never told anyone of the spousal violence they had endured or were currently enduring.[28]

Child marriage edit

 
Women and girls in Qamber, Shadadkot, north-west Sindh, Pakistan (8406155976)

Defined as marriage before the age of 18 years, child marriage is widespread in Pakistan and linked to spousal violence.[29] Child marriage occurs most often in rural and low-income households where education is minimal.[29] The Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey conducted from 2012 to 2013 reported that 47.5% of currently married women aged 15 to 24 had been married before the age of 18.[29] Moreover, of those child marriages, one-third of those women reported spousal violence.[29]

Marriages within the extended family edit

Consanguineous marriages, or those within blood relations such as first and second cousins, are considered marriages in biraderi, or brotherhood, within many Pakistani subcultures.[30] Based on reported research, about two-thirds of all Pakistani marriages are within families.[30] Analysis of a Pakistani Health Demographic Survey from 2012 to 2013 showed that women in consanguineous marriages are more likely to face psychological domestic abuse.[30] However, findings in this study also reported the prevalence of domestic violence within the larger Pakistani population as well.[30]

Increased urbanization edit

Another factor given for the rise in domestic violence has been due to increased urbanization. As people move from villages and increasingly live apart from an extended family, assaults are less likely to be prevented by the intervention of family members, who in past times often intervened in domestic conflicts.[31] In particular, women who move cities or areas after marriage away from their respective family are more at risk for domestic violence.[5] These women are left without parental or familial support as the only contacts they have are now limited to their husband and husband's family.[5] Violent spousal relationships are perpetuated by isolation of the victim and lack of social support.[5]

Impact on women edit

Physical and psychological health outcomes edit

Domestic violence leads to increased risk towards certain health outcomes like major depression, dysthymia, conduct disorder, and drug abuse.[11] Moreover, because women are primary caretakers in Pakistan, children also face increased risk for depression and behavioural problems.[5] Zakar et al. found in their study that of those interviewed (373 women from Pakistani hospitals) including women who had experienced severe domestic violence, 54% reported poor current mental health. Associated with this self-reported statistic of women in a poor state of mental health was also a high prevalence of mental health disorders with anxiety and depression being the most common.[5]

In particular, physical violence has long-term, negative psychological impacts on women with stigma against mental health serving as an impediment to treatment.[11][5] At times, physical violence may cause permanent disfiguration of the body causing physical ailments that lead to a variety of psychological disorders like depression.[5][26] Furthermore, women are often unable to receive treatment for psychological disorders as mental health within the cultural realm of Pakistan is not considered a health matter.[5][19] Mental health illiteracy leads to treatment of mental health disorders superstitiously or not at all.[5][26]

Another study that examined domestic violence and pregnancy among Pakistani women found that 51% of respondents reported experiencing domestic violence in the six months prior to or after pregnancy.[32] The researchers of this study and others have suggested due to the prevalence of domestic violence in pregnant women that domestic violence be screened for during antenatal care.[32][33]

Bargaining power edit

Women in domestic violence relationships often have no recourse of escaping due to fear of murder from the perpetrator.[34] A vivid example of this is the practice of watta satta, or bride exchange, whereby [30] a daughter from one family is swapped for a daughter of another in a brother-sister pair.[34] Power dynamics between the families follow a revenge-based model. If a husband is harsh on his wife then the mutual threat exists of the husband's brother-in-law being harsh on his sister.[34] These reciprocal threats leave women in positions with little to no bargaining power.[34] This leaves women in a position where they cannot escape a marriage because of cross bride exchange family entanglement.[34][5] Adding to the complexity, divorce is also highly stigmatized within the Pakistani culture.[34][5][25]

Bargaining power of women in domestic violence relationships is also minimal due to residence with the husband's family.[34] Particularly, in rural areas, if a woman in a domestic violence relationship is living with her husband's family, she has little recourse to seek help or escape.[30][34] Studies on attitudes of domestic violence in Pakistan have shown that though these families in rural areas may wish to help their daughter, it is costly to continuously visit her.[30] In other cases, domestic violence perpetrator families have been shown to taunt or ridicule those seeking justice.[30]

