Divorce Cases Drive Up Parent-Child Meetings

1 min read

RAWALPINDI:

The Rawalpindi district courts are witnessing a significant rise in parent-child meetings, largely due to the alarming increase in divorce cases.

These meetings, once held bi-weekly, have now become a daily occurrence, with 25 to 37 families arriving at the judicial complex each day to see their children.

Previously, under family court orders, visits were limited to twice a week. However, the growing number of divorces has pushed the need for more frequent meetings. Approximately half of the children involved in these cases are in the custody of their mothers, while the remaining are living with their fathers, grandparents, or other relatives. In some cases, one of the parents may be incarcerated in Adiala Jail due to criminal proceedings, such as murder cases.

Each family is allowed to meet with their children for a period of one to two hours. However, it is reported that families who offer bribes can extend these meetings to up to three hours. These encounters often feature heart-wrenching scenes, as separated parents try to reconnect with their children during the short time they have together.

Parents often bring gifts to these meetings in an effort to bond with their children. Items such as clothes, shoes, bicycles, toys, and even electronics like mobile phones are commonly gifted. Additionally, parents come with snacks like sweets, pizza, fruits, juices, ice cream, and various local snacks such as nimko and Lays. In many cases, extended family members like aunts and uncles also accompany the parents for these visits.

Most parents who attend these meetings have been separated from their children for three to five years, and under current arrangements, such meetings occur once a week. The District Judiciary has set up a Family Facilitation Centre to streamline these meetings. This center accommodates up to 15 families at a time, each with a scheduled one-hour visit.

To ensure security and proper record-keeping, a court order copy, ID numbers, and names of visitors are registered, with court staff and police officers present at the facility.

The rise in divorce cases has put immense pressure on the judicial system and the affected families. Sohail Akbar, a father who visits his two children once a month, shared his painful experience. After divorcing due to domestic disputes, his children are now living with their mother, while he has remarried. He visits his children along with their grandmother and paternal aunt. “It’s a very painful process. Now I regret my decision to divorce. I often think, why did I make that decision?” he said.

Another visitor, Faiz Akbar, expressed similar sentiments, advising families to avoid the path of separation. “It is better to endure a few moments of anger than to go through years of regret. After my experience, I urge couples whose family cases are pending to consider reconciliation. Try to settle your issues, or you may end up regretting it like me after two or three years,” he said.

Published in Express Tribune on 20 September 2024.

polio-drop
Previous Story

5,000 Reluctant Families Convinced To Vaccinate Children

Next Story

Lahore, Rawalpindi Districts Children Missed In Polio Drives Result In Positive Samples

Latest from Blog

Schools Violating Vacation Orders Penalised

SWABI: Complaints pouring in from different circles have forced the officials of the district administration to take action against schools who failed to comply with the provincial government’s order of summer holidays. The provincial education department has closed both public and private sector schools for summer holidays on June 15,…

Three Booked For Rape Of Ninth-grader

SAHIWAL: Police have registered a case against three suspects and arrested two of them for allegedly molesting and blackmailing a 15-year-old ninth-grade student through a mobile phone video in the official quarters of the irrigation department in Neeli Bar Canal Colony. Reports said ‘S’ of Sarwar Shaheed Road, Civil Lines,…

Three Pakistani Schools Among Top 10 Finalists For World’s Best School Prizes

ISLAMABAD: Three Pakistani schools have been named among the Top 10 finalists for the World’s Best School Prizes 2025. The prizes, launched by T4 Education in 2022 following the COVID-19 pandemic, aim to highlight innovative practices in schools that are transforming lives both inside and outside the classroom, according to…

Three Missing Hindu Girls Recovered From Karachi

Three underage Hindu girls who had mysteriously gone missing from Shahdadpur recently have been recovered from Karachi. Officials said on Thursday that Dr Lal Chand Ukrani, special assistant to the chief minister of Sindh on minority affairs, had taken serious notice of the incident and directed law enforcement agencies to…

STBB Committee Calls For Creativity And Tolerance In School Curricula

Hyderabad: The Sindh Textbook Board (STBB) reviewed committee has emphasised the inclusion of critical thinking, creativity and tolerance in school curricula. Officials said on 18-June-2025 that on the directives of Sindh Minister for Education Syed Sardar Ali Shah, the first meeting of the curriculum review committee formed by the Sindh…
Go toTop