Some 20 people from Multan, Pakistan, have been arrested for ordering the rape of a teenage girl, in revenge for a rape her brother allegedly committed. Police said the families of the two girls are related. Members of both had joined forces to decide what should be done. "A jirga [village council] had ordered the rape of a 16-year-old girl as punishment, as her brother had raped a 12-year-old," police official Allah Baksh told AFP. He said the village council was approached earlier this month by a man who said his 12-year-old sister had been raped by their cousin. The council then ordered the complainant to rape the sister of the accused in return - which police say he did. Pakistan's Dawn newspaper reported that the girl was forced to appear before the group and raped in front of them and her parents. The mothers of the two girls later filed complaints at the local police station. Medical examinations have confirmed rape in both cases. Image copyright AFP/Getty Images Image caption Reports suggest the second girl was raped in front of the family council Another officer, Ahsan Younas, told BBC Urdu that the first girl to be raped was aged between 12 and 14. The victim of the revenge rape is said to be 16 or 17. He said police had registered a complaint against 25 people, and that the suspect accused of raping the 12-year-old was still at large. While some reports say the group that ordered the rape was a jirga - or village council - BBC sources said it was actually formed by members of the two families. How a rape was filmed and shared in Pakistan Pakistan elders 'ordered girl's death' How a murdered social media star reflects Pakistan Jirgas, a kind of council formed of local elders, often settle disputes in rural Pakistan. However, they are illegal and have been condemned for a series of controversial rulings - including ordering so-called "honour killings" and past incidents of "revenge rape". In 2002, a jirga ordered the gang rape of 28-year-old Mukhtar Mai, whose 12-year-old brother was accused of an affair with an older woman. Image copyright BHASKER SOLANKI/BBC Image caption Mukhtar Mai, pictured in 2011, was gang-raped by order of a tribal council Ms Mai took her rapists to court - an act of extraordinary courage in Pakistan, where sexual assault victims still face considerable stigma. When their convictions were overturned by Pakistan's Supreme Court, she was offered many ways out of the country. However, she chose to stay in her village and start a girls' school and a women's refuge yards away from where she was raped. Profile: Who is Mukhtar Mai? Ms Mai is now a prominent women's rights activist, and her story inspired an opera, "Thumbprint", which opened in New York in 2014. Related Topics Pakistan Share this story About sharing Email Facebook Messenger Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn More on this story Video Rape survivor takes to Pakistan catwalk to inspire women 2 November 2016 Qandeel Baloch: How her murder reflects a divided country 16 July 2016 Pakistan elders 'ordered girl's killing' in Abbottabad 5 May 2016 How a rape was filmed and shared in Pakistan 26 February 2015 Profile: Mukhtar Mai 21 April 2011 Asia Denying husbands sex is abuse, Malaysia MP says 27 July 2017 From the section Asia Full article Denying husbands sex is abuse, Malaysia MP says China detains 'female Jesus cult' members 27 July 2017 From the section China Full article China detains 'female Jesus cult' members Video Video Why does North Korea need nuclear weapons? 27 July 2017 From the section World Full article Why does North Korea need nuclear weapons? Top Stories Israel relents on holy site restrictions 27 July 2017 Confusion over Trump's transgender ban 27 July 2017 Fatal ride accident at Ohio State Fair 27 July 2017 Features Partition 70 years on: The turmoil, trauma - and legacy 'My stomach dropped': Transgender troops hit by ban Are migrants paying price as EU targets smugglers? Video The murder investigation that made the FBI Video Why does North Korea need nuclear weapons? Does Dunkirk ignore the role of the Indian army? The light-time economy How pragmatic Finland deals with Russia Video Trump and Sessions: How relations soured Most Read 1 Brexit: UK-EU freedom of movement 'to end in March 2019' 2 Work to start on covering Grenfell Tower 3 Madonna accepts damages over 'invasion of privacy' 4 Sex on plane Bristol teacher struck off from profession 5 Prince William to pilot last East Anglian Air Ambulance shift 6 Old £1 coin spending deadline looms 7 Pakistan village council orders 'revenge rape' of girl 8 Ohio State Fair ride accident kills one and injures several 9 Herne Bay rail death: Teenager found 'electrocuted' on tracks 10 Should you finish a course of antibiotics? Ads by Google