LUMS Live Session 60: Abolishing Archaic Processes: Rape Investigations in Pakistan
The Two-Finger Test has haunted rape victims for years in Pakistan. The invasive virginity tests practice has been in force in the South Asian region since the colonial era and has been documented in at least 20 countries worldwide, according to the UN and WHO.
Following two petitions filed in Lahore in March and June 2020 by a group of women's rights activists, academics, journalists, advocates and a member of the National Assembly, seeking to ban such tests for rape survivors, the Lahore High Court recently passed a landmark decision to outlaw so-called “virginity tests" in rape examinations. Truly unscientific, intrusive, and demeaning, the abolishment of this practice brings in a new era for women’s rights in the country.
Hosted in conjunction with the Shaikh Ahmad Hassan School of Law (SAHSOL) and the Saida Waheed Gender Initiative (SWGI), the session was moderated by Ms. Syeda Zehra Zaidi, Adjunct Faculty, SAHSOL. The team that has been instrumental in this landmark case is joining the discussion as panelists, including Dr. Sadaf Aziz, Ms. Sahar Bandial, Ms. Maria Farooq, Mr. Sameer Khosa and Mr. Hammad Saeed.