Court rejects Cynthia’s plea to register case against Malik

 US blogger had accused PPP leader of raping her at his residence in 2011


Saqib Bashir August 06, 2020
 The US blogger further stated that she had submitted a request for the registration of a case but the police refused to do so. PHOTO: TWITTER (Cynthia D Ritchie)

ISLAMABAD:

A sessions court in Islamabad on Wednesday rejected US blogger Cynthia Dawn Ritchie’s request to register a case against former interior minister Rehman Malik on rape accusation.

 Additional District and Sessions Judge (ADSJ) Nasir Javed Rana conducted hearing of the case.

 Cynthia’s counsel Imran Feroz requested the court to order police to register a case against the former interior minister, while Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leaders Rehman Malik and Yousaf Raza Gillani’s lawyers opposed the move.

 The court after hearing the arguments on the US blogger’s plea reserved the verdict for a while and then dismissed the petition.

 Cynthia had adopted the stance in the petition that she feared for her life from Malik and that both the PPP leaders and the party had been harassing her.

 The US blogger further stated that she had submitted a request for the registration of a case but the police refused to do so.

 On June 17, Cynthia had filed an application with the Secretariat Police Station, stating that former interior minister Rehman Malik in connivance with former prime minister Yousaf Raza Gillani had employed the PPP’s media cell to intimidate, threaten, harass and defame her on social media.

 She also accused Malik, chairman of the Senate Standing Committee on Interior, of raping her at his residence in 2011.

 The police had described Cynthia’s complaint as baseless and opposed registration of a first information report in the matter.

 The police report stated that the US blogger had neither produced any evidence to prove her rape nor had she placed any material on record to show that she had been harassed.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