Archive for the ‘News’ category

A German Documentary About Acid Survivors Foundation, No border To show There Is Hope…

June 7th, 2010

An Article From The Express Tribune…

June 7th, 2010
Ale

    Rebuilding shattered lives

    By Maha Mussadaq
    June 05, 2010

    ISLAMABAD: When Valerie Khan Yusufzai came to Pakistan in 1996, she had no idea that she would be setting up an organisation dedicated to changing the lives of acid victims in the country.

    With her husband, Mohammad Yusufzai, she moved first to Swabi and then to Islamabad.

    “My family was not worried about me marrying a Pakistani man; they were more worried about me moving to Pakistan,” said Valerie.

    She grew up in a strict environment with strong values in France. “So moving to NWFP actually felt like home,” she said.

    A French literature graduate, she taught French for 12 years in Islamabad. But in 2005, Valerie’s mission began, when she first learnt about acid violence in Pakistan.

    “I was not aware of the phenomenon [of acid violence] until I saw a victim at the beauty parlour. Seeing her disfigurement from a woman’s perspective, there was a strong instinctive force inside me that pushed me to help her,” she said.

    Valerie helped the woman as much as she could, until financial and administration issues surfaced and she could not continue.

    But it seemed Valerie had found her calling. With the support of family and friends, she turned her humanitarian efforts into a more formal organisation and the Acid Survivors Foundation was registered in 2007, with Valerie as Chairperson and her husband as Executive Director.

    Since January 2007, 87 patients have registered with the organisation.

    “Now we are facing financial issues, not because more cases have started occurring, but because more are being reported,” she said.

    Victims can get free surgery at Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences in Islamabad and Benazir Bhutto Hospital in Rawalpindi but these hospitals are already overburdened with patients.

    Valerie feels that, even more than hospital burn centres, “The government needs to provide us with area to build Nursing Rehabilitation Units.”

    These units will provide comprehensive rehabilitation services, medical and surgical nursing care, physiotherapy and psychotherapy as well as socioeconomic services.

    “The rehabilitation is not just physical; the real work is to rebuild their shattered confidence and help them face the world again,” Valerie said.

    At present, the patients are kept at a nursing care rehabilitation unit in Sector I-10.

    “None of the victims will ever be exactly the same. We are not magicians, we are just social workers trying to make a difference,” she said.

    Valerie said there was no support from the government in terms of funds because they did not trust local NGOs. “The government should double check the credibility of NGOs by checking their receipts, bank statements, legal documents. If this is done, the corrupt ones will be identified,” she said.

    “The Acid Crime and Protection Bill was tabled in the National Assembly in December 2009 and much more work needs to be done to get it implemented,” she said.

    The number of acid violence incidents increased in the last eights years, with 10 in 2002 and almost 50 in 2008, according to statistics from the Acid Survivor Foundation collected between 1991 and 2008.

    The reason behind almost half of all reported cases, is family disputes, and 90 percent of the cases are reported in Punjab. Of all cases reported between 1991 and 2009, 61 percent of victims were female and 39 percent were male.

    Valerie said her mission would continue as long as she lives. “We do thank God for what we are blessed with but every now and then there is a feeling within us that we must achieve more.”

    “Do not believe you are doing something big because there are many exceptional people out there making a difference. One must always remain humble,” Valerie said.

    Published in the Express Tribune, June 5th, 2010.

    Reader Comments

    Comments (3)
    • jamal shahid

      20 hours ago

      biggest fan .. like totally

    • zahra

      12 hours ago

      Love the story I follow ur stories everyday…keep it up!!! you are a brilliant journalist….

      Regards
      Zahra

    • Hassan Durrani

      11 hours ago

      Nice Article … For Sure

Warning…

June 4th, 2010

Acid Survivors Foundation can only guarantee the relevance of its data and the ones stated in ASF statistics but does not give any guarantee of any kind for whatever is published in various articles, books, magasines, etc… as :

- mistakes do occur frequently in the journalists statements

- some organisations do not necessarily follow a protocol of verification and liaison for notification/identification/tracing of acid attacks, do not necessary have reliable sources of information.

The figures of 8886 acid survivors since 1994 in Pakistan, is not an information that we will validate for the time being as it does not correspond to any data we came across so far. If any such new data is available, we would study it and of course would uodate ours accordingly and disseminate the information,

VKY, ASF Chairperson.

An Article From Zofeen Ibrahim, In Australia.To News

June 4th, 2010

PAKISTAN: Women Intensify Push to Pass Law Against Acid Attacks

Monday, 31 May 2010 12:36

Written by Zofeen Ebrahim

E-mail Print PDF

KARACHI, Pakistan, May 31  (IPS)  - Almost seven years after Naila Farhat, 20, became another victim of an acid
throwing attack by a spurned suitor, she is finally seeing more vigorous efforts
toward the passage of a law seeking to amend existing legislation to reinforce
protection of women against violent assaults.

