- Technology Report
- Health Report
- Education Report
- Economics Report
- Arts & Culture
- Ask a Teacher
- Words And Their Stories
- AS IT IS
- Everyday Grammar
- This is America
- Science in the News
- In the News
- American Stories
- Trending Today
- U.S. History
- America's National Parks
- America's Presidents
- Agriculture Report
- Explorations
- People in America
Pakistan Prisons' Mother-and-Infant Program Gets Mixed Reviews
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.
September 20, 2012
KARACHI/ISLAMABAD — Female prison inmates in Pakistan who have small children are allowed to have their children with them behind bars - sometimes for years. Experts say this practice can protect the children, but it can also scar them.
Mohib, aged five, has spent half his life in jail.
His mother, a convicted murderer, brought her sons into prison with her two-and-a-half years ago.
Sehar Bibi says her boys would rather be free, but there was no one else to care for them.
“It’s not good only because it’s a prison," she says. "Children want to roam around, they want to go to parks, they want to study outside.”
Often, imprisoned mothers do not trust the child-protection programs offered by the state.
Muhammad Hassan Mangi, who heads Pakistan’s Ministry of Human Rights, says children suffer as a result.
“We think that it is not appropriate for the psychological, mental development of a kid to be brought in to be taken care of within the jail premises because it has long, long, long psychological and social impacts on the child,” he said.
The mother-and-infant program was developed out of compassion for mothers. At age five, the children are supposed to leave.
But Muskan, aged seven, has been here two-and-a-half years.
Yasmeen Bibi, her mother, convicted of kidnapping, says Muskan is better off with her in jail.
“We are not able to keep ourselves as safe in the environment outside as we are in here,” she said.
Human rights advocate Anees Jillani explains why.
“They were scared that if they were kept with the father, the father may force them to get married at a very early age, or the father may even sell the daughters,” said Jillani.
According to the latest numbers from the Human Rights Ministry, in five jails surveyed, there were 68 children confined with their mothers.
But little is known how many have stayed on, or what happens to these prison children once they have to leave.
Related Articles
- Acid Attacks Continue in Cambodia Despite Harsher Punishments (12/9/20)
- Romney Attempts Campaign Reset (12/9/20)
- VOA Interview with Aung San Suu Kyi (12/9/18)
- Reality of Mormon Life More Complex Than Romney Image (12/9/19)
- Homeless Female Vets Get Unique Final Salute (12/9/19)
- Angola's Economic Boom Has Winners and Losers (12/9/18)
- Evangelical Christians Reconcile Anti-Mormonism With Romney Choice (12/9/18)
- Refugee Camps Spread Life-Threatening Diseases (12/9/18)
- Fashion Meets Art on Pakistani Catwalk (12/9/12)
- Marylanders Recall Bloodiest Day in US History (12/9/17)