Policy initiatives edit

General legislation against domestic violence edit

In 2009 a Domestic Violence Protection bill was proposed by Yasmeen Rehman of the Pakistan People’s Party. It was passed in the National Assembly[35] but subsequently failed to be passed in the second chamber of parliament, the Senate, within the prescribed period of time.[36] The Council of Islamic Ideology objected to the bill, claiming that in its current form it will increase divorces and argued that the bill considered women and children the only victims of domestic violence, ignoring elderly and weak men.[37] The council claimed that the punishments suggested by the bill were already enacted by other laws and suggested lack of action on these laws as the reason for increase in domestic violence.[38] After the passage of Eighteenth constitutional amendment, the matter pertaining to the bill became a provincial issue.[39] It was re-tabled in 2012, but met with a deadlock in parliament because of stiff opposition from the religious right. Representatives of Islamic organizations vowed resistance to the proposed bill, describing it as "anti-Islamic" and an attempt to promote "Western cultural values" in Pakistan. They asked for the bill to be reviewed before being approved by the parliament.[40] The bill was passed for Islamabad Capital Territory.[39][41]

Specific legislation against certain offenses edit

Dowry deaths edit

In 1976 the Pakistani government passed legislation on dowry and bridal gifts in an attempt to eliminate the custom but, because of cultural and societal norms combined with government ineffectiveness, such killings over inadequate dowries continue.[4]

Acid attacks edit

In 1999 the Senate of Pakistan rejected a resolution which would have condemned the practice of murdering women for the sake of family honour.[42] In 2011 the Senate passed the Acid Control and Acid Crime Prevention Bill to repress acid attacks in the country; the senate also passed the Prevention of Anti-Women Practices bill.[43]

Honour killing edit

On April 21, 2001, the national government leader Pervez Musharraf declared that honour killings were "vigorously condemned" by the government and would be treated as murder.[44] The Ministry of Women Development set up ten crisis centres to help the victims of domestic violence and raise the awareness level of the people on this issue.[45] Particularly in 2004, Pakistan's Criminal Law (Amendment) Act passed that provided legal protection for women against any offense committed by family members for the sake of honour.[11] However, Pakistan's legal system has done little to uphold this legislation.[11][46] The National Commission on the Status of Women reports that Pakistan is doing little to bring justice to perpetrators.[46] If the family of the victim forgives the perpetrator, then the perpetrator will be set free despite clear violation of Pakistani law.[46] Oftentimes, families who are caught in an honour killing case come from rural areas where families must work together in a village on the daily to live.[46] When an honour killing occurs, the family of the victim are highly likely to forgive the perpetrator based on what elders of the village advise them to do.[47]

Support organizations edit

From both international and internal funding, there are a variety of NGO's that provide support to women who have endured or are enduring domestic violence in Pakistan.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c Hansar, Robert D. (2007). "Cross-Cultural Examination of Domestic Violence in China and Pakistan". In Nicky Ali Jackson (ed.). Encyclopedia of Domestic Violence (1st ed.). Routledge. p. 211. ISBN 978-0415969680.
  3. ^ Ajmal, Umer Bin (25 April 2012). "Domestic violence". Dawn. Retrieved 28 July 2012.
  4. ^ a b c Zaman, Habiba (2004). Suad Joseph; Afsaneh Najmabad (eds.). Family, Law and Politics: Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures: 2. Brill. p. 124. ISBN 978-9004128187.
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  33. ^ Mufiza, Farid; Saleem, Sarah; Karim, Mehtab; Hatcher, Juanita (2008). "Clinical Article: Spousal abuse during pregnancy in Karachi, Pakistan". International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics. 101 (2): 141–145. doi:10.1016/j.ijgo.2007.11.015. PMID 18289536. S2CID 205258124.
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  35. ^ Ghauri, Irfan (August 5, 2009). . Daily Times. Archived from the original on November 2, 2013.
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  47. ^ Jamal, A (2015). "Piety, Transgression, and the Feminist Debate on Muslim Women: Resituating the Victim-Subject of Honor-Related Violence from a Transnational Lens". Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 41: 55–79. doi:10.1086/681771. S2CID 147517991.
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External links edit

