menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Pakistan’s legal system isn’t built for children. This clinic is trying to change that

28 0
25.06.2026

Pakistan’s legal system isn’t built for children. This clinic is trying to change that

It is a pecularity of Pakistan’s criminal justice system that it has treated children as miniature adults, not just in the way their crimes are prosecuted but in how the victims themselves are perceived.

“We handle a four-year-old child through the same protocols used for an 18-year-old boy, a 16-year-old girl, or even a 30-year-old man,” said Police Surgeon Dr Sumaiyya Syed. She is part of the government effort to open the country’s pilot Child-Friendly Medicolegal Clinic at the Office of the Police Surgeon as part of the Anti-Rape Crisis Cell. It was inaugurated last week and fulfils a requirement of the Sindh Medico-Legal Act.

In the case of bodily harm, a medico-legal certificate or report needs to be prepared as evidence. The child has to be brought to a government facility where one of its doctors will examine the child and document injuries, their severity and probable cause. The ML certificate is the bridge between medicine and the courts.

Every year, Sahil, a nonprofit organisation working on child protection since 1996, publishes its Cruel Numbers report, tracking child sexual abuse, abduction, missing children and child marriage across Pakistan. Last year, at least 2,003 child sexual abuse cases were recorded, with 1,549 (77 per cent) in Punjab, 330 (16pc) in Sindh, 91 (4pc) in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and 33 (3pc) across other areas.

The figures are widely cited, but they barely reflect the full problem. Sahil compiles its data through secondary collection, using reports published in over 80 newspapers. But so much more never makes it to press. Families and communities suppress cases more often than they report them.

Dr Syed said she’s pushing to have violence against women and children recognised as a public health crisis. “It would change our protocols, our entire approach. Until we recognise it as a crisis, we will just keep working randomly.”

The child-friendly approach

It is not easy to open up in a government hospital or police station if you have been sexually assaulted or worse regardless of your age. But at the new clinic some effort has been made to create an environment to put children at ease with toys and snacks.

Dolls and figure diagrams help children indicate what happened. Children used to be examined lying down, but the approach now is to........

© Dawn Prism