ISLAMABAD: Dua Zehra Kazmi, a teenaged Karachi girl who has previously said she left home and eloped of her own choice but whose parents say she was abducted, has been “secured” at a shelter home in Punjab and the Sindh government has been requested to return her to her parents, a top official said on Tuesday, ending months of drama in a closely-watched case that has divided public opinion about which side, Kazmi or her parents, were telling the truth.
The parents of Kazmi, who had gone missing from her home in Karachi on April 16, say she is underage and was “kidnapped,” but the girl told a Sindh High Court (SHC) judge last month she had married Zaheer Ahmed, 21, of her “free will.”
At the time of her disappearance, Kazmi resided with her family in Pakistan’s Sindh province, where the Sindh Child Marriages Restraint Act, 2013 prohibits the marriage of a child under the age of 18 and provides penalties for a male contracting party, the person who solemnizes the marriage as well as the parent or guardian concerned.
But in Punjab, where Kazmi married Ahmed, the legal age of marriage is 16.
Last week, Karachi police informed a sessions court that 24 persons had been involved in abducting Kazmi from Karachi in April and solemnizing her marriage in Punjab.
According to a copy of an application by Kazmi submitted in a Lahore court, the teenager has said she has separated from her husband and has no protection and needs to be sent to a shelter home. The application was shared by Jibran Nasir, who represents Kazmi’s parents, on social media. It is unclear when Kazmi submitted the application.
“The Punjab government has secured Dua Zehra at Darul Aman under strict security and protection after a court order,” Salman Sufi, head of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s Strategic Reforms, said on Twitter.
“The Sindh government has been requested to dispatch a child protection bureau team to take her to her parents. Mr.Zaheer is being traced for arrest.”
After the Sindh High Court had ruled on June 8 that Kazmi could decide her own fate and disposed of the case, Kazmi’s parents challenged the verdict in the Supreme Court, which on June 25 ordered the formation of a new medical board to determine her age. On July 4, the medical board declared Kazmi to be between 15 and 16 years, closer to 15, making her marriage illegal in both Sindh and Punjab.
The investigating officer (IO) of the case, Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) Shaukat Ali Shahani, on July 16 submitted a progress report of the case to Additional District and Sessions Judge Muhammad Mehboob Awan in Karachi.
“The statements of witnesses were recorded and the call data record (CDR) of the cell phone of suspect Zaheer was analyzed, which showed his presence in Karachi on the day when Dua Zehra went missing,” Shahani had said.
“In the light of statements, circumstantial, medical and forensic evidence, held suspects cleric Hafiz Ghulam Mustafa and Asghar Ali and Zaheer Ahmed and his 21 absconding relatives had been found involved in committing the offense of kidnapping punishable under Section 363 of the Pakistan Penal Code and offense of solemnizing child marriage punishable under Sections 3, 4 and 5 of the Sindh Child Marriage Restraint Act, 2013.”
The kidnapping and child marriage case filed by Kazmi’s parents is fixed before a judicial magistrate in Karachi tomorrow, Wednesday.