Farhat is the first to admit, though, that beneath her physical scars is a
smoldering anger that refuses to be pacified until she has exacted vengeance
against her violators.

”I want him to be doused in acid so he can feel not just the searing pain but
live with disfigurement day after day, for the rest of his life,” she said of her
main assailant over telephone from Layyah, a town in the southern part of
Punjab province.

Yasmeen Rehman, advisor to the prime minister on women’s development
and a legislator, told IPS that the Ministry of Women Development (MoWD)
was doing further research on a draft law against acid attacks.

”It is seeking help from the Acid Survivors Foundation (ASF) and the United
Nations Development Fund for Women, she said.

The ASF, in turn, is getting assistance from its parent organisation in Britain
and Cornell Law School in the United States, said Sana Masood, a lawyer
working with the Foundation, which provides medical, psychosocial,
socioeconomic and legal aid to acid survivors. ”We are currently involved in
extensive research to help the MoWD in coming up with another bill,” she
revealed

”Realistically speaking, I should say we will be able to present it in the
(legislative) assembly by July,” said Rehman

In November 2009, six years after Farhat filed a case against her perpetrators
ū a tailor and her elementary science teacher, who acted as an accomplice ū
Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhary urged the
government to pass a new law that would restrict the sale of industrial
strength acid and increase the punishment for acid attacks.

This came with his landmark verdict upholding the original lower court ruling
sentencing Farhat’s violators to 12 years in prison and ordering them to pay
1.25 million rupees (about 14,775 dollars) in damages.

Chaudhary also announced that the government would shoulder the cost of
her healthcare and educational needs.

Farhat said she decided to bring her case to the Supreme Court late last year
after the lower courts released one of her assailants, her former teacher, and
lowered the prime perpetrator’s sentence to four years and his fine to
110,000 rupees (1,300 dollars).

”The teacher bribed the judge and got himself released the very same day,”
she said.

Following the Supreme Court’s ruling, three women parliamentarians filed a
”hurriedly drafted” bill, as Masood described it, seeking to amend existing
laws on violence against women.

”It does not seem to be a priority within the legislative assembly and has yet
to be taken up for discussion,” said Marvi Memon, one of the bill’s principal
authors.

Masood said the bill in its present form is inadequate, because it ”is
discriminatory and caters only to women and children when our findings
show that 39 percent of victims are males.”  Men are also in danger of acid
attack, she said, usually as a result of issues like property disputes, financial
problems and professional jealousies, she said.

Furthermore, she said, the bill does not clearly define the ”role of the law
enforcement agencies or mechanisms for regulating and monitoring acid
trade,” said Masood.

Some female legislators, on the other hand, have dismissed the need for a
new law protecting women against violent assaults such as acid throwing.

”I think we’re already over-legislated,” said member of Parliament Nafisa
Shah. ”The laws are there. What is needed is strict enforcement of the
existing ones,” she said.

Rehman said ”special and specific laws are needed in a country where
violence against women is on the rise.” In an earlier interview with Agence
France-Presse, ASF’s Masood said they recorded 48 cases of acid attacks in
2009, up from 30 in 207.

Shahnaz Bokhari, president of the Islamabad-based Progressive Women’s
Association, which assists victims of domestic violence, said she has
supported 8,886 acid attack female survivors since 1994.

The incidence of acid attacks is particularly high in the southern part of
Punjab, the south Asian country’s cotton belt and second largest province,
said Khan.

”Lack of a regulating and monitoring framework regarding acid, cheap price,
low level of socio-economic development” are some of the factors underlying
these crimes, said Khan.

A bottle of concentrated sulphuric acid generally costs only 20 Pakistani
rupees per litre (about 23 U.S. cents), said Bokahari.

”Acid is used for textile industry and cleaning cotton seeds before being
replanted,” explained Khan, whose organisation has provided medical,
psychosocial, socioeconomic and legal aid to about 300 acid Punjab-based
survivors since 2006 when it was formed.

While Farhat has been unrelenting in her quest for justice, some victims are
afraid of taking action against their perpetrators.

Forty-something Naeema Begum, whose husband threw acid in her face
when he divorced her in 200,4 said, ”I don’t want to take him to court; I’m
scared he may take my kids away from me as revenge,” she said.

”Most have been threatened into silence,” said Bokhari. Their scars are not
just physical, she said. ”They go much deeper.”

