Washington DC: Chinese Rally on April 11 to Support 71 Million Leaving Chinese Communist Party

On April 11, 2010, supporters of human freedom will join together at Washington DC’s Freedom Plaza to recognize the growing movement of Chinese citizens in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) that have left the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), as their rejection of Communist totalitarianism.  The movement known as the Tuidang and Quit CCP movement states that over 71 million Chinese people have chosen to leave the CCP since December 2004.

Chinese-Americans and their supporters will gather at the Washington DC Freedom Plaza, which is located on Pennsylvania Avenue NW, between 13th Street and 14th Streets NW. from 2 to 4 PM on Sunday, April 11 to recognize and show solidarity with the Chinese people that seek to embrace freedom.

Image from a NYC Rally Challenging Communism in PRC (Shaoshao Chen/The Epoch Times)
Image from a NYC Rally Challenging Communism in PRC (Shaoshao Chen/The Epoch Times)

The Tuidang movement or “Quit the Party” movement has seen an increasing wave of resignations from those that now publicly reject Communist totalitarianism in the PRC.  The Tuidang movement calls upon the Chinese people to resign their memberships in the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), so that Chinese people in the PRC will have an opportunity for political and human freedom.  Resignations include the statement that “I declare that I solemnly denounce the Chinese Communist Party and its affiliated organizations.”

On its Facebook page, Tuidang states that “As of 06/04/10 [April 6, 2010] – 71,146,636 people have submitted statements withdrawing from the Chinese Communist Party or its affiliated organizations. Those who are current members of the CCP or its affiliated organizations are with these statements resigning their membership; former members use these statements to sever all association with these organizations. All are renouncing the CCP totally.”  The “Quit CCP” web page states that this number of those resigning from the CCP continues to grow.  The “Quit CCP” web site also lists the individual statements of some of those who have resigned from the CCP.  In challenging Communist totalitarianism, the Epoch Times reports on “Nine Commentaries” that justify the reason for Chinese people leaving the CCP.

Symbol of the Tuidang Movement of Chinese People Rejecting the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
Symbol of the Tuidang Movement of Chinese People Rejecting the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)

In February 2009, Epoch Times reported that 50 million Chinese people had resigned from the CCP.  In January 2010, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)’s Jeffrey Imm met with Chinese freedom fighter Lisa Tao at a Chinese cultural event in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and she told him that she was daily calling up people in China and giving them the courage to resign from the CCP.  As of January 2010, R.E.A.L. reported that “Quit CCP” stated that 66 million had resigned from the CCP.

On January 5, 2010, NDTV reported that a former CCP director, Zhang Kaichen, came to America and publicly resigned from the CCP, stating: “”Today I am reborn. I come across the ocean, and solemnly declare to the world that, from today on, I will make a clean break from the evil Chinese Communist Party.”  NDTV reported that “Zhang Kaichen is the former Director of the Liaison Branch of the Propaganda Department of the Shenyang CCP Committee in China’s Liaoning Province.”

January 2010: Fomer Chinese Communist Party Official Zhang Kaichen Resigns from CCP in America (Photo: NDTV)
January 2010: Fomer Chinese Communist Party Official Zhang Kaichen Resigns from CCP in America (Photo: NDTV)

Now the Tuidang and “Quit CCP” web sites state that, as of April 2010, over 71 million had resigned from the CCP.  Chinese Americans and their supporters seek to show their solidarity in America’s capital, Washington DC, on April 11, 2010, to let those continuing to struggle against Communist totalitarianism that they stand in unity and in support of their efforts.

Rally Logistics:

— Date: Sunday, April 11, 2010
— Time: 2 to 4 PM Eastern Daylight Savings Time
— Location: Freedom Plaza, Washington DC, 20004 – on Pennsylvania Avenue NW between 13th and 14th Streets NW

The Freedom Plaza in Washington DC is named in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., who worked on his “I Have a Dream” speech in the nearby Willard Hotel. In 1988, a time capsule containing a Bible, a robe, and other relics of King’s was planted at the site.

