Infanticide is on the rise in Pakistan
Aid groups say little
is being done to stop the killing of newborns among Pakistan's poorest
KARACHI, Pakistan — Three days after she gave
birth, Zaitoun says, her husband killed the child, their first, because she was
a girl.
The infant's fate wasn't a surprise to
Zaitoun, 26, who moved to Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, from the rural
northwest three years ago. Zaitoun (who asked that her last name not be used)
has a round face and thick brown hair that she coils into a bun. Her marriage
was arranged, she says, and her husband found her a job working as a nanny for
a family in one of Karachi's wealthy neighborhoods, where he works as a
doorkeeper.
When Zaitoun realized she was pregnant, she
never spoke of it to her husband, knowing money was tight and that having a
baby would likely mean she would lose her job. Her in-laws, whom Zaitoun did
tell of her pregnancy, advised her to pray that it wouldn't be a girl. Two days
after her daughter was born, Zaitoun says, she woke up to find the baby gone.
That afternoon, when her husband came home for lunch, she asked him what had
happened. "I took care of it," he said.
A few days later, she says she saw an
ambulance crew pick up a tiny corpse from a trash dump outside her apartment
building. In the six months she'd been living in Haryana Colony, a squatter
settlement where some of Karachi's poorest families live, Zaitoun saw three
other dead babies removed the same way, she says.
As Pakistan becomes more urbanized, Karachi's
population has grown exponentially. Most of the migrants who move from villages
to the city in search of better economic opportunities end up living in densely
packed, illegal housing settlements like Haryana Colony. The residents here
straddle the poverty line, have limited access to education and are often
uninformed about birth-control options. Increasingly, they are turning to
infanticide — killing a child within a year of birth — aid groups say.
In South Asia, killing children is nothing
new, and girls are particularly vulnerable. Parents do it to help feed their
sons, who are more highly valued in Pakistani society. But the number of
children killed has risen steadily over the last five years, welfare
organizations in Karachi say. Edhi Foundation, Pakistan's largest welfare
agency, says the number of dead babies its ambulances pick up has increased by
almost 20 percent each year since 2010.
"The price of bread is rising, more
immigrants are moving into Karachi, and job security is nonexistent in the
country," says an Edhi official, Anwar Kazmi. While the number of corpses
the foundation has found nationwide is startling, Kazmi adds, it does not begin
to convey the full scope of the problem; it does not include babies killed in
rural areas, for instance, or those secretly buried by whoever killed them.
Other organizations, such as Chhipa Welfare
Association and the Aman Foundation, report similar increases, a trend they say
may intensify as the cost of living in Karachi continues to rise.
But Kazmi says money is only one reason for
the country's high infanticide rate. "Many more are killed because they
are born out of wedlock," he says.
In Pakistan's socially conservative society,
illegitimate children are referred to as "harami," an Arabic word
that means "forbidden under Islam" — an admission, Kazmi says, that
the parents have sinned.
"If the baby is a boy, an aunt or
grandparent may pretend the child is theirs, and the boy could survive,"
he explains. "But in Pakistan, girls are considered bad fortune, and for
this reason, many of the children killed are girls."
Three streets down from Zaitoun's apartment,
Maryam sits with her 17-year-old daughter, Asma, in the one-room apartment they
share with four others. (Maryam declined to give her last name, while Asma
asked that her name be changed.) A year ago, Asma gave birth to a child out of
wedlock. A few minutes after the birth, Maryam suffocated the baby with a
pillow, the two acknowledge. They then waited 10 minutes to be sure the baby
was really dead. That night, Maryam doused the corpse in kerosene and left it
on a trash heap that was already ablaze, while Asma waited at home. Asma,
quietly fiddling with her long, thick braid as her mother tells the story, says
she never even learned the gender of her newborn.
Maryam considered making Asma get an abortion,
she says, but decided against it. Abortions are legal only in limited
circumstances in Pakistan and are typically carried out by untrained
practitioners in makeshift clinics. Maryam says she has heard horror
stories from women who've undergone the procedure and was worried that
something could go wrong and that her daughter could die or lose the ability to
bear children. According to the Guttmacher Institute, a global nonprofit that
studies reproductive health, about 200,000 women are hospitalized
in Pakistan each year for complications due to illegal
abortions.
