Woman of substance

If one craves homemade lunch at a workplace, then “Amma’s thela” is perhaps the best possible choice. Parked under one of the pedestrian bridges on Shahrah-e-Faisal, ‘Amma,’ as it is popularly known, is owned by 46-year-old Tarammisa, a roadside vendor who has been selling homemade food in the commercial areas near Jason Trade Centre for more than 10 years.

Not only has she earned a reputation among employees of different companies due to her friendly nature, but the food is also famous for its quality.

“I don’t see them as clients, they are like my sons,” she says of her customers. A mother of seven daughters, Tarammisa was compelled to come out on streets after her eldest daughter was burnt to death by her in-laws, leaving behind two children. Due to limited literacy skills, Tarammisa had few alternatives to earn and raise her grandchildren. “My husband was unemployed because he was sick. Street vending seemed to be the only option available,” she revealed.

Her business, she says, kicked off on the very first day, perhaps because the office workers needed a change from the food they were used to. “I think the location counts a lot. I realised this kind of food was the need of the hour and so I chose to set up a food stall.” Today, regardless of their official status, a majority of the office workers are her regular customers.

But this 10-year-long journey has not been easy for her. When Tarammisa first set up the stall, the pedestrian bridge was not built to provide her with a shade. “The summers were especially difficult. The heat of the sun affected the ready-made food but I managed somehow. Today, by the grace of God, the city government has chosen this spot for the construction of a bridge. My clients and I feel much more comfortable now,” she smiles.

Moreover, she is one of the lucky few whose stall has not been removed from the area. “My set-up is an encroachment of public space,” she admits, but adds that she has no option. “I don’t have enough money to pay the rent of a shop.” However, she discloses that, “there was a time when the police used to harass me and even confiscated my stall for a few days. I had to recover it from the police station nearby. After that incident, a lot of people in the area who had become fond of my food came forward to support me. I have not been harassed ever since,” she says adding that she is grateful for the respect the office workers have given her.

She also pointed out that she sells food during busy hours of the day from 2.00 p.m. to 4.00 p.m. and workers enjoy eating the variety of dishes she brings everyday. “After a whole day of struggle when I’m at home, I take only 30 to 40 minutes to relax and have my tea, and then start preparing food for the next day. I buy my weekly ration on Sundays,” she adds.

The small-scale entrepreneur added that earlier she used to make some money through stitching, but she was not able to save enough for her daughter’s wedding. “Now I earn about 200 to 300 rupees which is quite sufficient.” With this kind of earning in the last 10 years she has been able to marry-off all her daughters and educate her grandchildren.”

Her husband and grandsons help her transport the cooking utensils from home to her stall and back. A victim of several old-age diseases, the proud “Amma”, however, refuses to give up. “I cannot think of spending a single day without feeding these workers. I consider this bridge a second home since I spend most of time here,” concluded Tarammisa.

Source: The News

Date:4/3/2007

Girl raped by eight

LAHORE,Eight people allegedly raped a 16-year-old girl in Manawan here on Monday.

‘M’ told police that Sohail and his seven accomplices abducted her from Singhpura, took her to a house in Manawan and raped her. The police claimed to have arrested Sohail and four of his accomplices.

Source: Dawn

Date:4/3/2007

Rapists of farmer’s daughter at large

SIALKOT, April 3: Motra police could not arrest alleged rapists of a local farmer’s daughter even after a lapse of two weeks.

Reports said Idrees, Abdul Ghaffar and their accomplice had abducted Muhammad Rafiq’s daughter `S’ at gunpoint on her way back home from school in Kharoliyaan-Motra, Daska two weeks ago.

The accused allegedly took her to Narowal at the house of their accomplices Masood and Sarfraz where they had gang-raped her for three days. She managed to escape. On her statement, the Motra police had registered a case against five above-mentioned accused.

The victim’s family told newsmen that police were not arresting the influentials, who were threatening the family with dire consequences for approaching the police.

The family has urged the chief minister and IGP to provide security to them and ensure early arrest of the accused.

ABDUCTED: Eight accused, including women, abducted Daska-based transporter Mian Muhammad Saleem’s daughter `A’ on Tuesday when she was on her way to college.

Police have registered a case against eight accused, including Azhar, Asad, Kulsoom Bibi, Tanseer, Mubasher and Tahira Bibi with no arrest or recovery.

Source: Dawn

Date:4/4/2007

Acid attack-the pain that never heals

LAYYAH, April 3: The enhancement in the term of an acid burn convict from 14- year imprisonment to 32 years might have brought smiles on the burnt lips of victim Zareena but she says it will not lessen her miseries she has been suffering for the last five years.

The Layyah additional district and sessions judge had on March 29, 2007, enhanced the jail term of convict Nazar for throwing acid on Zareena when she refused to establish illicit relation with him.

“I am very happy over the decision of the sessions court but it can’t lessen my miseries and the darkness prevailed in my life,” victim Zareena told Dawn after the verdict.

Narrating her ordeal, she said she had become a victim of her good looks.

Zareena’s mother died when she was only three. Her father Abdul Rasheed arranged her marriage with Ramzan in 2001 in a match-for-match marriage or watta satta when she was only 15 years old and studying in class seven in a school of Kot Sultan.

She settled in her husband’s house in Bait Wasawa Shumali and gave birth to daughter Zunaira. In that village, her neighbour Nazar Hussain pestered her to establish illicit relations with her. She said the convict used to send her messages through her younger brother Nadeem and sister-in-law Nasreen to lure her. One day Nazar stopped her near a field and asked her to sleep with him at any cost. His daring act enraged Zareena and she reprimanded him publicly and also complained to Nazar’s father Haji Allah Bakhsh about the incident. His father assured her that such things would not happen again.

To avenge his humiliation, Nazar broke into the house of Zareena on July 6, 2002, where Zareena was asleep with her daughter Zunaira in the courtyard of her house. Nazar threw acid on Zareena and fled from the scene. Her face, eyes, arms and legs were burnt and her minor daughter Zunaira also sustained burnt injuries. She was shifted to the burn unit of Mayo Hospital in Lahore where she was treated for six months.

The Layyah senior civil judge held trial of Nazar and sentenced him to 14-year rigorous imprisonment and a Rs405,000 compensation for the victim on Sept 26, 2003.

The accused filed an appeal in the additional sessions court for the revision of his sentence. Human rights activist Nuzhat Yasmeen pleaded Zareena’s case. The court enhanced the imprisonment of the accused from 14 years to 32 years imprisonment.

Zareena said when she recovered from her injuries, she could not even drink water without a straw pipe and could not eat food in sitting position as her lips had been damaged. She had to lie in bed to consume food. A Lahore-based non-government organisation took her to Islamabad Women’s Crisis Centre and arranged her meeting with Tourism Minister Nilofar Bukhtiar. The minister helped Zareena to get financial aid worth Rs500,000 from the federal government, which she spent on cosmetic surgery of her face at the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences. After the surgery, she can drink water without straw pipe and take food in sitting position.

Zareena has lost her both eyes in the acid attack. She says her eyelids were sewed in the Mayo Hospital and she can feel light with her left eye when an electric bulb is lit or she comes out in the day light. Zareena says her left eye is repairable from the Shifa International Hospital in Islamabad. But costly treatment and her poverty may not let her overcome the darkness she was plunged in for going for piety.

Source: Dawn

Date:4/4/2007