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Fearing backlash, Pakistan drops ‘un-Islamic’ chemical castration

The punishment, which is carried out by the use of drugs and is reversible, can be a punishment for some sex crimes in Poland, the Czech Republic and some US states

Reuters Islamabad Published 20.11.21, 02:54 AM
Imran Khan earlier said he wanted to introduce the penalty amid an outcry over the case of a woman driving along a highway who was raped.

Imran Khan earlier said he wanted to introduce the penalty amid an outcry over the case of a woman driving along a highway who was raped. File photo

Pakistan has removed a clause from a new criminal law that had allowed chemical castration as a possible punishment for serial rapists, a government official said on Friday.

“We have amended the criminal law, and decided that the chemical castration clause will be taken out,” Maleeka Bukhari, parliamentary secretary on law, said. She said the decision was taken after the Islamic Ideology Council, a state-run body that interprets laws from an Islamic perspective, found chemical castration un-Islamic.

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The government of Prime Minister Imran Khan hurriedly passed nearly 3 dozens laws in a joint session of the parliament on Wednesday, including the anti-rape criminal law.

Chemical castration, which is carried out by the use of drugs and is reversible, can be a punishment for some sex crimes in countries including Poland, South Korea, the Czech Republic and some US states. Khan said last year he wanted to introduce the penalty amid an outcry over the specific case of a mother of two driving along a major highway who was dragged out of her car and raped.

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