Violence on women

As the world marks International Women’s Day today, women in Pakistan have little to celebrate as they continue to endure violence, including murder in the name of honour.

On March 5, this newspaper reported a conference in Lahore being told that the government had failed to check violence against women, which registered a 13 per cent increase in 2009 compared to what it had been in 2008. According to the statistics made public at the conference, as many as 928 cases of rape and 604 cases of the so-called honour killing were reported from across the country last year. The social and economic exploitation that women in general suffer also adds to their plight, as do lack of education, fewer employment opportunities, social taboos and misperceived notions of modesty.

The government is yet to mean what it says about protecting women against violence. Its failure so far betrays lack of seriousness to tackle the problem. A society where such violence is abhorred and the perpetrator is taken to task will remain elusive until the government does away with a culture of impunity as well as discriminatory laws.

There is a pressing need for change in the way women are treated in society. That change must first take place within the family. Educational institutions and the media could also play a vital role in changing public mindset to a point where violence against women would readily invite obloquy and legal action.

Source: The News

Date:3/8/2010

Women and power

By Sherry Rehman

INTERNATIONAL Women’s Day is always a day for stock-taking, especially in countries where women’s identities are in a constant state of stressful negotiation with society.

If empowerment is seen as the ability to make choices in an environment where it was not previously possible, Pakistan offers a hugely polarised landscape. A woman’s experience of power shapes her ability to affect change in her world, yet today the standard measure of class, or labour participation, that correlate to more empowerment, often fails. Pakistan today is the most urbanised country in South Asia, more so than India or Bangladesh, and rapid social change, with enclaves of exception, has paradoxically brought an overall degradation in the average woman’s status. Growing poverty and religious extremism have brought a dual-burden of vulnerability.

If she is an income-generator, rarely is she a decision-maker. Urban women have better access to information, but even as entrepreneurs, if not factory fodder, they have low investment capacity, even less business exposure, and remain subordinate to male peers.

In contrast, the life of a rural woman is often stereotyped as one at the bottom of the pyramid, but where commercialisation has not broken traditional structures, she still retains some degree of autonomy as compared to the faceless tribal woman, who is the least empowered in terms of making strategic choices.

Terrorism, militancy and religious extremism ravage all of society, but even at its least aggressive, its long shadow in Pakistan now defines social exclusion for women even in areas where the Taliban have been officially flushed out, such as Swat. These areas were once hospitable to women in public spaces, now as outposts to many tribal regions and agencies, they have been transformed into altered, harsher, gender-hostile realities. In fact, according to the World Economic Forum’s task force on gender disparity, Pakistan now ranks third from the bottom, 132 out of 134 countries, better only than Chad and Yemen.

But our rural and tribal areas are not the only type of terrain that is threatened by the misogyny of militant extremism. The patriarchal social mores of tribal society have seeped into our most metropolitan environments, creating sub-cultures of restriction in major cities as well. Karachi, for instance, is now home to the largest number of semi-migrant tribal men, with higher demographics than either Kabul or Peshawar, lowering the city’s social bandwidth for gender freedoms. In urban Punjab, decades of sectarian violence and state tolerance for jihadist outfits has expanded the appetite for anti-women discourse and created new inhibitors where less existed. In Quetta or Peshawar, the walls close in on women and their opportunities.

A breakdown in the architecture of laws and challenges to state writ means women’s rights suffer a downslide. According to human rights lawyers, many areas of Pakistan witness a silent case of honour killing every single day; in the most populous province a woman is raped every hour. These are sobering, if not shocking, statistics.

What can then be done? The state is no match for the creeping Salafism of our society, which is used and abused for repressing and imprisoning women, but it can start to challenge this trend by investing in better governance of social programmes. The only indicator that remains stable in most correlations to empowerment is access to education, not just access to jobs, and to a large extent, better healthcare. On an average, all those who seek to influence policy discourse in Pakistan can target traditional social indicators and Millennium Development Goal targets as indices we need to work on, and can safely invest in.

While framing new legislation is critical, as laws provide the foundation for the option of state relief or affirmative action, laws often provide for little reform on the ground if public knowledge of their utility remains obscure. Women are unable to navigate the programmes on offer for them, or to seek relief from empowering laws because of lack of information. This is where media initiatives can actually transform the relationship of women with the state, as well as with society.

An effective case in point is an animated public service campaign run by a private channel that iterated the message that women do not have to tolerate harassment, now that the sexual harassment bill is law, and can now start reporting such incidents to the police, the courts, an ombudsman, or a mandatory committee if they work in a corporation. This is indeed a powerful message.

