a prominent human rights activist has never stopped fighting for justice in the pakistani courts in an exclusive interview she told the w.c. is keeping up the struggle not just for herself but for all women in pakistan. isn t easy to always repeat what i ve gone through. it is very hard for me. but i want those people to be punished because i don t want anyone else to become another mukhtar mai. but this is my aim. well for more let s cross over to islam journalist nosheen standing by for a. look tom lies legal case has dragged on for nearly seventeen years how did we get to this appeal today and what s at stake so basically in two thousand and two six men were sentenced to death for the repeal. in two thousand and five
it isn t easy to always repeat what i ve gone through. it is very hard for me. but i want those people to be punished because i don t want anyone else to become another mukhtar mai. or for more let s cross over to islam of by word journalist nosheen us is standing by for a. look thomas legal case has dragged on for nearly seventeen years how did we get to this appeal today and what s at stake. so basically in two thousand and two six men were sentenced to death for their report. in two thousand and five five of the men need to and then in two thousand and eleven the supreme court even though the lawsuits accused was also open to more than my submitted in the us and that s why we have reached today. and in
up machine thank you so much. a journalist there in islam about. the united nations is appealing for more than two hundred eighty million dollars in aid for mozambique to help that country recover from high clone die the u.n. says three million people are affected by the disaster in the country and in neighboring zimbabwe in malawi nearly two weeks after the cyclon struck fears are now rising that epidemics such as cholera will break out some of the worst hit rural areas are just now beginning to receive international aid. speedboats is still the only way to get help to people outside urban areas in the worst hit region around the city of beirut these portuguese marines carried medicine food and drinking water to settlements along the still swollen basie river where an unknown number of people remain without aid more than ten days after the storm.