Freedom Plaza - Washington DC - 14th and Pennsylvania Avenue NW - Site of April 11 Rally for Chinese Freedom
Freedom Plaza - Washington DC - 14th and Pennsylvania Avenue NW - Site of April 11 Rally for Chinese Freedom

Directions:

Map Showing Location of Freedom Plaza in Washington DC

Street Level Photographic View of Freedom Plaza Area

— Washington DC Metro Subway Stop: Metro Center (Central Station – for Red, Blue, Orange Lines)
Washington DC Metro Subway Planner Tool

Walking Directions for Metro Center Subway:
— Metro Center Metro Station to Pennsylvania Ave NW & 14th St NW:
1. Exit station through 13TH ST NW & G ST NW entrance.
2. Walk approx. 1 block S on 13th St NW.
3. Turn right on Pennsylvania Ave NW.
4. Walk approx. 1 block W on Pennsylvania Ave NW.

walking-directions-metro-center-freedom-park

— Parking lots: the nearby National Theater reports the following parking lot areas include:
— PMI
— 1220 E Street, NW – Enter on E Street between 12th and 13th Streets
— 424 11th Street, NW
— 1325 G Street, NW – Enter on G Street between 13th and 14th Streets
— QUICK PARK
— 1301 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW – Enter on 13th Street between E and F Streets

Freedom Plaza is an open air plaza which is in front of The National Theater, whose address is 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20004.  Directions to Freedom Plaza are essentially not much different than going to the front of the National Theater (National Theater driving directions, street map of area, parking directions, Metro directions).

Showing Proximity of Freedom Park and National Theater
Showing Proximity of Freedom Park and National Theater

Additional Resources:

Report on April 11 Rally in Google-based Simplified Chinese Language Translation

Tuidang Web Site – Chinese Language

Tuidang Facebook Page – English Language

Quit CCP Web Site – English Language

Nine Commentaries on CCP – English Language

January 5, 2010 – NDTV: Former Chinese Official Renounces Communist Party Membership

January 4, 2010 – R.E.A.L. Report on Philadelphia Chinese Cultural Event and Quit CCP Movement

October 21, 2009: An underground challenge to China’s status quo – by Caylan Ford

July 20, 2009 – Tuidang campaign is most successful civil rights movement in China

February 24, 2009 – Epoch Times:  The Dawn of a New China – 50 million Chinese withdraw from the Chinese Communist Party

Communist China: Newspaper Suspended for Showing Anti-Communist Party Slogan on Front Page

R.E.A.L. Postings on Totalitarianism

January 15, 2010 – R.E.A.L. Report on Shen Yun: Performing for Human Rights and Freedom in China

January 28, 2010 – R.E.A.L. Report – Chinese Cultural Performing Arts Urges Americans to “Take a Stand” on Human Rights

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Christian Science Monitor Commentary: An underground challenge to China’s status quo

As Obama plans his visit to China in November, he should pay attention to the Tuidang movement. It shows that the Chinese people understand human rights and civil liberties.

By Caylan Ford
posted October 21, 2009 at 12:00 am EDT
Washington —

The lead image on the Sept. 27 edition of the Jinzhou evening newspaper was hardly unusual. In anticipation of the 60th anniversary of Communist Party rule in China, it featured a street lined with enormous red flags beating in the wind.

It would have been nearly indistinguishable from any other Chinese state-run newspaper that day but for one important detail. In the bottom left corner of the photo, scrawled on a bike rack, were eight tiny but clearly visible characters: “Heaven condemns the Communist Party; denounce it and be blessed.”

Similar writings that dare to challenge the divine mandate of China’s rulers appear regularly across China, hanging as banners in city parks, posted on Internet forums, or handwritten on paper bank notes. It is all evidence of a movement that has silently swept the nation. Called Tuidang, which translates simply as “withdraw from the party,” the movement encourages people to publicly renounce their membership in Communist organizations. The implications are manifold. This is the first time since the 1980s that China has seen such a large, organized dissident movement – if an underground one.

The day after the image ran, the Jinzhou newspaper came under investigation by the government. Its website was shut down, and the paper taken out of circulation.

The incident represents a fitting analogy for the state of the Communist Party today. Beneath the pomp and power lie resentment, discontent, and questions. In 60 years of Communist rule, China has endured political and social upheaval that have left deep psychic wounds.

But in the country’s totalitarian climate, the people have few avenues to openly discuss their country’s history or to make peace with their own role in it. Since China has not had its opportunity for truth and reconciliation, its citizens are finding their own ways to do this.

Perhaps that explains the extraordinary appeal of the Tuidang movement, which organizers say has more than 60 million participants. It began in late 2004, when New York-based Chinese dissident newspaper DaJiYuan (Epoch Times, affiliated with the spiritual movement Falun Gong) ran a series of polemic editorials detailing the history of the Communist Party in China.They also proclaimed that the country would not truly be free or prosperous until it was rid of the party, which, it argued was at odds with China’s cultural and spiritual values.

