News
Monday, July 10, 2006
Ordinance to amend Hudood laws this month
By Qamar Jabbar
LAHORE: A presidential ordinance will be promulgated
this month repealing the controversial articles of the Hudood Ordinance,
sources told Daily Times on Sunday.
The Law Ministry is currently drafting the ordinance,
which would seek to provide relief to women unjustly imprisoned under
Hudood laws, the sources said. President Gen Pervez Musharraf and
then the federal cabinet would approve the draft, after which it would
be presented in the National Assembly to become an act, the sources
said.
The ordinance would make the appearance of four witnesses
necessary for the registration of a case under the Hudood Ordinance.
It would also bar families from registering complaints under the Hudood
Ordinance against couples who marry of their own will. Married couple,
in case of any complaint, would have to present their nikah namas
(marriage certificates) in the police station concerned.
Under the new ordinance, the complainant and the accused
would have to undergo DNA tests in cases of rape or adultery. Currently,
such cases are presented in court on the basis of medico-legal examinations.
Rape and adultery cases would also not be registered without four
witnesses.
DNA testing facilities are currently available only
at the Centre for Excellence in Molecular Biology (CEMB) of the Punjab
University, and the government has decided to open a DNA lab at Sir
Ganga Ram Hospital in Lahore. The sources said the CEMB charges Rs
10,000 for DNA tests and this was too expensive for most accused in
Hudood cases.
Mehnaz Rafi, a PML vice president and member of the
National Assembly Standing Committee on Women’s Affairs, told
Daily Times that there were many ambiguities in the Hudood laws and
many women were in jail because of these.
Ms Rafi said the government had now allowed for the
immediate bail of women accused in Hudood cases. She said couples
who marry of their own choice should not suffer in courts under Hudood
cases. Many women jailed for adultery after being raped or for marrying
of their own choice were giving birth in jail, which was a violation
of human rights, she said.
She said that the government wants to keep women accused
under Hudood laws out of prisons and that was why it was considering
amendments to the laws.
The government has recently tasked the Council
of Islamic Ideology with drawing up amendments to the Hudood Ordinance,
which was promulgated by Gen Ziaul Haq in 1979. Human rights groups
say the laws discriminate against women and three national commissions
over the last 20 years have each recommended the repeal or amendment
of the ordinance.
Courtesy http://www.DailyTimes.com.pk