Asma and Maryam did not previously tell anyone
about the birth, and Maryam says she feels no regret, reasoning that she saved
not only her daughter but her grandchild from a life of misery and pain. In
December, Asma got married in an arranged marriage that was planned three years
ago. She doesn't intend to tell her husband, who was not involved in her first
pregnancy, and hopes he never learns the truth.
For a while, when she was pregnant, Asma says,
she would sometimes go to one of the safe havens Edhi Foundation has set up to
encourage mothers to drop off unwanted infants rather than kill them. The
organization created 400 such sites, but the program has had limited success.
Just 18 babies were dropped off at sites in Karachi in 2013, while Edhi says it
buried more than 1,300 babies last year.
There are a variety of reasons for the lack of
response. The program earned the wrath of religious leaders, who say that it
encourages promiscuity and immorality. Also, in Karachi the sites are not
discreet. Most are located on major thoroughfares in heavily populated parts of
the city. Some parents worry that if they attempt to drop off an unwanted
infant, they will be accosted by onlookers who disapprove of their decision.
Edhi says it takes in the babies without asking any questions, but there aren't
any safe-haven laws to protect parents from prosecution for child abandonment.
Perhaps most vexing of all, parents aren't leaving their newborns in Edhi's
care, Kazmi says, because a child seen as illegitimate in the eyes of God is
the embodiment of the parents' sin. Asma, for example, says she is grateful
that her child only lived for a few short minutes; this way, perhaps God will
forgive her.
Representatives from Chhipa Welfare
Association blame the Pakistani government for the rising numbers of
infanticides.
"The government has failed to provide
jobs for a majority of the population, the state of education is abysmal, and
law and order in the country is almost nonexistent," says Ramzan Chhipa,
the organization's founder and leader. The association has set up similar
safe-haven sites across Karachi and also retrieves corpses from garbage dumps.
However, both Kazmi and Chhipa say that until
the plight of these newborns is highlighted by local media outlets and taken
seriously by the police, the situation isn't likely to change. However,
Karachi's police force, often accused of being poorly trained, corrupt and
lacking political will, is unlikely to spend its limited resources on finding
the killers of infants.
Nisar Ahmed, the police officer in charge of
investigating crime in the Karachi West district, where Haryana Colony is
located, said that in the past three years, the city's police force has never
investigated anyone for infanticide. No one, he says, has ever reported such a
crime.
"I have never heard of someone coming
into the station and saying that they know someone who killed a harami
child," Ahmed says. Even if someone was arrested, he or she would likely
slip through the cracks of the Pakistani legal system. Ahmed says that he
couldn't imagine someone going to trial for the crime.
Earlier this year, Rubeena, another Haryana
Colony resident, reported the killing of an infant near her home, she says, but
the police never investigated. The officer she spoke to asked her whether she
had physically witnessed the incident. When she said she hadn't, he didn't open
an investigation, though Rubeena said the baby had clear rope burns around her
snapped neck.
One small step forward has come from
Pakistan's religious council, a group of leading clerics. After news
outlets reported the gang rape of 5-year-old twins who had been
abandoned by their parents, many called for stricter adherence to Pakistan's
existing child-protection laws. The public outrage spurred the council to
designate a day, Sept. 20, 2013, for recognizing girls' value, and imams across
the country were encouraged to use their Friday sermons to praise daughters.
Some critics say, however, that this should be part of a wider campaign to
change the idea that boys are more valuable than girls.
Muhammad Saleem, an Edhi ambulance driver,
said worshippers at his mosque spent three hours talking about the women in the
Quran who were valued and loved by both the Prophet and Allah. Then, the next
day, he was dispatched to pick up an abandoned baby.
Though it was hardly the first time he had to
pick up a baby from a trash heap, Saleem says, it was the first time in 12
years as an ambulance driver that he found a baby still alive. She was covered
in burns from the trash fire a sanitation worker had presumably lit and died on
the way to the hospital.
Moved by the fate of that little girl, Saleem
insisted on taking the infant's body from Edhi's morgue to a cemetery to give
her a proper burial. That was in September. Since then, says Saleem, he has
already picked up another dead baby.
|