Millions of copies of the articles found their way into mainland China through e-mails, faxes, and underground printing houses. Some Chinese readers say the articles finally confirmed what they suspected all along – about the Great Leap Forward, the Tiananmen massacre, the Cultural Revolution. This offered recognition that their memories were real and their suffering was shared.

But despite appearances, this is not a political movement in the conventional sense. Unlike the student movement of 1989 or the more recent Charter 2008 manifesto – both of which embraced the language of Western democracy – the Tuidang movement employs distinctly Chinese language and meaning. More Confucian than humanist, it often makes its points by drawing on Buddhist and Daoist spirituality.

Denouncing the party is thus not simply political activism, but takes on spiritual meaning as a process of cleansing the conscience and reconnecting to traditional ethics and values.

In December 2004, one month after the articles were published by the dissident newspaper, its editors starting receiving statements from readers declaring their wish to disavow membership in the Communist Party, the Communist Youth League, or the Young Pioneers, sometimes after their memberships had technically expired. Today, statements representing some 60 million people have been sent to the newspaper, which posts them to an online database.

The authenticity of the declarations is impossible to independently verify. Most people sign them using aliases to protect their safety, and there are no provisions to prevent fraudulent postings.

But the numbers are really not the point. For those who do send in their statements disavowing the party, the postings offer a rare platform to vent frustrations, discuss ideas, share stories of suffering, or find forgiveness.

Many relay tales of personal victimization under the Communist Party. Take, for instance, Ding Weikun, a 74-year-old veteran party member from rural Zhejiang Province. In 2003, his town’s government colluded with private developers to seize the land of local farmers. The farmers protested, Mr. Ding wrote, and armed thugs were brought in to suppress them. “I witnessed the killing and injuring of dozens of villagers, on the spot,” he noted. The old man tried to pursue justice by appealing to the local government, but he was arrested and sentenced to prison by the very party that he had served for 40 years.

While some write of their personal suffering, others speak of their crimes. For them, withdrawing from the party is about seeking absolution.

“I have always thought that I was a good man, but looking back I realize that I had gradually lost myself,” wrote Xiao Shanbo, a former party member from China’s northeastern Liaoning Province. “My mind and heart slowly became corrupted. I declare invalid all the words and deeds I have done in the past. These were decisions that I made out of ignorance due to the lies and propaganda of the [Communist Party].”

Mr. Xiao never specifies his crimes, but closes his posting with a plea for forgiveness: “God, please give me this chance! I have gone through much arduous soul-searching, and I intend to change my ways and make up for what I have done.”

The Communist Party has reacted to the phenomenon with predictable disdain. Terms related to the movement are among the most vigorously censored on the Chinese Internet, and at least 71 people have been imprisoned for possessing movement literature or propagating its spread. That means that, if found, the activist who vandalized the bike rack in Jinzhou city will be in serious trouble.

The party may have good reason to be anxious. For decades, its power has relied on an ability to censor information, control public memory, and suppress dissenting views. The statements of participants offer a rare glimpse and great insight into the sources of discontent in China.

The Tuidang movement also shows the manner in which Chinese people understand human rights, civil liberties, and democracy, and how they might reconcile these ideas with a more traditional Confucian worldview. It could perhaps even serve as a precursor for another democracy movement.

But one way or another, the movement certainly challenges the popular view that most Chinese people are satisfied with the status quo. As President Obama prepares for his November visit, it is reason to consider engaging more with the Chinese people, and not only with their government.

Today, as more and more Chinese citizens are remembering their past, they may well change China’s future, too.

Caylan Ford is a master’s degree candidate in international affairs at The George Washington University, where she studies Chinese politics and international security. She is currently writing a thesis on organized dissent in China. She is also a volunteer analyst at the Falun Dafa Information Center and was a staff writer for Epoch Times until 2007.

[Editor’s note: The original version did not give the English name of the referenced newspaper or the affiliation. Additional information about the author has also been added.]

Holocaust Remembrance Days: April 11 – 18

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum reports on Holocaust Remembrance Days in 2010 from April 11 through April 18.

“The United States Congress established the Days of Remembrance as our nation’s annual commemoration of the Holocaust and created the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum as a permanent living memorial to the victims. This year Holocaust Remembrance Day is Sunday, April 11. The Museum designated Stories of Freedom: What You Do Matters as the theme for the 2010 observance. In accordance with its Congressional mandate, the Museum is responsible for leading the nation in commemorating the Days of Remembrance, and for encouraging and sponsoring appropriate observances throughout the United States.”

