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http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/05/opinion/05kristof.html

WHEN RAPISTS WALK FREE
By Nicholas D. Kristof
([EMAIL PROTECTED])

Published: March 5, 2005
The New York Times

One of the gutsiest people on earth is Mukhtaran Bibi. And after this week, 
she'll need that courage just to survive.

Mukhtaran, a tall, slim young woman who never attended school as a child, lives 
in a poor and remote village in the Punjab area of Pakistan. As part of a 
village dispute in 2002, a tribal council decided to punish her family by 
sentencing her to be gang-raped. She begged and cried, but four of her 
neighbors immediately stripped her and carried out the sentence. Then her 
tormenters made her walk home naked while her father tried to shield her from 
the eyes of 300 villagers.

Mukhtaran was meant to be so shamed that she would commit suicide. But in a 
society where women are supposed to be soft and helpless, she proved 
indescribably tough, and she found the courage to live. She demanded the 
prosecution of her attackers, and six were sent to death row.

She received $8,300 in compensation and used it to start two schools in the 
village, one for boys and one for girls, because she feels that education is 
the best way to change attitudes like those that led to the attack on her. 
Illiterate herself, she then enrolled in her own elementary school.

I visited Mukhtaran in her village in September and wrote a column about her. 
Readers responded with an avalanche of mail, including 1,300 donations for 
Mukhtaran totaling $133,000. 

The money arrived just in time, for Mukhtaran's schools had run out of funds. 
She had sold her family's cow to keep them open because she believes so 
passionately in the redemptive power of education.

Now that cash from readers has put the schools on a sound financial footing 
again. And Mercy Corps, a first-rate American aid group already active in 
Pakistan, has agreed to assist Mukhtaran in spending the money wisely. The next 
step will be to start an ambulance service for the area so sick or injured 
villagers can get to a hospital.

Down the road, Mukhtaran says, she will try to start her own aid group to 
battle honor killings. And even though she lives in a remote village without 
electricity, she has galvanized her supporters to launch a Web site: 
www.mukhtarmai.com. (Although her legal name is Mukhtaran Bibi, she is known in 
the Pakistani press by a variant, Mukhtar Mai).

Until two days ago, she was thriving. Then - disaster.

A Pakistani court overturned the death sentences of all six men convicted in 
the attack on her and ordered five of them freed. They are her neighbors and 
will be living alongside her. Mukhtaran was in the courthouse and collapsed in 
tears, fearful of the risk this brings to her family.

"Yes, there is danger," she said by telephone afterward. "We are afraid for our 
lives, but we will face whatever fate brings for us."

Mukhtaran, not the kind of woman to squander money on herself by flying, even 
when she has access to $133,000, took an exhausting 12-hour bus ride to 
Islamabad yesterday to appeal to the Supreme Court. Mercy Corps will help keep 
her in a safe location, and those donations from readers may keep her alive for 
the time being. But for the long term, Mukhtaran has always said she wants to 
stay in her village, whatever the risk, because that's where she can make the 
most difference.

I had planned to be in Pakistan this week to write a follow-up column about 
Mukhtaran. But after a month's wait, the Pakistani government has refused to 
give me a visa, presumably out of fear that I would write more about Pakistani 
nuclear peddling. (Hmm, a good idea. ...) 

Mukhtaran's life illuminates what will be the central moral challenge of this 
century, the brutality that is the lot of so many women and girls in poor 
countries. For starters, because of inattention to maternal health, a woman 
dies in childbirth in the developing world every minute.

In Pakistan, if a woman reports a rape, four Muslim men must generally act as 
witnesses before she can prove her case. Otherwise, she risks being charged 
with fornication or adultery - and suffering a public whipping and long 
imprisonment. 

Mukhtaran is a hero. She suffered what in her society was the most extreme 
shame imaginable - and emerged as a symbol of virtue. She has taken a sordid 
story of perennial poverty, gang rape and judicial brutality and inspired us 
with her faith in the power of education - and her hope.
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