Progressive forces: Giving women employment, and their dignity

By Fazal Khaliq

Mussarat Ahmad Zeb set up a vocational training institute for the women of Swat.

SWAT: When all symbols of progressive forces had been crushed by the Taliban in the once serene valley of Swat, Mussarat Ahmad Zeb stepped up and fought for the rights of women in the area.

“It was the middle of 2007 when I came to Swat from Islamabad.

It was a bleak time and the insurgency had an immense impact on women — they were traumatised and distressed,” Zeb said in an interview with The Express Tribune.

She set up a vocational training centre by the name of ‘Ladore’ where the women could gain skills as well as therapy. The centre is named after a herb found in Swat valley.

“I did not want to give the militancy-affected women just money, so a platform was created to provide them an opportunity to gather vocational skills,” she said.

“Initially the women were reclusive and introverted, but now we all have a good time while we work.”

“I am not only training women but also reviving the rich cultural heritage of Swat Valley,” she said.

“This isn’t mere embroidery. Every flower in Swati embroidery carries a story,” she added.

Zeb criticised the Benazir Income Support Programme, a scheme initiated by the present government.

“They are snatching away [the women’s] dignity by offering Rs1000 every month. If I was in charge of the programme, I would never give money without work,” she said.

Zeb said she plans to set up her own looms in Swat in the future.

She aims to target the international markets and urged the government to set up a platform for doing so.

“I am bringing back our heritage and showing to the world that we have talent and dignity. We are peaceful and brave people.”

Source: The Express Tribune

Date:5/26/2011

Women caravan ends after rally against injustice, discrimination

ISLAMABAD: Women Caravan while concluding its two-day ‘Long March’ to highlight the miseries of the flood affected women, held a protest demonstration in front of the Parliament House asking for special budgetary package to address women’s suffering.

The unique visual stunt put together by flood-hit rural women culminated here on Wednesday.

The women’s caravan that started on Tuesday comprising a large number of women and girls from flood-hit areas demanded women’s prioritization in the flood rehabilitation process and budgetary allocation for women support programme. Participants were of the view that Women and girls have been the worst victims of 2010 floods due to their pre existing vulnerabilities. After almost a year of the devastating floods, millions of women are still desperately striving to rebuild their lives and livelihoods.

ActionAid Pakistan’s Country Director Jemal Ahmed said it is imperative that government and NGOs keep their focus on women’s rehabilitation. Only strong, empowered women can build a safe and prosperous society.

He said that floods have pushed rural women into further poverty and suffering but they have immense resilience and courage of conviction and they are here to tell the world of their problems and demanded prioritization in the fiscal budget 2011-12.

Government must allocate budget for women support programme, which means they should be given Watan cards, proper shelter and income generating opportunities, he added.

Potohar Organization for Development Advocacy (PODA) Director Sameena Nazir said that the impact of floods is not over yet. There are still millions of internally displaced families that are seeking to rebuild their lives; therefore, budgets should be allocated at federal and provincial levels so that poor people can be supported to overcome the flood devastation.

She said that since women primarily have the responsibility of feeding every person in the family, they should also be given assistance in terms of food production and food storage facilities.

On the occasion, women and girls shared their personal stories and testimonies with the audience. They said that poverty has compelled women to resort for begging.

One such woman was Manzooran Mai from Taunsa (South Punjab) who said she had started begging to feed her six children. A girl, Farzana, shared that she had to leave school, as her parents cannot afford to buy books and pay school fee. She said that they have not been given ‘Watan Cards’, while in some cases the cards are unable to draw any money from the bank.

Source: Daily Times

Date:5/26/2011

Woman fights it out to a rapprochement

RAWALPINDI: Airport police detained a teacher of a private university for several hours after she argued with a serving army officer for overtaking her car dangerously at Amaar Chowk on Tuesday night, sources told Dawn.

She was allowed to go home after reaching a compromise with the officer on Wednesday, the source said.

The teacher followed the officer, who was travelling with his family, to a picket of the army near the chowk. She told the officer that due to his “wrong overtaking” she had narrowly escaped an accident. But the hour long argument over who was at fault turned ugly and heated.

However while the teacher, herself daughter of a retired army officer, was leaving after apparently settling the issue, the security personnel barred her way. The source said she protested the “impolite attitude” of the security staff. Eventually the police were called in and took her away to the airport police station.

SHO of the women police station told Dawn that she only provided women constable to escort the teacher while the incident was handled by the Airport police.

At the police station, the teacher informed her family and also called her lawyer, asking them to reach to her help. Source said the teacher lodged a formal complaint and demanded registration of a case against the army officer, who also wanted to register a counter case.

Since she had spent whole night and early part of Wednesday in police detention, senior officers intervened and worked out a rapprochement between the two parties.

Copies were made of the compromise and handed to the teacher and the army officer. When Regional Police Officer (RPO) Mohammad Zubair was contacted, he declined to comment.