  • Domestic Violence (Prevention and Protection) Act, 2012 (PDF)

domestic, violence, pakistan, endemic, social, public, health, problem, according, study, carried, 2009, human, rights, watch, estimated, that, between, women, pakistan, have, suffered, some, form, abuse, women, have, reported, attacks, ranging, from, physical. Domestic violence in Pakistan is an endemic social and public health problem According to a study carried out in 2009 by Human Rights Watch it is estimated that between 10 and 20 of women in Pakistan have suffered some form of abuse 1 2 Women have reported attacks ranging from physical to psychological and sexual abuse from intimate partners 3 4 A survey carried out by the Thomson Reuters Foundation ranked Pakistan as the sixth most dangerous country for women while India ranked 1st as the most dangerous country for women 5 Given the very few women s shelters in the country victims have limited ability to escape from violent situations 2 One of the main reasons why domestic violence is so prevalent in Pakistan is the deeply entrenched patriarchal norms that exist in the country These norms place men in positions of power and authority over women and children and they can make it difficult for women to assert their rights and seek help In addition the legal framework around domestic violence in Pakistan is weak and the government has been criticized for not doing enough to protect women and children from abuse 6 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Definition 1 2 Statistics 2 Types of abuse 2 1 Physical violence 2 1 1 Dowry deaths 2 1 2 Acid attacks 2 1 3 Honour killing 2 2 Psychological abuse 3 Factors 3 1 Poverty 3 2 Patriarchalism 3 3 Child marriage 3 4 Marriages within the extended family 3 5 Increased urbanization 4 Impact on women 4 1 Physical and psychological health outcomes 4 2 Bargaining power 5 Policy initiatives 5 1 General legislation against domestic violence 5 2 Specific legislation against certain offenses 5 2 1 Dowry deaths 5 2 2 Acid attacks 5 2 3 Honour killing 6 Support organizations 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksOverview editDefinition edit As defined by the World Health Organization domestic violence encompasses physical and psychological distress including sexual coercive acts towards primarily women by a current or former male intimate partner 7 The landmark Domestic Violence Prevention and Protection Act passed in 2012 by the Pakistani Senate defines domestic violence as including all acts of gender based and other physical or psychological abuse committed by a respondent against women children or other vulnerable persons 8 The definition then further specifies assault attempt at assault criminal force criminal intimidation emotional psychological and verbal abuse harassment stalking sexual abuse physical abuse and economic abuse as some of the actions that fall under domestic violence 8 Statistics edit An estimated 5000 women are killed per year from domestic violence with thousands of others maimed or disabled 2 Lisa Hajjar an associate professor at the University of California describes abuse against women in Pakistan as endemic in all social spheres 9 In an observational study published in the Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences based on a convenience sample of 218 women in the gynecology wards of three hospitals 97 of the interviewed women said they had been victims of some form of assault ranging from verbal abuse or threatened to being subjected to beatings or non consensual sex 10 A study by the United Nations found that 50 of married women have experienced sexual violence and 90 have been psychologically abused 11 Studies by the Pakistan Nation Women s Division and Zakar et al confirmed these statistics of high percentages of domestic violence in Pakistani households 11 5 Research has also shown high rates of domestic violence primarily in rural communities and Afghani refugees living in Pakistan 12 13 A cross sectional survey of 490 randomly selected women from a rural health center in Pakistan of reproductive age reported that 65 of those interviewed had experienced domestic violence 12 A special report by the United Nations of the state of violence against women in Pakistan reported that Afghani refugees are left out of Pakistani services and of Pakistani statistics 13 The report noted that violence against women like child abuse and domestic violence is considerably high however proper statistics on this population are difficult to obtain 13 Types of abuse editPhysical violence edit Dowry deaths edit See also Bride burning In Pakistan Dowry deaths have been described by the United Nations as a form of domestic violence in Pakistan 14 Women are often