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Kansas Governor Sam Brownback (file photo)
Kansas Governor Sam Brownback (file photo)

U.S. President Donald Trump has said he will nominate Kansas Governor Sam Brownback to become the U.S. ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom.

If confirmed by the Senate, the 60-year-old Brownback, a Republican, would run the State Department's Office of International Religious Freedom. The announcement was made late on July 26.

According to the State Department's website, the mission of the office is to “promote religious freedom as a core objective of U.S. foreign policy.”

The office monitors “religious persecution and discrimination worldwide, recommend, and implement policies in respective regions or countries, and develop programs to promote religious freedom.”

Brownback, a former U.S. senator, was an early advocate of U.S. action to stop genocide in Sudan's Darfur region. He visited Congo and Rwanda amid a humanitarian crisis to call for better coordination in foreign aid programs.

"Sam has always been called to fight for those of all faiths, and I am glad he has been given an opportunity to answer this call," said Kansas State Senator Pat Roberts, a fellow Republican.

However, Tom Witt, executive director of the LGBT-rights group Equality Kansas, assailed Brownback's conservative views on issues such as same-sex marriage.

"He has caused enough damage here in Kansas," Witt said. "We do not wish him upon the world."

Based on reporting by AP and Reuters
People gather under a tree, the site of a rape of a 16-year-old girl allegedly ordered by a village council chief and 23 other councilmen near the city of Multan.
People gather under a tree, the site of a rape of a 16-year-old girl allegedly ordered by a village council chief and 23 other councilmen near the city of Multan.

Pakistani police say they have arrested the head of a village council and 23 other councilmen in central Pakistan on suspicion of ordering the rape of a 16-year-old girl as punishment for a rape committed by her brother.

Police spokeswoman Shabina Kareem said on July 27 that the arrest of council chief Saeed Patwari and the councilmen from the village of Raja Pur, near the city of Multan, came in a series of raids in recent days.

Kareem said the suspects all attended a July meeting in which Patwari allegedly ordered Mohammad Ashfaq to rape the 16-year-old girl to avenge the rape of his 12-year-old sister by another man, Omar Wadda.

Police official Allah Baksh said the families of the two girls are related.

Authorities said both Ashfaq and Wadda were still at large.

A regional police chief and some other officers were fired for their belated response in the case after the first rape took place in Raja Pur on July 16.

Pakistan's Dawn newspaper reported that the 16-year-old girl was forced to appear before the group of councilmen and was raped by Ashfaq in front of them and her parents.

Police said medical examinations have confirmed rape in both cases.

Mohammad Bilal, a cousin of the 16-year-old rape victim, described how the council refused the family's request to go to police over the initial rape case and, instead, sought to carry out “honor crime” justice in line with traditions of the village by ordering the second rape.

Shahbaz Sharif, the chief minister of Punjab Province, said during a visit to Multan on July 27 that authorities “will do justice with both of the victims.”

Tahira Abdullah, a member of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, condemned the rapes and said that what the council did was illegal.

Abdullah demanded strong action against all who sanction such crimes.

So-called "honor" crime revenge rulings are common in some rural areas of Pakistan.

In June 2002, a tribal council in the Muzaffargarh District of Punjab Province ordered the gang rape of Mukhtar Mai, a young woman who took the 13 rapists to court.

That case gathered international prominence and Mai later opened a school for rural girls and founded the Mukhtar Mai Women's Welfare Organization (MMWWO).

The MMWWO provides legal help for victims of violence or injustice, many of them women.

With reporting by AP, AFP, and Dawn

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