Pakistani child maid shows signs of torture, say doctors

Pakistani child maid shows signs of torture, say doctors

January 11, 2017
The wife, left, of a Pakistani judge is escorted by her brother as they leave the Supreme Court in Isla mabad in this Jan. 6, 2017 file photo. — AFP
The wife, left, of a Pakistani judge is escorted by her brother as they leave the Supreme Court in Isla mabad in this Jan. 6, 2017 file photo. — AFP

ISLAMABAD — A ten-year-old maid employed by a Pakistani judge shows multiple signs of torture, a hospital chief said on Tuesday after the Supreme Court ordered a probe into a case which sparked widespread shock.

The incident has spotlighted rampant child labor in the country. After social media images allegedly showing injuries to the girl’s face and hands went viral, the top court intervened last week and ordered a full investigation.

The court also demanded police find the child, who is not being named by AFP.

Her father removed her from a women’s shelter amid reports he had forgiven the judge and his wife and described his daughter’s story as untrue.
She was found on Sunday in the suburbs of the capital Islamabad and taken for a medical examination.

“She shows signs of torture,” Javed Akram, head of the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences hospital, said.

“Our medical board has observed multiple injuries, burns, blunt injuries and bruises on the child’s face,” he said.

“She has burn marks on her back and on the left hand. She also has a blunt wound on her face. All her wounds are healing.”

Another doctor said on condition of anonymity that the child, employed by a district judge in Islamabad, had changed her statement several times.

Media reports said she initially claimed she fell down the stairs and burnt her hands by accident, later telling police she was beaten and had her hands burned on a stove by the judge’s wife. Current figures on the scale of child labor in Pakistan are not available. According to Human Rights Watch, about 13 percent of Pakistani children aged 10-14 are working.


January 11, 2017
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