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| Asma Nawab spent two decades in jail after she was wrongfully accused of the murder of her family (AFP Photo/RIZWAN TABASSUM) |
Asma Nawab spent two decades in jail, wrongfully accused of murdering her family. Finally acquitted, she is seeking a new life, free from whispers and memories, as her plight draws fresh questions over Pakistan's woeful justice system.
Nawab was
just 16 years old when someone slit the throats of her parents and only brother
during an attempted robbery at their home in Pakistan's chaotic port city of
Karachi in 1998.
With the
killings dominating headlines, prosecutors pushed for swift justice in a 12-day
trial that ended with a death sentence handed to Nawab and her then-fiance.
The next 20
years were "very painful", Nawab, now 36, says tearfully.
At first
the other inmates were sceptical at her protests of innocence, but eventually
she formed a new "family" of women -- some convicted of kidnappings,
others of murders.
They
supported one another when progress on their cases was poor, or family
neglected them.
"We
would cry on Eid and other festivals... It was very painful. I would feel it
intensely" when relatives failed to visit, she said through sobs.
"Only once my uncle came to see me."
Though her
trial was speedy, her appeal moved at a glacial speed through Pakistan's creaky
justice system.
It was not
until 2015 that her lawyers petitioned the Supreme Court, which -- after a
three-year hearing -- ordered Nawab released due to lack of evidence last
month.
"The
verdict of this case was given in 12 days but it took 19 and a half years to
dispose of the appeals," her lawyer Javed Chatari told AFP.
Nawab said
the acquittal left her stunned. "I really couldn't believe it," she
told AFP.
The verdict
left her "perplexed", she said, and she struggled to understand what
would come next. "How would I face the world after living so long in
jail?"
Judicial woes
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Nawab meets
her former neighbours as she returns to her childhood home in
Karachi after her
release from prison (AFP Photo/RIZWAN TABASSUM)
|
Judicial woes
Stories
like Nawab's are common in Pakistan, where the judiciary lacks the capacity to
cope with the country's surging population and an expanding case load,
resulting in a mammoth backlog.
In 2017
alone, there were more than than 38,000 cases pending in Pakistan's Supreme
Court in addition to hundreds of thousands awaiting trial across the judiciary,
according to a Human Rights Commission Pakistan report released in April.
Rampant
corruption in Pakistan's police force also means the wealthy are able to bypass
the law, while deep-seated patriarchy means women in particular face an uneven
playing field in the justice system.
"Unequal
power structures allow for people with advantage -- money or power -- to rise
above the law. For the poor, the system is sluggish and sometimes is so weak
that it is safe to label it as almost non-existent," said lawyer Benazir
Jaoti, who specialises in women's legal and political empowerment in Pakistan.
"Within
the system, women are one of the groups of people that are significantly
disadvantaged, it being a patriarchal society and a patriarchal system."
Even when
the system finally comes through, as it did with Nawab's acquittal, that is
usually as far as it goes, leaving those whose lives have been dismantled to
repair the damage with little or no support.
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Nawab's
lawyer Javed Chatari breaks the lock at her home in Karachi, nearly
20 years
after her wrongful arrest (AFP Photo/RIZWAN TABASSUM)
|
Going
home again
Nawab has
had little to return to since leaving Karachi's central prison in early April.
With her
loved ones dead, her family house was looted then fell into disrepair.
Any
potential compensation from the state will take time to process, her lawyer
admits, acknowledging there's a high chance she will receive nothing. In the
meantime, she is unemployed.
During her
first visit back to her humble family home she quietly wept as her lawyer broke
the gate's lock with a hammer.
"(The
police) left nothing behind," she said after walking through the
dilapidated house covered in dust and cobwebs.
"I
lost my parents and now I see none of their belongings."
Nearly two
decades after being convicted, Nawab still holds the media as much as the
courts responsible for her treatment, saying she was unfairly portrayed as the
culprit in the murders, including in a TV drama based on the case.
Although
she has been exonerated, her release has done little to change the public
narrative.
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Nawab says
people still whisper cold remarks when she walks past and
refuse to accept she
was wrongfully imprisoned (AFP Photo/RIZWAN TABASSUM)
|
Persecution
persists, Nawab says, with people in the streets frequently whispering cold
remarks when she walks past.
"Society
will not accept the verdict," agreed Supreme Court lawyer Mohammad Farooq,
commenting on the case. "She cannot get rid of this stigma as far as
society is concerned."
But Nawab
says she must move on and has plans to finish her studies and find a job.
She has
also vowed to raise awareness for other wrongly imprisoned women. Her lawyer
says he will help her set up an NGO to give women like her the support she
never had.
"I
don't want any other woman to have to endure the ordeal that I lived
through," says Nawab.
"So I
will raise their voices for them."




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