The Star Malaysia

She’s not a victim but a fighter

Rights campaigner­s back student’s bid to put attacker in jail

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LAhoRE: A Pakistani law student has emerged as a women’s rights crusader after she was stabbed 23 times in a busy street only to see her alleged attacker walk free, igniting outrage across the deeply patriarcha­l country.

Khadija Siddiqui, 23, survived the frenzied attack in broad daylight outside her sister’s school on a busy thoroughfa­re in the teeming eastern city of Lahore, Pakistan’s cultural capital, in May 2016.

Her sister was also injured as she tried to defend her and the brazen attack only ended when her driver managed to pull the assailant off and rush Siddiqui to hospital, where she was admitted to intensive care with her neck slashed, her arms wounded and a deep injury to her back.

Siddiqui named her attacker as Shah Hussain, a classmate whom she had rejected romantical­ly.

He was convicted and sentenced to seven years in prison in July 2017.

But Hussain, the son of a prominent Lahori lawyer, appealed the decision – and in a shock judgment released on June 4, the Lahore High Court acquitted him on all charges.

The decision was greeted with an uproar in Pakistan, where hundreds of women are murdered and attacked by men each year, with many struggling to get justice in a sluggish court system that advocates say is often slanted against them.

“I was shocked,” Siddiqui, who spent three weeks in hospital after the attack and whose back still pains her, said. “But unfortunat­ely it was true.”

Siddiqui’s long struggle to put her attacker behind bars had already drawn attention from women’s rights campaigner­s but when Hussain walked free it unleashed a wave of anger.

“I am heart broken, speechless, shattered after hearing what our judiciary system did to you @ khadeeeej7­51 - But do not give up, keep fighting, and we shall overcome this together,” tweeted actress Urwa Hocane.

Hamza Ali Abbasi, another TV personalit­y and activist, commented: “We must all unite; be Khadija’s voice; leave no stone unturned to get her justice against this barbarian! #WeAreWithK­hadija”.

The hashtag was trending in Pakistan within hours of the acquittal.

The outcry was so great that Pakistan’s Supreme Court has now taken up the case and will hold hearings later in the summer, it announced on Wednesday.

 ??  ?? Long struggle: Siddiqui’s case has caused an uproar in Pakistan after her attacker was acquitted on all charges and walked free. — AFP
Long struggle: Siddiqui’s case has caused an uproar in Pakistan after her attacker was acquitted on all charges and walked free. — AFP

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