Farhat sees beyond her disfigured body, her spirit resolute as ever to find
justice, which has not been so elusive, after all. A new law is in the offing and
her perpetrator is in jail. At the moment, though, six months since the CJP’s
directive, she has yet to receive the promised financial assistance.

When A Woman Speaks…

June 4th, 2010

A woman activist delivering her speech in Multan at GJP final consultation.

A press articles showing all the women activists who had attended the consultation to say no to acid violence and urge the Pakistani government to pass a relevant law to regulate and monitor acid sale and punish the perpetrators and facilitate victims' rehabilitation.

GJP: Last But Meaningful Consultation With Stakeholders In Multan.

June 4th, 2010

Mr M.Khan, ASF ED, discussing the issue of acid violence with law enforcement agencies representatives.

When Mollahs explain how Islam condemns such an atrocious form of violence...

Acid attack spreading…

May 7th, 2010

Page last updated at 08:38 GMT, Friday, 30 April 2010 09:38 UK

Acid attack on Pakistani sisters in Balochistan

Manzoor Attiqa (pictured) was attacked earlier this year

Campaigners there are up to 150 acid attacks every year

Three sisters have suffered serious facial burns after two unidentified men on a motorbike threw acid at them in Pakistan’s Balochistan province.

The sisters, aged between 14 and 20 years old, were attacked as they walked from Kalat city to Pandarani village – one is still in a serious condition.

Political activists held a protest in Kalat shortly after the attack.

There are no reliable statistics, but campaigners say there may be 150 acid attack victims in Pakistan each year.

The police named the girls as Fatima Bibi, 20, Saima Bibi, 16 and Sakina Bibi, 14.

They were taken to a government hospital in Kalat, but Fatima Bibi was later shifted to a hospital in the provincial capital, Quetta.

No arrests have been made as yet.

Two weeks ago, an unknown group – the Baloch Ghairatmand Group (the Honourable Baloch Group) – claimed responsibility for a similar attack on two women in a market in Dalbandin city.

The group had warned women to wear the hijab, the traditional Muslim headscarf, and not to visit markets unaccompanied by men from their families.

The attack was criticised by Balochistan’s political leaders as well as armed rebel groups, who said it had been carried out by elements that wanted to push the Baloch people back in time.

BBC news : Dr Charles Viva, Dr Hamid Hassan From BBH, Acid Survivors Foundation, A Joint Effort.

April 14th, 2010

BBC

Page last updated at 07:15 GMT, Tuesday, 13 April 2010 08:15 UK

Pakistan acid victims rebuild ruined lives

By Orla Guerin
BBC News, Rawalpindi

Acid attacks on wives ‘at all time high’

At four years old, Gul-e-Mehtab already knows what she wants to do when she grows up.

This little girl, whose name means “moonlight flower”, wants to be a doctor in order to heal her own mother, Manzoor Attiqa.

“She says: ‘Mama when I grow up, I will become a doctor. I will treat you, and then you will be perfect’,” Manzoor says, with a proud smile.

Twenty-two-year-old Manzoor is a patient in surgical ward 10 in Benazir Bhutto hospital in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi.

Manzoor Attiqa

Manzoor says the attack followed a row over doing the dishes

The ward is a cluster of women in brightly coloured shawls, who share the same scars and the same trauma. All have been attacked with acid.

There are no reliable national statistics, but campaigners estimate that there may be as many as 150 victims every year.

It is an intimate crime – often carried out in the family home, by husbands or in-laws.

Manzoor’s attack followed a row over doing the dishes.

“It was seven o’clock in the morning, and I had just finished making breakfast,” she says.

“My daughter was crying so I picked her up, but her grandmother said: ‘Leave her and wash the dishes.’ I told her that I would wash them, and that we had the whole day ahead of us. After this, they started beating me. I was unconscious for four or five days. I woke up in hospital in Lahore.”

While she lay unconscious, Manzoor was drenched in acid. It devoured her lower lip, neck and shoulders and left her chin fused to her chest.

But when she speaks of the in-laws she blames for the attack, there is no bitterness. In spite of her injuries, and her suffering, she says that she has forgiven them.

“They are like my own mother and sisters,” she says. “I just pray God shows them the right path, so they can’t do this kind of thing to anybody else. I forgave them, so that they could realise they did wrong.”

Get the sellers

When we meet Manzoor, she is about to have her sixth surgery – performed free by a group of Pakistani experts, and British volunteers, led by plastic surgeon Charles Viva.

The retired NHS doctor, with a snow-white walrus moustache, has spent decades treating the poor around the globe, including many victims of acid burns.

Charles Viva, plastic surgeon

Retired plastic surgeon Charles Viva has treated many acid burns victims

“I feel very passionately angry about this because God has made us whole, and for somebody to do this causes a lot of distress for the patients and their families,” he says. “We do what we can to give the women back their dignity.”

