September 14, 2020
ISLAMABAD: Reacting to the motorway gang-rape case, Prime Minister Imran Khan on Monday called for rapists to be castrated chemically so that they cannot carry out the crime again in future.
"It [rape] should be graded like murder, first degree and second degree," he said, speaking to anchor Moeed Pirzada for a private news channel. "Chemical castration should take place. I have been reading up on it, it happens in many countries," added PM Imran.
Speaking about the motorway rape incident, PM Imran said that it had shaken the entire nation as everyone felt that it could happen to their wives and daughters.
PM Imran said that when he first became prime minister, he was shocked to receive a briefing from the Islamabad IG who told him that sex crimes were on the rise against women and children.
The premier said that there were three ways to deal with cases of rape and sexual abuse, starting first with registering sex offenders and paedophiles.
He stated the example of foreign countries where paedophiles — after a proven history of sexually abusing children again after being released from jail — were properly registered and tracked by governments.
PM Imran said that the second step through which the government could deal with rapists and child sexual abusers was to hand them exemplary punishments.
"They should be hanged on chowks," he said. "Because they ruin children's lives and their parents [lives]. You don't even know how often these cases occur as they are under-reported," he added. "They should be hanged publicly".
However, PM Imran said that the government later came to the conclusion that the action of publicly hanging rapists would not be "internationally acceptable" as Pakistan was accorded the Generalised Scheme of Preferences (GSP) status by the EU which could be revoked.
He then said that the government should opt for chemical castration of rapists. "Chemical castration or perform surgery [on rapists] so they can't do anything in future," he said. "Just like murder, first degree or second degree or third degree, this [rape] should also be graded. The [person found guilty of] first degree [rape] should be subjected to castration," he said.
PM Imran defends CM Punjab, frequent changes in government
PM Imran said that the police and bureaucracy in Punjab have been politicised, reiterating support for Chief Minister Usman Buzdar.
"Usman Buzdar is not a corrupt man. He is running a very difficult Punjab government. To govern Punjab is very difficult," he said. "The police and bureaucracy have been politicised in Punjab as only one party had been ruling the province for the past 35 years," he added.
The prime minister said that among the challenges that a coalition government and a politicised bureaucracy were some of the challenges that Buzdar was dealing with.
"Only I knew about the pressure that he [Buzdar] was facing. The masses don't know about it," he said.
PM Imran said that the Punjab government was spending a lot of money in Dera Ghazi Khan as it was — according to socioeconomic indicators — the most backward province in the country.
"What I expect from Usman Buzdar is that at the end of his tenure, poverty [in Punjab] declines," he said, adding that the PTI government's projects in the province were aimed to uplift the poor.
"Changes have taken place and more changes will also take place in the future," he said. "What matters is that we are focusing on our objective [of delivering for the people]."
Further defending the Punjab government for its frequent transfer of secretaries, PM Imran said that it was discovered that the Punjab Police, at the lower level, was involved with land grabbers.
In response to a question, the prime minister categorically said that there was no guarantee that the new IG Punjab will fulfill his tenure or not.
"What matters is whether he will perform or not," said PM Imran. "Shoaib Dastagir also did a good job [as Punjab IG] but the prerogative [of changing IGs] belongs to the chief executive. No one will hold IG Punjab accountable if people's lives and properties are not safe. They will hold Usman Buzdar and Imran Khan accountable," he said.
Speaking in response to the recent Financial Action Task Force (FATF) related legislation in the parliament, PM Imran said that the entire nation was watching whether the opposition stood with the country or their own interests.
"The only thing that the opposition wants is that the government lets go of their corruption cases," he said. "That is the only thing they want."
The prime minister said that the opposition wanted to pressurise him like they had pressurised General (retd) Musharraf into providing them the National Reconciliation Order (NRO).
He reiterated his government's stance, saying that no NRO will be given to the opposition. PM Imran also said that he knew former prime minister Nawaz Sharif will not return to the country, however, adding that his government will try its best to ensure he does.
Referring to Modi's action of attempting to annex the occupied Kashmir territory, PM Imran said that the Indian prime minister had committed a "historic blunder".
He said that his government was contemplating to take the issue to the International Court of Criminal as it was illegal to change the demography of a disputed region anywhere in the world.
PM Imran said that the government had internationalised the issue of occupied Kashmir, which had pressurised India as the UN Security Council also took up the issue a few times.