“Observances and remembrance activities can occur during the week of Remembrance that runs from the Sunday before Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom Hashoah) through the following Sunday (view the Remembrance Day Calendar). Days of Remembrance are observed by state and local governments, military bases, workplaces, schools, churches, synagogues, and civic centers.”

Holocaust Remembrance Days: April 11-18, 2010 (Photo: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum)
Holocaust Remembrance Days: April 11-18, 2010 (Photo: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum)

Support The International Violence Against Women Act (IVAWA)

If you live in the US please contact your Senators and Representatives urging them to co-sponsor the IVAWA!

The International Violence Against Women Act (IVAWA, H.R. 4594, S. 2982), is the most comprehensive piece of legislation addressing violence against women and girls worldwide. Working through the international assistance that the U.S. already provides, this bi-partisan bill would expand our government’s ability to prevent violence against women caught in conflict, support non-governmental organizations that are combating violence on the ground, and put the U.S. unequivocally on the record with countries around the world in saying that ending violence against women and girls is a national priority.

Australia: Jordanian Refugee jailed for strangling ‘too Australian’ wife

Australia: Jordanian Refugee jailed for strangling ‘too Australian’ wife
— The Age reports:
“A man who killed his wife by using her veil to strangle her in their Melbourne home did so in the belief he was entitled to dominate her, a Supreme Court judge has found.”
— “Soltan Azizi was today sentenced to 22 years’ jail by Justice Betty King, who said the Afghani refugee had been physically abusive towards Marzieh Rahimi throughout their 14-year marriage.”

Pakistan: Extremist lawmakers Object to Domestic Violence Law for Women’s Rights

R.E.A.L. summarizes reports on a new proposed domestic violence bill in Pakistan, opposition to it, and reports on domestic violence in Pakistan.  In August 2009, a similar bill was reportedly “passed” by the Pakistan National Assembly, but was rejected due to inaction by the Pakistan Senate and the rest of the Pakistan government by December 2009.  In January 2010, the U.S. government announced plans for $7.5 billion in aid for Pakistan.

April 8, 2010: AP reports: “Pakistan edges closer to banning domestic violence”
— after acid attack on her face, destroying her left eye, wife Zakia Perveen said “I just thought it was my destiny, my fate.”
— “Rights advocates hope a proposed law banning domestic violence will chip away at such attitudes, giving women a more even playing field and bringing Pakistan in line with a growing number of developing nations that have outlawed spousal abuse.”
— “But Islamist lawmakers in Parliament are objecting, claiming the law could tear apart the social fabric by undermining families.”
— “In 2008, there were at least 7,571 incidents of acid attacks, rapes, spousal beatings and other violence against women, according to The Aurat Foundation, a women’s rights group. Because the group relied mostly on media reports, the figure is likely a vast undercount.”
— “Other surveys have shown up to 80 percent of wives in rural parts of Pakistan fear physical violence from their husbands, while 50 percent of women in urban areas admit their husbands beat them, according to a 2009 U.S. State Department report on Pakistan.”

Pakistan: Abused Wife Zakia Perveen - who was attacked with acid in her face by her husband - losing her left eye (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)
Pakistan: Abused Wife Zakia Perveen - who was attacked with acid in her face by her husband - losing her left eye (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)

The February 1, 2010: Aurat Foundation – Statistics of violence against women in Pakistan in 2009. report states that:

“The number of cases of violence in different categories of offenses and their province-wise breakdown is as follows. There were:
— 1384 cases of murder:
(752 in Punjab; 288 in Sindh; 266 in NWFP; 39 in Balochistan; 39 in Islamabad);
— 604 cases of ‘honor’ killing:
(245 in Punjab; 284in Sindh; 14 in NWFP; 59 in Balochistan; 2 in Islamabad);
—  1987 cases of abduction/kidnapping:
(1698 in Punjab; 160 in Sindh; 64 in NWFP; 13 in Balochistan; 52 in Islamabad);
—  608 cases of domestic violence:
(271 in Punjab; 134 in Sindh; 163 in NWFP; 22 in Balochistan; 18 in Islamabad);
—  683 cases of suicide:
( 448 in Punjab; 176 in Sindh; 43 in NWFP; 10 in Balochistan; 6 in Islamabad);
—  928 cases of rape/gang-rape:
(786 in Punjab; 122 in Sindh; 7 in NWFP; 4 in Balochistan; 9 in Islamabad);
—  274 cases of sexual assault:
(227 in Punjab; 44 in Sindh; 0 in NWFP; 2 in Balochistan; 1 in Islamabad);
—  50 cases of stove burning:
(33 in Punjab; 10 in Sindh; 4 in NWFP; 1 in Balochistan; 2 in Islamabad);
—  53 cases of acid throwing:
(42 in Punjab; 9 in Sindh; 1 in NWFP; 0 in Balochistan; 1 in Islamabad);
—  1977 cases of violence were of miscellaneous nature (vanni/swara, custodial violence, torture, trafficking, child marriages, incest, threat to violence, sexual harassment, attempted murder, suicide & rape) in the four provinces and Islamabad.”

