No wonder the Pakistan government can't catch Osama bin
Laden. It is too busy harassing, detaining - and now
kidnapping - a gang-rape victim for daring to protest and
for planning a visit to the United States.
Last fall I wrote about Mukhtaran Bibi, a woman who was
sentenced by a tribal council in Pakistan to be gang-raped
because of an infraction supposedly committed by her
brother. Four men raped Ms. Mukhtaran, then village leaders
forced her to walk home nearly naked in front of a jeering
crowd of 300.
Ms. Mukhtaran was supposed to have committed suicide.
Instead, with the backing of a local Islamic leader, she
fought back and testified against her persecutors. Six were
convicted.
Then Ms. Mukhtaran, who believed that the best way to
overcome such abuses was through better education, used her
compensation money to start two schools in her village, one
for boys and the other for girls. She went out of her way to
enroll the children of her attackers in the schools, showing
that she bore no grudges.
Readers of my column sent in more than $133,000 for her.
Mercy Corps, a U.S. aid organization, has helped her
administer the money, and she has expanded the schools,
started a shelter for abused women and bought a van that is
used as an ambulance for the area. She has also emerged as a
ferocious spokeswoman against honor killings, rapes and acid
attacks on women. (If you want to help her, please don't
send checks to me but to Mercy Corps, with "Mukhtaran Bibi"
in the memo line: 3015 S.W. First, Portland, Ore. 97201.)
A group of Pakistani-Americans invited Ms. Mukhtaran to
visit the U.S. starting this Saturday (see
www.4anaa.org).
Then a few days ago, the Pakistani government went berserk.
On Thursday, the authorities put Ms. Mukhtaran under
house arrest - to stop her from speaking out. In phone
conversations in the last few days, she said that when she
tried to step outside, police pointed their guns at her. To
silence her, the police cut off her land line.
After she had been detained, a court ordered her
attackers released, putting her life in jeopardy. That
happened on a Friday afternoon, when the courts do not
normally operate, and apparently was a warning to Ms.
Mukhtaran to shut up. Instead, Ms. Mukhtaran continued her
protests by cellphone. But at dawn yesterday the police
bustled her off, and there's been no word from her since.
Her cellphone doesn't answer.
Asma Jahangir, a Pakistani lawyer who is head of the
Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, said she had learned
that Ms. Mukhtaran was taken to Islamabad, furiously berated
and told that President Pervez Musharraf was very angry with
her. She was led sobbing to detention at a secret location.
She is barred from contacting anyone, including her lawyer.
"She's in their custody, in illegal custody," Ms.
Jahangir said. "They have gone completely crazy."
Even if Ms. Mukhtaran were released, airports have been
alerted to bar her from leaving the country. According to
Dawn, a Karachi newspaper, the government took this step,
"fearing that she might malign Pakistan's image."
Excuse me, but Ms. Mukhtaran, a symbol of courage and
altruism, is the best hope for Pakistan's image. The threat
to Pakistan's image comes from President Musharraf for all
this thuggish behavior.
I've been sympathetic to Mr. Musharraf till now, despite
his nuclear negligence, partly because he's cooperated in
the war on terrorism and partly because he has done a good
job nurturing Pakistan's economic growth, which in the long
run is probably the best way to fight fundamentalism. So
even when Mr. Musharraf denied me visas all this year, to
block me from visiting Ms. Mukhtaran again and writing a
follow-up column, I bit my tongue.
But now President Musharraf has gone nuts.
"This is all because they think they have the support of
the U.S. and can get away with murder," Ms. Jahangir said.
Indeed, on Friday, just as all this was happening, President
Bush received Pakistan's foreign minister in the White House
and praised President Musharraf's "bold leadership."
So, Mr. Bush, how about asking Mr. Musharraf to focus on
finding Osama, instead of kidnapping rape victims who speak
out? And invite Ms. Mukhtaran to the Oval Office - to show
that Americans stand not only with generals who seize power,
but also with ordinary people of extraordinary courage.
E-mail:
nicholas@nytimes.com