attacked and murdered if their in laws deem their dowry to have been insufficient 15 Amongst dowry related violence bride burnings also known as stove deaths 16 are widely reported In 1988 a survey showed that 800 women were killed in this manner in 1989 the number rose to 1 100 and in 1990 it stood at 1 800 estimated killings According to the Progressive Women s Association such attacks are a growing problem and in 1994 on International Women s Day announced that various NGOs would join to raise awareness of the issue 17 Newspapers in Lahore in a six month period 1997 reported on average 15 attacks a month 18 Women s eNews reported that 4 000 women had been attacked in this manner in Islamabad s surroundings over an eight year period and that the average age range of victims was between 18 and 35 with an estimated 30 percent being pregnant at the time of death 16 The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reported that about four women are killed in this manner every day by either family members or husbands 19 Shahnaz Bukhari who runs the Progressive Women s Association in Islamabad has said of such attacks Either Pakistan is home to possessed stoves which burn only young housewives and are particularly fond of genitalia or looking at the frequency with which these incidences occur there is a grim pattern that these women are victims of deliberate murder 16 Acid attacks edit Acid attacks in Pakistan came to international attention after the release of a documentary by Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy called Saving Face 2012 20 According to Shahnaz Bukhari the majority of these attacks occur in the summer when acid is used extensively to soak certain seeds to induce germination 21 Various reasons have been given for such attacks such as a woman dressing inappropriately or rejecting a proposal of marriage The first known instance of an acid attack occurred in East Pakistan in 1967 22 According to the Acid Survivors Foundation up to 150 attacks occur every year The foundation reports that the attacks are often the result in an escalation of domestic abuse and the majority of victims are female 20 Honour killing edit A recent report noted that one in five homicides in Pakistan are attributed to honour killings 23 The prevalence of such honour killings that have been reported are around 2 000 killings every four years 23 Overall out of all homicides of both men and women in Pakistan honour killings of women constitute 21 11 Moreover the perpetrator in most honour killings is the husband 23 One study found as high as 92 of all honour killings are committed by the spouse 23 The highest occurring reason in spousal honour killings was alleged extramarital affairs 23 Much of the data has been collected by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan through newspaper reports however it is clear there needs to be more systematic research by a health agency is needed to assess this public health crisis and effectively plan for solutions as many cases go unreported 23 Another analysis of this research states that a possible explanation of the high rate of honour killings towards married women could be attributed to the generally high statistics of domestic violence in Pakistan 11 Psychological abuse edit Psychological abuse generally includes yelling insulting controlling behaviors and threatening In a study by Zakar et al of 373 randomly selected married women of reproductive age interviewed in Pakistani ospitals 60 8 reported as current victims of severe psychological violence with 15 having been victims in the past 5 The percentage of women going through current psychological violence far surpassed the percentages of women going through current sexual 27 3 and physical 21 7 violence Moreover more than half of these participants 54 reported being currently in a poor state of mental health Factors edit nbsp A young girl in a rural area of the Sindh province of Pakistan is selling these baskets her family has made for a living Poverty edit Associated with poverty is illiteracy and social stigma against domestic violence 24 Lack of an education due to financial reasons accompanies a lack of awareness about women s rights 25 Moreover because mental health illiteracy is especially widespread in low income areas many women to not get appropriate treatment for the after effects of domestic violence 5 Patriarchalism edit Another reason given for abuses is patriarchalism in Pakistani society which marginalizes women s role 4 In some traditional societies a man is considered to have the right to physically beat his spouse on his wish 14 According to Rahel Nardos it is the dual constructs of women as the property of men and as the standard bearers