In Manzoor’s case, this means grafting skin from her leg on to her neck, so that she can lift her head fully.

Mr Viva wants action against those who sell the acid, not just those who throw it.

“I think we need some very strong deterrents to prevent this happening,” he said.

“I think it’s essential that the government and the authorities should target the people who perpetrate the crime, and those who supply the acid. They are just as guilty for giving the acid.”

Two hours later, Manzoor is back in ward 10. Her surgery was a success, but it won’t be her last.

‘It didn’t end my life’

Opposite her, in bed nine, Saira Liaqat is recovering from her latest operation – her 18th. Her face is still bandaged,already she is sitting up, supported by her mother, Gulshan.

A medical file rests at the end of the bed, with photos of a striking girl in a gold headdress. That was Saira seven years ago, before she was attacked.

Saira Liaqat, after surgery, supported by her mother, Gulshan

Saira Liaqat was attacked several years ago, but has plans for the future

Acid has erased any resemblance to the pretty girl of the past, but it has not crushed her spirit. Since the attack, she has trained as a beautician.

“I want to own my own beauty parlour,” she says.

“I want people to say ‘that’s the girl who suffered and didn’t lose hope’. I want to support my parents as well as a son can. I want to show that person that even though he threw acid in my face, it didn’t end my life.”

Saira’s husband is still on trial for her attack. If convicted, he could get between five and 14 years. Gulshan wants an eye for an eye.

“He should either get the death penalty, or have acid thrown in his face, so he knows how it feels,” she says.

“The law is weak in Pakistan. If criminals like him are given a tough punishment immediately, then nobody will do this kind of thing.”

Campaigners are calling for the introduction of life sentences. They say that while Pakistan is finally waking up to this issue, there is still a long way to go.

“At the highest level, people like the chief justice are taking acid violence very seriously,” says Valerie Khan of the Acid Survivors Foundation (ASF), which helps many of the victims.

“In the past six months, we are seeing higher sentences being handed down. But the vast majority of women are unable to even register a case. And police are still turning a blind eye, due to corruption and social pressure.”

While she slept

One of many still waiting for justice is 23-year-old Naseera Bibi.

She is friendly and talkative, in spite of her debilitating injuries.

The acid thrown in her face, while she slept, ate through her nose and both of her eyes. She believes her husband was the culprit.

I’ve learnt how to knit sweaters and my children are back with me. I can’t just sit around and lose hope
Naseera Bibi

She says she heard his voice next to her, as the acid melted her skin, telling her to say it was someone else.

“I started screaming. Then I heard my husband telling me whoever asks you who did it, just say it was Javed. I told him that I haven’t seen anybody. He kept insisting whoever asks you, just say Javed did it.”

Naseera’s main concern now is how to provide for her children, without her sight.

“I’ve been taken to about 10 doctors, but there doesn’t seem to be a chance of restoring my eyesight,” she says.

“I’ve been very upset about this, because I have become a burden. But the ASF sent me to a school to study. I’ve learnt how to knit sweaters, and my children are back with me. I can’t just sit around and lose hope.”

Like other acid attack survivors in ward 10, Nazeera has been robbed of her looks, but not of her courage.

She has two dreams for the future – to send her children to school, and for her attacker to be punished.

INTERNET LINKS
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites


After The Efforts, The Reward And Tons Of Additional Hope To Eradicate Acid Violence!

March 27th, 2010

These two awards made a big difference in their life, Naila and Nazeera are committed to help other survivors learn to live again and not only survive, they can guide them towards finding self esteem again and can help build  an acid violence free Pakistan.

Because  after the violence and the suffering there is also hope, success and happiness, Naila and Nazeera want to send this essential message : we have discovered what beauty is really about, and we feel beautiful, we feel human and feminine, we can share that with other victims and prove that we can become active responsible citizens again.

While Nazeera is co-writing her life story, Naila is studying again and wants to become a lawyer : we wish them both good luck in their new journey!

VKY.

Recognition : a moving moment, an achievement…

March 26th, 2010

Many people are asking this very pertinent question : but don’t you sometimes get desperate , don’t you sometimes want ti give up? How do you do to keep on fighting against this horrendous torture?

Well Acid Survivors Foundation team usually answers that they are determined and nourished through the survivors success and hope..We thought it would be nice to give you a glimpse of that positive dynamic and let you feel and understand what a victory, aprogress can mean for a whole group of activists who are measuring the impact of their efforts on a daily basis.

VKY

from top left to low right, Saeeda, Naila and Nazeeran receiving certificates from ASF and Rozan, for being a role model in fighting for eradication of violence against women.