Giving women their due respect

WOMEN are a vital, inseparable part of any society and deserve equal respect and opportunities. However, in our society they are looked upon with great disdain, so much so that it creates sad situations sometimes.

If you are travelling by any public conveyance, you would hardly find any woman sitting while all males are sitting. However, it is considered unmanly for a man to keep sitting while a woman is standing.

Transporters accommodate women though there’s not an inch inside their vehicles, knowing that some male would probably rise and offer his seat to them. Apparently, bus conductors proclaim that they are concerned about women standing on bus stops, but actually it is the money (fare) they are after.

Another form of disrespect is by assigning front seats for women. Many women are found complaining that drivers fix mirrors in such a position that they can keep glancing at them with their indecent gazes throughout the journey.

In banks and post offices, there are separate windows for women to facilitate them. Knowing that few women turn up, many males bring their sisters, wives or mothers to renew their licenses or for some other work so that they do not have to stand in long queues. You visit banks or post offices and you will often find women getting out of their cars with bills or booklets in their hands while their male companions wait outside in the car parking.

Besides, if males do accompany them inside, they stand aside trying to look indifferent. You can drive your car across the country with women and you will hardly find any traffic warden stopping you to ensure that you are carrying a proper driving license.

Similarly, you can cross a police checkpost and can transport loads of explosives provided you have a woman sitting right next to you.

However, if there are only males sitting in a car, no matter how decent they might look, the police will stop them on checkposts and search them through and through.

If one happens to witness a street argument between a man and a woman, you will indeed sympathise with the latter. Women are usually considered innocent in such cases, as sometimes it may be the other way around. Often males find remaining silent as the only viable option on such occasions to avoid being physically beaten up by onlookers and passersby.

Nevertheless, women must be treated with respect under all situations and by all of us.

SYED FARHAN BASIT
Mirpur Mathelo

Source: Dawn

Date:9/21/2011

Journalist’s house blown up

The house of Jawed Noor, senior correspondent of daily “Mashriq” and the president of Wanna Press Club was blown up with explosive device placed by some unknown miscreants in the midnight of Thursday, October 20, 2011, at Wanna, the headquarter of South Waziristan Agency of Federally Administrated Tribal Areas of Pakistan.

Noor told PPF that some miscreants blow up his house by placing a bag of explosive device outside. He was in Peshawar at the time of attack. His family members awakened when they heard a big sound of blast, all members are safe, however the walls and window panes of the house were damaged, he said.

He told that he had received death threats on phone calls few days ago, but he didn’t take any notice of it. Noor said, there are many militant groups in FATA, and they don’t want journalists to publish the truth or any news against them.

Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), Tribal Union of Journalists (TUJ) and other journalists condemned the attack and demanded of the government to provide full protection to the journalists.

Condemning the incident, the present of TUJ, Safdar Hayaat Dawar said FATA journalists are becoming the easy prey for militants as they have been attacked by them for long time but we will never stay silent now. We will stage country wide protest if the attacks on journalists would not be stopped.
Source: Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF)
Date:10/21/2011

ILO to train media on gender issues

LAHORE: The International Labor Organisation plans to build capacity of 800 working journalists on gender sensitisation reporting and covering the issues concerning working women`s role in the economic development and the problems they are facing at workplaces.

“The ILO also under a project titled `Promoting Gender Equality for Decent Employment (GE4DE)` plans to train 5,000 women in Pakistan with a view to strengthening national mechanism to promote equal employment opportunities for women and to enhance skills of poor women in rural and urban areas of selected districts,” ILO National Project Coordinator Dr Frida Khan said while highlighting the salient features of the programme at a roundtable discussion with media persons here on Tuesday.

She said the project launched in association with the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) would help prepare media master trainers through capacity building of 800 working journalists in 39 planned training workshops titled `training of trainers` (ToTs) to be held across the country in near future. She said the media master trainers after receiving training on gender sensitisation would further build capacity of nearly 17,000 identified working journalists in the country.

Ms Khan said the project had been launched after the ILO Pakistan chapter reached up to the fact that the gender discrimination was at the lowest ebb in Pakistan in the name of false religious values and concepts.

“Through this project we believe that gender equality in the world of work is a fundamental human right, critical to social justice and is an instrument in achieving poverty alleviation,” she added.

She said the project would specifically focus on media to increase awareness through quality reporting and covering of the of gender equality in the world of work.

Ms Khan said as after devolution under 18th constitutional amendment the provinces were liable to formulate their own labour policies, the government higher-ups should involve all the stakeholders while finalising such important policies.

“We started with some small pilot projects and already we have reports of a group of women in Gwadar, who have set up their own catering business in traditional sea food. These women were reported to earn Rs1,000 per person per day. In Karachi we took some women who were working in the worst condition of sorting fish and cleaning shrimps and prawns and trained them to work in for a fish processing firm and a group of those women has been picked for further training as factory supervisers,” she said.

Eminent development and rights activist Moneeza Hashmi while giving her input in the discussion said that women themselves could do much to foster better treatment of women in the media by promoting sound media education programmes.

She said women must be enabled to play their part in the solution to the serious problems of society and of society`s future.

Punjab University`s Mass Communication Department Director Dr Ahsan Akhtar Naz said the situation regarding women rights and equality was gradually getting better in Pakistan. He said the media should highlight the problems of women instead of using them only for glamour and advertisements.

Lahore College for Women University Department of Mass Communication chairperson Dr Anjum Zia appreciated the efforts of ILO and CIDA for arranging media discussion on such an important issue. She said the media should change its culture by focusing the issues relating to gender discrimination in Pakistan.

On this occasion the media persons belonging to different newspapers, TV channels and radio stations also signed a roundtable declaration in which they pledged to play a key role in empowering women by improving their public profile through a fair and representative coverage of working women.

Source: Dawn

Date:9/21/2011