of a family s honour set the stage for culturally sanctioned forms of violence 26 In some cases women perpetuate patriarchalism and domestic abuse especially in regard to mothers in law 25 Many women are expected to be homemakers and to perform key household duties however if a woman is not performing her duties by her mother in law s standards the mother in law may seek to punish the woman through her son citation needed In analysis of data from 3 867 married or previously married women from the 2012 2013 Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey association was found between the intergenerational transfer of spousal violence and cultural views of women 27 Strikingly 47 of these women agreed that beating of a spouse was justified if the wife had argued with her husband 27 Statistics such as this prove that patriarchalism within the Pakistani society has led many Pakistani women to believe that domestic violence is normal or even at times justified This idea is enforced by a study done of 759 Pakistani women between the ages of 25 and 60 years old in which 27 admitted they had never told anyone of the spousal violence they had endured or were currently enduring 28 Child marriage edit nbsp Women and girls in Qamber Shadadkot north west Sindh Pakistan 8406155976 Defined as marriage before the age of 18 years child marriage is widespread in Pakistan and linked to spousal violence 29 Child marriage occurs most often in rural and low income households where education is minimal 29 The Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey conducted from 2012 to 2013 reported that 47 5 of currently married women aged 15 to 24 had been married before the age of 18 29 Moreover of those child marriages one third of those women reported spousal violence 29 Marriages within the extended family edit Consanguineous marriages or those within blood relations such as first and second cousins are considered marriages in biraderi or brotherhood within many Pakistani subcultures 30 Based on reported research about two thirds of all Pakistani marriages are within families 30 Analysis of a Pakistani Health Demographic Survey from 2012 to 2013 showed that women in consanguineous marriages are more likely to face psychological domestic abuse 30 However findings in this study also reported the prevalence of domestic violence within the larger Pakistani population as well 30 Increased urbanization edit Another factor given for the rise in domestic violence has been due to increased urbanization As people move from villages and increasingly live apart from an extended family assaults are less likely to be prevented by the intervention of family members who in past times often intervened in domestic conflicts 31 In particular women who move cities or areas after marriage away from their respective family are more at risk for domestic violence 5 These women are left without parental or familial support as the only contacts they have are now limited to their husband and husband s family 5 Violent spousal relationships are perpetuated by isolation of the victim and lack of social support 5 Impact on women editPhysical and psychological health outcomes edit Domestic violence leads to increased risk towards certain health outcomes like major depression dysthymia conduct disorder and drug abuse 11 Moreover because women are primary caretakers in Pakistan children also face increased risk for depression and behavioural problems 5 Zakar et al found in their study that of those interviewed 373 women from Pakistani hospitals including women who had experienced severe domestic violence 54 reported poor current mental health Associated with this self reported statistic of women in a poor state of mental health was also a high prevalence of mental health disorders with anxiety and depression being the most common 5 In particular physical violence has long term negative psychological impacts on women with stigma against mental health serving as an impediment to treatment 11 5 At times physical violence may cause permanent disfiguration of the body causing physical ailments that lead to a variety of psychological disorders like depression 5 26 Furthermore women are often unable to receive treatment for psychological disorders as mental health within the cultural realm of Pakistan is not considered a health matter 5 19 Mental health illiteracy leads to treatment of mental health disorders superstitiously or not at all 5 26 Another study that examined domestic violence and pregnancy among Pakistani women found that 51 of respondents reported experiencing domestic violence in the six months prior to or after pregnancy 32 The researchers of this study and others have suggested due to the prevalence