A year ago, similar media reports stated efforts were in progress on a new domestic violence law in Pakistan.  In August 2009, Dawn reported that a “private bill” on domestic violence had passed in the Pakistan National Assembly, which required approval by the Pakistan Senate.  The Council of Islamic Ideology (CII) in Pakistan has previously warned that a law against domestic violence will “push up divorce rates,” according to Dawn.  But by December 25, 2009, ANI reported “the [Pakistan] Government has seemingly lost sight of it.” On December 25, 2009, ANI reported: “when the bill was sent to the Senate, Mohammad Khan Sheerani, of the JUI-F, raised some objections, leading to a deferment of hearing, and then the Government slept on the matter and now the bill has lapsed… to make it a law the Government was required to get the bill passed through the upper house within 90 days of its receipt.”

In another report by Shirin Sadeghi, Pakistan group Women Protection Project’s Dr. Khola Iram states “When you talk about domestic violence in Pakistan, some men in the educated classes, for instance, say that women are not the ones who are dying, it’s the police officers, they are all males… They don’t consider citizen security as security of women also.”
Shirin Sadeghi reports “Dr. Iram is subdued as she explains that Pakistan, a nation of over 90 million women and girls, does not have a domestic violence law.”
Shirin Sadeghi also tells of how Pakistani women have been “married” to inanimate objects and even pigeons to save their inheritance.  Shirin Sadeghi reports: “The concept of marrying a female family member to an inanimate object, such as the Koran, or an animal, is too often employed to ensure that the inheritance will never be lost. ‘We had a case in Bhawalpur where the lady was married to a pigeon just to save the inheritance. I mean, what kind of Islam is that?’ Dr. Iram says.”

March 2009 report – Pakistan woman Irshaad asks: “Is it really a punishable crime to beat or scold one’s wife?” She says she is not beaten as often now that her husband has gotten sick.

— See also Google search on “domestic violence bill in Pakistan”

Other R.E.A.L. postings on Pakistan women:

March 11, 2010: U.S. State Department Human Rights Report on Women in Pakistan

Pakistan: 647 women killed in the name of ‘honor’ last year

Pakistan: Latest Honor Killing:How A Deleted Cellphone Video Led To Murder

Pakistan: Violence against women increases by 27 percent: official

Pakistan Women Acid Victims Seek Hope — Women “Treated Like Commodoties”

Pakistan: Man kills wife over ‘honor’

Slavery in Pakistan: “Girl sold in open auction”

Pakistan: Horrific Violence Against Women Continues — 4,514 Cases in First Half of 2009 — “Honor Killings,” Acid Attacks, Other Violence Rampant

Pakistan: Taliban kill two female teachers in Bajaur

World Gender Gap Worst in Islamic Nations — Survey Shows Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Yemen, Egypt, Turkey at Bottom of List

Pakistan: Bombing in Peshawar Targets Women, Children

Pakistan: Acid burn victim seeks help to fight her misery

Pakistan: Suicide Attack Targets Women’s Cafeteria at Pakistan University

Pakistan — Karachi: “Man slays sister’s husband over honor” for being married

Pakistan: “Mother of nine killed over honor”

Pakistan: Top Pakistan university to ban kissing

Pakistan Federal Shariat Court acquits rape convict

Pakistan “Honor Killing”: “Bodies of couple found in well in Gadap Town”

Pakistan “Honor Killing” based on “Karo-Kari” — Kubra Bibi — mother of two, strangled

Pakistan: Human rights group hails new law for Pakistani womenPCC states it will “provides protection to working women at workplace from sexual advances and intimidation”

Pakistan Mob Tortures Women, Forces Them to Walk Naked in Public

Pakistan: “7 more girls escape from Women Crisis Centre” — fear to be killed by relatives