Yet bucking all these trends, we have empowered women like a legislator in the Punjab Assembly squandering women’s rights, probably because she is oblivious of the devastating effect that existing laws on polygamy, in their easy abuse, have on the average woman in urban Pakistan. She forgets that the strict permissions which are rightly required by the law in Pakistan, are cast aside for thousands of women every year who become half-citizens in a contractual vacuum when their husbands shed them without support, without either Islam’s justice system or the state’s intervention. They remain legally ‘married’, saddled with children who need regular support, and become part of the informal domestic servant class that comforts the lifestyles of other working and leisure-class women.

The good news is in the nuance. A burgeoning urban youth culture accommodates middle-class aspiration, and provides a gender-neutral public space in the media. Women are serving as role models in traditionally all-male professions. A higher participation of women in the legislatures has redefined the agenda in parliament. In fact, the vilified reserved seats have done more in seven years for women’s empowerment laws than anyone in 50 years. Out of the 58 private member’s bills moved in 2010 in the 13th National Assembly sitting, 85 per cent of the bills were moved by women on reserved seats. So some statistics do look good.

Now it is up to all of us, the executive, civil society, the media, and politicians, to chip away at the social, cultural and economic barriers preventing women from exercising power as full citizens of Pakistan. We hold up half of Pakistan’s sky. No one should be allowed to take that away from us.

The writer is a member of the National Security Committee of the National Assembly and former information minister.

Source: Dawn

Date:3/8/2010

International women’s day today

EVERY year International Women’s Day is celebrated on March 8 across the world.

This year’s women day is the third time under an elected government of a party, whose leader Benazir Bhutto was not only a woman herself but also championed women’s rights. Unfortunately, crimes against women are on the rise from sexual harassment at workplaces in urban areas to acts of karo-kari in rural areas. Despite the fact that the government has claimed that projects like distribution of land among landless Hari (peasant) women, Benazir Bhutto income support programme, Union Council-Based Poverty Reduction Project and Benazir Low-Cost Housing Scheme are as per the vision of their assassinated leader Benazir Bhutto and part of the commitments of the PPP’s election manifesto, there is a dire need to demonstrate political will to change the mindset.

Economic empowerment is linked with their say in political and social spheres of life. Women should not be treated ‘equal’ on the basis of headcount but should be respected on the basis of equity.

In 2009, about 39 women were killed on the pretext of karo-kari in the district of the Sindh Chief Minister. All misogynist Sindhi feudal lords who were hand in glove with Musharraf are now enjoying power under reconciliation and ordering killing of innocent women under harsh tribal code of jirga.

Recently a Kohli (dalit) girl was allegedly kidnapped and assaulted by some influential people of Khoso tribe in Nangarparkar. In another case, 60 families migrated to Mithi because their girls were threatened with kidnapping and rape.

Party cadre, legislators and government people were approached but ‘vote bank’ took precedence over respect for minority communities and women specifically. Civil society and human rights organisations are raising their voice but then who cares. There is a need of a paradigm shift of mindset. There is a need of a radical change from gender blind syllabus to state laws and implementation of women empowerment projects and their say in policy and decision making process.

It is time the media and civil society put in serious efforts to educate people about their individual responsibility to enforce human rights and respect the rights of their women. Change starts at home.

MUNAIZA ZULFIQAR
Sindh Democratic Forum (SDF)
Hyderabad

(II)

TODAY most of civil society organisations and women development departments of provincial and federal governments hold seminars, walks, etc., inviting the world’s attention towards miseries of women.

The events will be well attended by women from well-off and so-called liberal families. Yet no good or comfort comes to the suppressed and aggrieved segment of poor women, especially those who live in rural areas.

These are difficult times for women in Pakistan as the country ranks 106th out of 137 on the Gender-related Development Index and 66th out of 75 on the Gender Empowerment Measurement Index. Despite religious, constitutional and legal rights, women’s position in Pakistani society is weak.

Women are subjected to most extreme forms of violence and exclusion. Incidents of honour killing, rape, fire and acid burning, domestic violence, dowry-abuse, trafficking, under-age marriage and trade of young girls among tribes for dispute settlement are gruesome and frequent. Women’s access to education, employment, health, property and justice had been severely restricted for years. With the rise in extremism, women’s right to mobility has reduced sharply in many parts of the country.

Pakistan has one of the lowest rates for girl child survival, maternal safety, literacy and employment among women because of prolonged discrimination and injustice.

Involvement of men in highlighting these issues remains low and is, therefore, a contributory factor to the deteriorating situation regarding gender equality, empowerment and violence against women in Pakistan.

In spite of claims for bringing protective law for the rights of women and lodging FIRs against influential holding jirgas against women in parts of Sindh, Balochistan and southern Punjab, neither the police nor the government seems to be serious in containing illegal and immoral practices of the jirga system. The government needs to ensure universal education for the girl child by opening up girls school at every village; to ensure enforcement of relevant laws protecting women against discrimination; and to ban of jirga system.

ABDUL SAMAD CHANNA
Karachi

Source: Dawn

Date:3/8/2010