of domestic violence in pregnant women that domestic violence be screened for during antenatal care 32 33 Bargaining power edit Women in domestic violence relationships often have no recourse of escaping due to fear of murder from the perpetrator 34 A vivid example of this is the practice of watta satta or bride exchange whereby 30 a daughter from one family is swapped for a daughter of another in a brother sister pair 34 Power dynamics between the families follow a revenge based model If a husband is harsh on his wife then the mutual threat exists of the husband s brother in law being harsh on his sister 34 These reciprocal threats leave women in positions with little to no bargaining power 34 This leaves women in a position where they cannot escape a marriage because of cross bride exchange family entanglement 34 5 Adding to the complexity divorce is also highly stigmatized within the Pakistani culture 34 5 25 Bargaining power of women in domestic violence relationships is also minimal due to residence with the husband s family 34 Particularly in rural areas if a woman in a domestic violence relationship is living with her husband s family she has little recourse to seek help or escape 30 34 Studies on attitudes of domestic violence in Pakistan have shown that though these families in rural areas may wish to help their daughter it is costly to continuously visit her 30 In other cases domestic violence perpetrator families have been shown to taunt or ridicule those seeking justice 30 Policy initiatives editGeneral legislation against domestic violence edit Main article Women related laws in Pakistan In 2009 a Domestic Violence Protection bill was proposed by Yasmeen Rehman of the Pakistan People s Party It was passed in the National Assembly 35 but subsequently failed to be passed in the second chamber of parliament the Senate within the prescribed period of time 36 The Council of Islamic Ideology objected to the bill claiming that in its current form it will increase divorces and argued that the bill considered women and children the only victims of domestic violence ignoring elderly and weak men 37 The council claimed that the punishments suggested by the bill were already enacted by other laws and suggested lack of action on these laws as the reason for increase in domestic violence 38 After the passage of Eighteenth constitutional amendment the matter pertaining to the bill became a provincial issue 39 It was re tabled in 2012 but met with a deadlock in parliament because of stiff opposition from the religious right Representatives of Islamic organizations vowed resistance to the proposed bill describing it as anti Islamic and an attempt to promote Western cultural values in Pakistan They asked for the bill to be reviewed before being approved by the parliament 40 The bill was passed for Islamabad Capital Territory 39 41 Specific legislation against certain offenses edit Dowry deaths edit In 1976 the Pakistani government passed legislation on dowry and bridal gifts in an attempt to eliminate the custom but because of cultural and societal norms combined with government ineffectiveness such killings over inadequate dowries continue 4 Acid attacks edit In 1999 the Senate of Pakistan rejected a resolution which would have condemned the practice of murdering women for the sake of family honour 42 In 2011 the Senate passed the Acid Control and Acid Crime Prevention Bill to repress acid attacks in the country the senate also passed the Prevention of Anti Women Practices bill 43 Honour killing edit On April 21 2001 the national government leader Pervez Musharraf declared that honour killings were vigorously condemned by the government and would be treated as murder 44 The Ministry of Women Development set up ten crisis centres to help the victims of domestic violence and raise the awareness level of the people on this issue 45 Particularly in 2004 Pakistan s Criminal Law Amendment Act passed that provided legal protection for women against any offense committed by family members for the sake of honour 11 However Pakistan s legal system has done little to uphold this legislation 11 46 The National Commission on the Status of Women reports that Pakistan is doing little to bring justice to perpetrators 46 If the family of the victim forgives the perpetrator then the perpetrator will be set free despite clear violation of Pakistani law 46 Oftentimes families who are caught in an honour killing case come from rural areas where families must work together in a village on the daily to live 46 When an honour killing occurs the family of the victim are highly likely to forgive the perpetrator based on what elders of the village advise them to do 47 Support organizations editFrom