Court Acquits Doctor Charged with Assaulting Minor Sister-in-law

1 min read

PESHAWAR: A child protection court here has acquitted a medical doctor arrested on charges of sexually assaulting his 12-year-old sister-in-law over two years ago.

The court presided over by the additional sessions judge, Mohammad Haneef, pronounced after completion of the trial that the prosecution failed to prove its case against the accused, and the evidence on record didn’t connect him with the commission of the offence.

The accused was arrested after the occurrence, which took place early in 2023, and has remained behind bars since then.

The alleged victim and her family members had gone to the US after the occurrence. They are reportedly having US nationality. The wife of the accused had also reportedly taken a divorce from him afterward.

FIR of crime was registered two years ago at Hayatabad police station

The alleged victim and her father had recorded their statements from the US through video link.

The FIR of the occurrence was registered at Hayatabad police station, Peshawar, on Feb 6, 2023, under different provisions of Pakistan Penal Code and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Child Protection and Welfare Act.

The alleged victim had claimed that her parents had gone out of their residence, and she and her elder brother were at home along with her brother-in-law (accused). She alleged that she was alone at the TV lounge when the accused approached her and forcibly assaulted her.

The defence counsel, Shabbir Hussain Gigyani, argued that his client was implicated in a concocted case. He argued that the FIR of the occurrence was registered after a delay of 10 days, which clearly proved that it was a conspiracy.

He contended that medical evidence didn’t clearly prove that the alleged victim had been sexually assaulted. He added that the clothes sent for DNA sampling, which the prosecution claimed belonged to the victim, were also sent for analysis after 12 days of the alleged occurrence.

The counsel contended while the prosecution claimed that the DNA sampling matched with that of the accused, it couldn’t be proved that the said clothes belonged to the victim or her sister, who was the wife of the accused. He added that apparently the evidence had been fabricated.

He argued that the accused was a medical doctor and had been behind bars for over two-and-a-half years. He stated that there were several loopholes in the prosecution’s case, and the accused couldn’t be convicted unless the case was proved without any shadow of doubt.

Published in Dawn, November 13th, 2025.

Previous Story

Sindh Offers Free Birth Control Counseling App

Next Story

Kidnapped Teenager Recovered from Karachi

Latest from Blog

Pakistan Child Labour Surveys Evidence For Action

Published in June 2026 by UNICEF and the National Commission for Human Rights (NCHR) Pakistan, this synthesis report consolidates the findings of household-based Child Labour Surveys (CLS) conducted across Pakistan’s four provinces and the Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT) between 2019 and 2024. Utilizing the internationally recognized SIMPOC methodology on a…

Cleft Children Fight for Treatment

Pakistan is confronting a serious but largely overlooked public health challenge, with thousands of children born every year with cleft lips and palates. Although the condition is treatable, many patients remain without timely care due to gaps in the healthcare system. Experts estimate that nearly 300,000 children are affected nationwide,…

Missing Boy’s Body Recovered from Leh Nullah

RAWALPINDI: The body of a seven-year-old who had been missing after falling into an open sewage drain and being swept away in the Westridge area on June 17 was discovered floating on the water surface of Leh Nullah, Gawal Mandi about some seven kilometers from his home, on the afternoon of June…

8.6 Million Children Trapped in Labour

ISLAMABAD:  More than 8.6 million children in Pakistan are engaged in child labour, including over 6.6 million involved in hazardous work that threatens their health, safety and development, according to a national report launched on Thursday by the National Commission for Human Rights (NCHR) in collaboration with UNICEF. Titled ‘Pakistan:…

How Education System is Posing Hurdle to Religious Equality

LAHORE: Speakers at a symposium here have highlighted the shortcomings in the education system in the country that are creating hurdles to religious freedom and equality. The symposium on “advancing religious freedom through education and exploring the emerging challenges, opportunities, and responses” was held at the Human Rights Commission of…
Go toTop