Sexually Assaulted Christian Threatened with Blasphemy Charge, Rights Group Says

Muslim supervisor retaliating for accusation of misconduct, leader says.

Rights worker Riaz Aasi with Salima Rani Bibi. (Morning Star News)

Rights worker Riaz Aasi with Salima Rani Bibi. (Morning Star News)

LAHORE, Pakistan (Morning Star News) – A Muslim supervisor is threatening to file blasphemy charges against a Christian sanitation worker in Pakistan if she refuses to withdraw her sexual assault accusation against him, a human rights leader said.

Salima Rani Bibi, a 50-year-old Catholic sweeper in the sanitation branch of the Khanewal Municipal Committee in Punjab Province, was allegedly groped and had clothes torn off by supervisor Ajmal Khan Dukki in front of other employees on July 22 after she repeatedly refused his demands for sex, said Riaz Aasi, chairman of Alpha Human Rights Care Organisation.

Aasi said Dukki routinely sexually harassed Rani Bibi, a mother of six girls, and made lewd remarks to her in front of other Christian workers.

“When Rani Bibi filed a complaint against him with the Tehsil Municipal Administration (TMA) Khanewal, Dukki and other senior officials started intimidating her by stopping her salary and going as far as threatening her with abduction of her daughters, four of whom are minors,” Aasi told Morning Star News.

Aasi said that when Rani Bibi refused to withdraw her complaint, Dukki groped her private parts and tore off some of her clothes.

“This incident happened in front of a large number of employees, but even though all of Rani Bibi’s Christian colleagues are willing to testify in her favor, the court has been adjourning the hearing on one pretext or the other,” Aasi said.

Rani Bibl has also filed a complaint with the Khanewal police station house officer, Khanewal deputy commissioner and Khanewal district police officer to no avail. Aasi said a scheduled Aug. 6 court hearing was postponed to Aug. 16, but then that hearing was also postponed. The next hearing is scheduled for Friday (Sept. 3). Aasi suspects the courts are delaying the process due to political pressure by the accused.

Rani Bibi has been forced to go into hiding along with her children due to mounting pressure on her to withdraw the harassment case, he said.

The accused belongs to the influential Dukki family of Khanewal, which shares powerful connections with Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar, Aasi said. The chairman of the Khanewal Municipal Committee, Janwal Masood Majeed Khan, also belongs to the Dukki family. The accused and Majeed Khan, along with Qazi Farhan, the in-charge of the sanitation branch, are using their political clout against Rana Bibi, Aasi said.

Aasi said that since he intervened on Rani Bibi’s behalf, Ajmal Khan Dukki and the other officials have engaged in a campaign of character-assassination against Rani Bibi, openly reviling her and the other Christian employees.

The rights activist said that ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) member Wazir Khan Niazi has also become involved in trying to save Ajmal Khan Dukki, pressuring witnesses with threats of torture to stop supporting Rani Bibi.

“We are waiting to see how the hearing on Sept. 3 goes,” Aasi said. “We are ready to organize a district and provincial-level protest if silenced. We are not afraid to go as far as a hunger strike.”

Discrimination against Christians

Most sanitation workers in Pakistan are Christian. Some Hindus in Sindh Province also work in sanitation, but Muslims in the country refuse the work.

Christian sanitation workers are routinely called derogatory terms such as Choora, Kooray wala and Gutter Saaf Karnay Wala and face sexual harassment, discrimination, nonpayment of salaries, irregular work contracts and extortion by senior officers.

Human rights activist Kashif Nawab said that municipal corporations usually engage sanitation workers on daily wages, denying them the rights of a permanent worker.

“Muslim sweepers use their influence in registering daily attendance but hardly show up, whereas the salaries of Christian sanitation workers are usually delayed,” Nawab told Morning Star News. “Social security law guarantees compensation for those who die on duty, but the families of Christian sanitation workers are not paid the full amount.”

Christian workers, particularly women, also have to face harassment by Muslim supervisors, he said.

“They know that these poor workers cannot do anything against them, hence the harassment is continuing unabated in almost all cities of Punjab and Sindh provinces,” Nawab said.

The manner in which Rani Bibi has been denied justice shows how the majority population treats the most vulnerable segment of society, he added.

“Threats of involving the poor woman in a blasphemy case should also be taken seriously by the police and district administration officials,” he said. “They need to support a woman who has taken a just stand against her harassment instead of becoming a party to her victimization campaign.”

The U.S. State Department in December re-designated Pakistan among nine other “Countries of Particular Concern” for severe violations of religious freedom. Previously Pakistan had been added to the list on Nov. 28, 2018.

Pakistan ranked fifth on Christian support organization Open Doors 2021 World Watch list of the 50 countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian.

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