both international and internal funding there are a variety of NGO s that provide support to women who have endured or are enduring domestic violence in Pakistan Bedari funded by United Nations Development Programme 48 White Ribbon Campaign Pakistan 49 Lawyers for Human Rights and Legal Aid LHRLA 50 Madadgaar National Helpline 1098 51 War Against Rape Pakistan Acid Survivors Foundation Pakistan 52 Chayn 53 See also edit nbsp Pakistan portal Forced conversion of minority girls in Pakistan Acid throwing Child marriage Dowry death Domestic violence Honour killing Honour killing in Pakistan Honour killing of Sadia Sheikh Honour killing of Ghazala Khan Rape in Pakistan Violence against women in PakistanReferences edit Cited in Gosselin Denise Kindschi 2009 Heavy Hands An Introduction to the Crime of Intimate and Family Violence 4th ed Prentice Hall p 13 ISBN 978 0136139034 a b c Hansar Robert D 2007 Cross Cultural Examination of Domestic Violence in China and Pakistan In Nicky Ali Jackson ed Encyclopedia of Domestic Violence 1st ed Routledge p 211 ISBN 978 0415969680 Ajmal Umer Bin 25 April 2012 Domestic violence Dawn Retrieved 28 July 2012 a b c Zaman Habiba 2004 Suad Joseph Afsaneh Najmabad eds Family Law and Politics Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures 2 Brill p 124 ISBN 978 9004128187 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Zakar Rubeena Zakar Muhammad Mikolajczyk Rafael Kraemer Alexander 2013 Spousal Violence Against Women and Its Association With Women s Mental Health in Pakistan Health Care for Women International 34 9 795 813 doi 10 1080 07399332 2013 794462 PMID 23790086 S2CID 36059658 Sardar Sharmeela Rassool Riffat 2021 04 08 Domestic violence DAWN COM Retrieved 2023 08 11 WHO 2005 WHO Multi Country Study on Women s Health and Domestic Violence against Women Geneva World Health Organization a b Domestic Violence Prevention and Protection Act PDF 2012 Hajjar Lisa 2004 Domestic Violence and Sharia A Comparative Study of Muslim Societies in the Middle East Africa and Asia In Lynn Welchman ed Women s Rights and Islamic Family Law Perspectives on Reform Zed Books p 265 ISBN 978 1842770955 Shaikh Masood Ali 2003 Is domestic violence endemic in Pakistan perspective from Pakistani Wives PDF Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences 19 1 23 28 Cited in Hanser Robert D 2007 Cross cultural examination of domestic violence in China and Pakistan In Nicky Ali Jackson ed Encyclopedia of Domestic Violence 1st ed Routledge p 211 ISBN 978 0415969680 a b c d e f g h Nasrullah Muazzam Haqqi Sobia Cummings Kristin 2009 The epidemiological patterns of honour killing of women in Pakistan European Journal of Public Health 19 2 193 197 doi 10 1093 eurpub ckp021 PMID 19286837 a b Zakar Rubeena Zakar Muhammad Z Abbas Safdar 11 June 2015 Domestic Violence Against Rural Women in Pakistan An Issue of Health and Human Rights Journal of Family Violence 31 1 15 25 doi 10 1007 s10896 015 9742 6 S2CID 32785806 a b c Violence Against Women Mission to Pakistan and Afghanistan PDF United Nations Economic and Social Council 2000 a b Van Wormer Katherine Fred H Besthorn 2010 Human Behavior and the Social Environment Macro Level Groups Communities 2nd ed Oxford University Press p 149 ISBN 978 0199740574 Pickup Francine Suzanne Williams Caroline Sweetman 2000 Ending Violence Against Women A Challenge for Development and Humanitarian Work Oxfam p 91 ISBN 978 0855984380 a b c Terzieff Juliette October 27 2002 Pakistan s Fiery Shame Women Die in Stove Deaths Women s eNews Rappaport Helen 2001 Encyclopedia of Women Social Reformers Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 115 ISBN 978 1576071014 Jilani Hina Eman M Ahmed 2004 Violence against Women The Legal System and Institutional Responses in Pakistan In Savitri Goonesekere ed Violence Law and Women s Rights in South Asia Sage p 161 ISBN 978 0761997962 Retrieved 3 August 2012 a b Kapoor Sushma June 2000 Domestic Violence Against Women and Girls PDF Innocenti Digest 6 7 ISSN 1028 3528 a b Rodriguez Alex May 29 2012 Pakistan offers little justice for victims of acid attacks Los Angeles Times Ali Sahar July 28 2003 Acid attack victim demands justice BBC Weightman Barbara A 2012 Dragons and Tigers A Geography of South East and Southeast Asia 3rd ed Wiley p 77 ISBN 978 0470876282 a b c d e f Dobson Roger 2009 Honour killings are a public health problem for Pakistan British Medical Journal 338 739 Poverty illiteracy termed causes of domestic violence Dawn 3 March 2006 Retrieved 6 September 2012 a b c Bibi Seema Ashfaq Sanober Shaikh Farhana Qureshi Mohammad 2014 Prevalence instigating factors and help seeking behavior of physical domestic violence among married women of Hyderabad Sindh Pakistani