Pakistan: “Honor Killing” of Daughter and Boy

Pakistan: Murder of Couple and Adopted Child — Motive Appears Their Freely Choosing Marriage — Family Suspected

Pakistan: Girls victimized by Taliban find safe haven to learn — “girls hide textbooks in their shawls to escape harassment”

Pakistan: Suspected “Honor Killing” of Pregnant Wife, Two Teenage Daughters

Pakistan Christian Post: “Honor killing of 40 women in month of May, 2009, in Sindh”

Pakistan — 60-year-old woman charged with “blasphemy”

Pakistan “Honor Killing”: Bride’s family accused of double murder

Pakistan: Man kills cousin for ‘honor’

Pakistan: Jirga orders marrying off three minor girls

Pakistan: “Honour killings in Sindh rise in second quarter: report”

Pakistan: “122 cases of women being burnt were reported in Lahore”

Pakistan: Another “Honor Killing” of Eloped Couple — Barki

Pakistan “Honor killings”: Couple, including teenage bride, mother, sister murdered

Pakistan high court orders release of “honor killing” convict

Pakistan: 16 year old girl sold to 62 year old man

Pakistan: Wider cooperation stressed to fight women trafficking

Pakistan: ‘Violence against women on rise as perpetrators go scot-free’

Pakistan’s Lahore: Man kills sister in the name of ‘honor’ — in front of other family members

U.S. State Dept Trafficking in Persons Report 2009 and Gender Imbalance in Human Trafficking – Pakistan listed as “Tier 2” in Watch List

Pakistan: Update on Tasleem Solangi “honor-killing” case

Pakistan Karachi: When a woman’s right becomes a ‘sin’

Pakistan: Report on Al-Huda International – “Many girls have been ‘transformed’ by Ms Hashmi who now believe in limiting  their existence to the four walls of the house”

Pakistan: “Karo-Kiri” used to justify so-called “honor killings”

Pakistan: woman forced to kidnap because of misogynist hate against women

Canada’s Roohi Tabassum “Faces possible honor killing if deported to Pakistan”

Pakistan: “Brother kills girl for honor”

Pakistan: Honor Killing in Pakistan takes lives of two men one woman

Pakistan: Female Pakistani Singer Killed In Peshawar — Ayman Udas

Pakistan: “honor killings” in Sindh

Pakistan: “Brother kills girl for honor”

Pakistan: Pashto female singer killed

Pakistan: Taliban gunmen shooting couple dead for adultery caught on camera

Pakistan: NWFP: Couple shot dead on jirga’s order – Kala Dhaka

Pakistan: Eloping Niece Murdered by Extremist Uncle Over “Honor”

Pakistan: Daughters Murdered by Extremist Father

Pakistan: Study Finds So-Called “Honor Killings” a Major Portion of Pakistan’s Homicides

Pakistan: Taliban whip 17 year old girl

Pakistan: Taliban destroy over 100 girls’ schools in Swat

Pakistan: Husband chops off wife’s nose on alleged infidelity

Pakistan woman asks – is it a crime for her husband to beat her?

Pakistan – Fear of death stalks women in Swat

Other R.E.A.L. postings on Pakistan religious minority women:

Pakistan: Pregnant woman killed for changing sect — from Sunni to Shia Islam

Pakistan: 25 Hindu girls abducted every month; forcibly converted to Islam

Pakistan: 12-Year Old Hindu Girl Abducted, Missing Since December — Nandini; Members of Court Suggested Minor Should Marry Rapist and Convert to Islam

Pakistan: Police turn blind eye to rampant kidnapping and rape of Hindu girls in Pak’s Sindh province

Pakistan Report: Christian Woman Raped, Tortured — Protests Denied

Pakistan: Report of Attack on Christian Family to Get Withdrawl of Rape Cape — Muneeran Bibi

Pakistan: Reports of Christian Girl Burnt Alive After Rape

Pakistan: Activists warn, the murder of a 12-year-old Christian girl could go unpunished

Pakistan: Violent Death of Girl in Pakistan Spurs Push for Justice

Pakistan’s Punjab: Christian Girl Attacked For Saying She’s Pakistani

Pakistan — ICC report on rape of Christian minority girl

Pakistan — ICC Report: “Pregnant Christian Dragged Naked through Pakistani Police Station”

Pakistan — Muslim Forces 12-year-old Girl to Convert, Marry Him

Pakistan: Lahore Christian woman threatened with “blasphemy” charge

Pakistan: Extremists Cleared of Rape of Christian Girl