World | Pakistan
University in the capital hit by sex scandals
Professor and librarian leave institution after rape accusations but police have yet to be involved
Islamabad: A university in the Pakistani capital has been hit by a string of sex scandals, with faculty members accused of preying upon vulnerable female students, a newspaper reported yesterday.
Sources told the Dawn that "seedy affairs had been going on in the holy precincts" of the International Islamic University, Islamabad (IIUI) for quite some time now.
An official said a professor and a librarian recently left the university after they were accused of rape.
"We did not approach the police to investigate the allegations as it would have brought bad name to the university and set parents of the 9,500 girls studying here worrying," the official was quoted as saying.
The sources also said a professor offered women students "good marks" in examinations in return for sex. He would even force himself upon unwilling students with threats of failing them.
The professor's escapades came to an end after the students' union claimed they had evidence.
The university asked the victim to file a formal complaint against the accused but her family refused.
The report said similar evidence that had been posted online had forced the librarian to resign a few months earlier.
However, the father of a victim reported a senior faculty member to the Prime Minister's Secretariat which instructed the Islamabad police to investigate.
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