Source: Dawn

Date:5/26/2011

Victims of acid attacks

By Bina Shah

WHEN I was a student in Boston, I rode the subway almost every day. There was a woman who I saw more than once on the Red Line; her face was unforgettable, but not because she was a great beauty.

Her features were, in fact, grotesque: her nose deformed and melted, her eyes reduced to the size of dimes, her skin one great mass of flesh, tender and pink. She would stare at everyone who glanced in her direction, fury bright in her nearly-invisible eyes.

It took me many years to realise that she had been the victim of a fire, and her face had suffered second- or third-degree burns, turning her from an ordinary human being into a figure of shock, disgust and ridicule as she went about her daily business.

I was reminded recently of that woman’s face when I heard the news that the Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill 2011, formerly known as the Acid Control and Acid Crime Bill 2010, was introduced in Pakistan’s National Assembly and passed without debate.

An 18-member committee on women development introduced the bill, which makes it a crime punishable by law to attack someone using acid, with the intention of wounding them or disfiguring them. It proposes a maximum sentence of life imprisonment – or a minimum 14 years’ imprisonment – plus a Rs1m fine on anyone found guilty of this crime.

Marvi Memon, an MNA from the PML-Q, is responsible for pushing the bill through in parliament. Initially sponsored by Memon and Fakhrunnisa Khokhar of the PPP, the acid bill was introduced in its current incarnation by Memon, Begum Shahnaz Sheikh of the same party and Anusha Rehman Khan of the PML-N. Other women MNAs across party lines praised the passage of the bill; Memon later stated on Twitter that it was “time to get all clean people from all parties together for good
policies for one purpose – to fix Pakistan. Don’t worry about which party we are in. The goal is Pakistan.”

Memon was inspired by the case of Maria Shah, the 22-year-old midwife from Shikarpur who died of an acid attack in 2009 when rickshaw driver Aslam Sanjrani threw acid on her as she worked at her clinic, because she spurned his marriage proposal.

Memon visited the woman as she lay dying in hospital, promising a law that would put Shah’s attacker in jail for life. Today, Memon feels she has delivered on that promise. She’s determined to hold the lawmakers responsible if they fail to catch the people who commit acid attacks.

“I’ve put the onus on the MNA of each constituency,” she stated on Twitter. “We will gun for them, not the criminals, if they fail us.” This is also a move that makes sense, given that many criminals in the rural areas appeal to a politically powerful feudal or sardar for protection once they’ve committed a crime like this.

But this is only the beginning, not the end, of the fight. First of all, now that the bill has been passed at this level, it goes to the Senate, where it needs to be adopted before it can become a law.

Furthermore, the bill doesn’t go far enough to truly protect women against acid attacks, either before they have occurred or after they have been committed. At least this is the opinion of Dr Shaista Effendi, a cosmetic and burn surgery specialist who works as a consultant at the Dr Ziauddin Hospital in Karachi. She’s had 30 years of experience working with the victims of acid attacks, as the founder and manager of the Civil Hospital Burns Unit, where women lie in agony, their flesh suppurating and stinking of gangrene, undergoing months and years of painful treatment to salvage what the acid didn’t burn away in the first place.

The bill, Dr Effendi says, doesn’t properly legislate to control the purchase of acid or any other corrosive substance, which is still easily available at any chemist or compounder’s store (it only recommends that provincial assemblies crack down on the buying and selling of acid). Also, it focuses explicitly on the criminal, not the victim, providing no compensation for the victim of an acid attack.

“She’s working, so are all the members of her family,” says Dr Effendi. “Once she’s in hospital, two or three family members must be with her all the time. It cripples an entire family, not just the person, psychologically, emotionally, financially. Not to mention how expensive the treatment is for a burn victim. The attacker must pay for that.”

But according to Dr Effendi, the real weakness of the bill is that it is a reactionary measure to what is a preventable crime.

“There are always signs leading up to the crime. Usually it’s a love-hate relationship between the attacker and the woman – she refuses his advances, rejects his proposal. There’s ego and possessiveness involved. And the attacker always shows signs of mental illness or disturbance leading up to the attack. These are the things that we have to watch out for.”

“To be honest, acid throwing is not unique to our country. There are rules that already cover this, under grievous bodily harm. But you see, we are a reactionary society. We need to show that we’re doing ‘something’, even when we could have done ‘something’ before the crime even happened.”

But this is Pakistan, and in Pakistan, something is better than nothing. Let’s hope this bill can evolve into the toughest piece of legislation we have yet on violence against women.

Let’s also learn the lesson that women legislators are far more willing to put aside party differences to push through laws in parliament that protect our girls and women against various forms of abuse – sexual harassment, honour killings, domestic violence and child marriage – a lesson that the women of Pakistan would do well to remember the next time we go to the polls to vote.

Source: Dawn

Date:5/26/2011