Journal of Medicine Science 30 a b c Nardos Rahel Michael L Penn Mary K Radpour William S Hatcher 2003 Cultural Traditional Practices and Gender Based Violence Overcoming Violence Against Women and Girls The International Campaign to Eradicate a World wide Problem Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 87 88 ISBN 978 0742525009 a b Aslam Syeda Zaheer Sidra Shafique Kashif 2015 Is Spousal Violence Being Vertically Transmitted through Victims Findings from the Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey 2012 13 PLOS ONE 10 6 e0129790 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1029790K doi 10 1371 journal pone 0129790 PMC 4470804 PMID 26083619 Ali Tazeen Mogren Ingrid Krantz Gunilla 2013 Intimate Partner Violence and Mental Health Effects A Population Based Study among Married Women in Karachi Pakistan International Journal of Behavioral Medicine 20 1 131 139 doi 10 1007 s12529 011 9201 6 PMID 22037921 S2CID 19498495 a b c d Nasrullah Muazzam Zakar Rubeena Zakar Muhammad 2014 Child Marriage and Its Associations With Controlling Behaviors and Spousal Violence Against Adolescent and Young Women in Pakistan Journal of Adolescent Health 55 6 804 809 doi 10 1016 j jadohealth 2014 06 013 PMID 25123525 a b c d e f g h Shaikh Masood 2016 Domestic violence in consanguineous marriages findings from Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey 2012 13 Journal of Pakistan Medical Association 66 Weiss Anita M 1998 Pakistan Some progress sobering challenges In Selig S Harrison Paul H Kreisberg Dennis Kux eds India and Pakistan The First Fifty Years Cambridge University Press p 146 ISBN 978 0521645850 a b Karmaliani Rozina Irfan Farhana Bann Carla Mcclure Elizabeth Moss Nancy 2008 Domestic violence prior to and during pregnancy among Pakistani women Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica 87 11 1194 1201 doi 10 1080 00016340802460263 PMID 18951219 S2CID 23094341 Mufiza Farid Saleem Sarah Karim Mehtab Hatcher Juanita 2008 Clinical Article Spousal abuse during pregnancy in Karachi Pakistan International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics 101 2 141 145 doi 10 1016 j ijgo 2007 11 015 PMID 18289536 S2CID 205258124 a b c d e f g h Jacoby Hanan Mansuri Ghazala 2010 Watta Satta Bride Exchange and Women s Welfare in Rural Pakistan PDF American Economic Review 100 4 1804 1825 doi 10 1257 aer 100 4 1804 S2CID 18781194 Ghauri Irfan August 5 2009 NA passes law against domestic violence Daily Times Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Zahid Gishkori 6 April 2012 Opposition forces government to defer women domestic violence bill The Express Tribune Retrieved 28 July 2012 Brightman Sara 2015 Rights women and the state of Pakistan Contemporary Justice Review 18 3 334 351 doi 10 1080 10282580 2015 1057706 S2CID 142382377 Nasir Iqbal 24 August 2009 Domestic Violence Bill to push up divorce rate CII Dawn Retrieved 4 September 2012 a b Ayesha Shahid 7 April 2012 Domestic violence bill gets new look Dawn Retrieved 6 September 2012 Gishkori Zahid April 17 2012 Citing controversial clauses Clerics vow to resist passage of Domestic Violence Bill The Express Tribune Domestic Violence Prevention and Protection Act 2012 PDF Senate of Pakistan 20 February 2012 Retrieved 29 July 2012 permanent dead link Ajmal Umer Bin 25 August 1999 World South Asia Bride burning kills hundreds Dawn Human Rights and Democracy The 2011 Foreign and Commonwealth Office Report TSO 2012 p 292 ISBN 978 0101833929 Kapoor Sushma June 2000 Domestic Violence Against Women and Girls PDF Innocenti Digest 6 6 ISSN 1028 3528 Shahina Imran 11 March 2008 Pakistan Domestic violence endemic but awareness slowly rising Lahore Integrated Regional Information Networks Retrieved 4 September 2012 a b c d Muhammad N Omer F Mushtaq A Shah M 2012 Honor killing in Pakistan An Islamic perspective Asian Social Science 10 180 185 Jamal A 2015 Piety Transgression and the Feminist Debate on Muslim Women Resituating the Victim Subject of Honor Related Violence from a Transnational Lens Signs Journal of Women in Culture and Society 41 55 79 doi 10 1086 681771 S2CID 147517991 Bedari Awakening for human rights White Ribbon Pakistan LHRLA Pakistan MNH 1098 Pakistan Archived from the original on 2020 11 14 Retrieved 2019 04 20 Acid Survivors Pakistan Archived from the original on 2008 02 27 Domestic violence Within the four walls The Express Tribune The Express Tribune 2013 09 04 Retrieved 2017 09 29 External links editDomestic Violence Prevention and Protection Act 2012 PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Domestic violence in Pakistan amp oldid 1207997492, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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