Bill Proposing Stricter Punishments for Rape Approved by Pakistan’s Senate Subcommittee

Bill proposing stricter punishments for rape approved by senate subcommittee, including life imprisonment, fines, and the death penalty. [Image via Superior University]

ISLAMABAD: A Senate subcommittee has approved a bill proposing stricter punishments for rape, including a minimum of 25 years’ imprisonment and a fine of Rs1 million or the death penalty.

The legislation aims to create harsher deterrents against sexual violence in Pakistan. The meeting of the Senate Standing Committee on Interior’s subcommittee, chaired by Senator Samina Mumtaz Zehri, was held on Tuesday at Parliament House.

The rape bill, approved by the Senate subcommittee, now awaits further deliberation in the full Senate for potential enactment.

The committee reviewed Senator Mohsin Aziz’s amendment to the Code of CrPC, which includes recommendations for increasing penalties for rape.

Senator Aziz proposed that convicted rapists should remain imprisoned for life literally, until their last breath.

Also See: Terrorism, Economics, and Ideology: Pakistan Confronting Fitna Al Khawarij

During the session, it was disclosed that the Islamabad Capital Territory and the Sindh government opposed the bill. Sindh authorities even deemed the proposed punishment “absurd”.

Chairperson Zehri, however, firmly supported the proposed amendments, saying that perpetrators of such heinous crimes must be made an example. “While genuine criminals roam free, police officers often jail individuals who are targeted for financial gain,” she noted.

The committee was briefed by the Special Secretary for the Interior, who noted that although the death penalty existed for rape under current laws, its implementation was restrained due to international agreements and obligations, including those under the GSP status.

This news is sourced from The Express Tribune and is intended for informational purposes only.

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

How Afghan Networks Sustain Terrorism in Pakistan

How Afghan Networks Sustain Terrorism in Pakistan

The December 2025 Boya suicide attack underscores the transnational nature of militancy confronting Pakistan. The identification of an Afghan national from Kabul as the attacker, and the public veneration he received there, reveals how recruitment pipelines, ideological legitimation, and porous borders continue to sustain insurgency in North Waziristan, placing growing strain on Pakistan–Taliban relations.

Read More »
Majoritarian Politics and the Erosion of Minority Dignity in India: The Bihar Hijab Incident

Majoritarian Politics and the Erosion of Minority Dignity in India: The Bihar Hijab Incident

The forcible removal of a Muslim woman doctor’s hijab by Bihar’s Chief Minister was not an isolated lapse of conduct but a revealing moment in India’s evolving political culture. It underscored how majoritarian ideology increasingly normalizes the public humiliation of minorities, particularly Muslim women, and weakens constitutional guarantees of equality, religious freedom, and personal dignity.

Read More »
Herat tragedy claims 30 lives, exposing Afghanistan’s governance failures, unsafe migration, and escalating humanitarian crisis.

Herat Border Tragedy: The Deadly Consequences of Afghanistan’s Governance Failures

The Herat border tragedy, is a stark illustration of the human cost of Afghanistan’s governance failures. With limited economic opportunities, widespread poverty, and insufficient social support, families are forced to undertake life-threatening journeys across freezing mountains. The incident underscores the urgent need for the Afghan government to provide stable livelihoods, establish safe migration routes, and strengthen healthcare and social services, as humanitarian risks continue to escalate across the country.

Read More »
A fact-based rebuttal of claims about Pakistani troop deployment in Gaza, exposing disinformation and reaffirming Pakistan’s UN-mandated peacekeeping doctrine.

Debunking the Gaza Deployment Narrative

False claims of a Pakistani troop deployment to Gaza, amplified by disinformation networks, were firmly rejected by the Foreign Office, reaffirming that Pakistan’s military operates only under UN mandates and constitutional limits.

Read More »
The death of Sharif Osman Hadi marks the collapse of the 1971 Consensus, reshaping Bangladesh’s identity and triggering a strategic crisis for India.

The End of the 1971 Consensus

Sharif Osman Hadi’s death has become the symbolic burial of the 1971 Consensus that long structured India–Bangladesh relations. For a generation with no lived memory of the Liberation War, Hadi embodies a Second Independence, reframing 1971 as the start of Indian dominance rather than true sovereignty. His killing has accelerated Bangladesh’s rupture with India and exposed a deep strategic crisis across South Asia.

Read More »