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    Pakistani salon owner reveals extent of attacks...

    Yeah Well Fine Then
    Yeah Well Fine Then
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    Join date : 2009-03-10

    Pakistani salon owner reveals extent of attacks... Empty Pakistani salon owner reveals extent of attacks...

    Post  Yeah Well Fine Then Sat Mar 14, 2009 10:22 am

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/pakistani-salon-owner-reveals-extent-of-countrys-acid-attack-epidemic-1643493.html




    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/pakistani-salon-owner-reveals-extent-of-countrys-acid-attack-epidemic-1643493.html
    Thursday, 12 March 2009

    Severe skin burns from kerosene or sulfuric acid can disfigure a
    person for life. This is what hundreds of Pakistani women have to live
    with each year, after being attacked for their “unfaithful” or “bad”
    behaviour,
    according to Masarrat Misbah, who runs a chain of beauty
    salons in Pakistan.

    In 2003, she was accosted in the streets of Lahore by a young woman,
    veiled from head to toe, who begged her for help. Masarrat brought the
    woman back to her office and discovered a woman without a face under
    the veil. Her features were destroyed by the acid that her husband had
    thrown at her, leaving her disfigured and experiencing extreme
    feelings of shame.


    Masarrat, revolted by the incident, decided to link her chain of
    beauty salons to the work of an Italian association, Depilex Smile
    Again Foundation, set up to care for disfigured women in Bangladesh.

    Today the association cares for up to 600 female victims of sulphuric
    acid or kerosene attacks. Some children, splashed while close to their
    mothers at the time of the attack, are also treated for burns
    .

    A team of Italian plastic surgeons work as volunteers for the
    association. They fly over and work for a week at a time.

    Asked by surgeons what happened, one woman responds that she was burnt
    by hot oil while cooking.

    Many of these women continue to live with their attackers, who are
    more often than not their own husbands. They do not have the choice:
    in many families divorce is not an alternative, especially if the
    woman has no financial income
    .

    Masarrat encourages the women to become independent, and employs a
    dozen of them in her beauty salons. Thanks to her new job Urooj Akbar
    has been able to leave her former husband and attacker.

    “I am no longer a victim, I am a woman,” says Urooj, who has had a
    dozen operations to repair the damage to her face. It takes an average
    of 25 operations to return these women's faces to as close to normal
    as possible.

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