International women leaders’ summit on 25th

Lahore: As part of the Women in Business Conference Series (WIBCON) for professional women, an international women leaders’ summit is being organised on January 25 in the city.

The speakers of the conference include Rokia Afzal Rehman, a former minister from Bangladesh, who will deliver the keynote address on enterprising women lessons from South and Far-East Asia.

Social activist and a popular voice of the Afghan Radio, Jamila Mujahed from Afghanistan, would share her experiences on tools of education for Afghan women during war. Turkish author Elif Shafak would speak on women and spirituality and the first Pakistani Emmy Award winner Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy would discuss how women are facing the challenges of extremism.

A panel, moderated by Dr Huma Baqai, Associate Professor IBA, will include senior bureaucrat Begum Nasreen Haque, Ayesha Aziz, Nadira Panjwani, and Yasmin Lari. Ayesha Tammy Haq will lead the session on local entrepreneurs’ success stories with Sana Safinaz, Farzeen Irtizaz and local entrepreneurs.

Political change skips Fata’s women, for now

By Sumaira Khan

Tribal areas have no female repres­entati­ves in parlia­ment.

ISLAMABAD: For women of a strictly patriarchal and rigidly homosocial region, their only voice are their male counterparts.

The Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) is the only region of Pakistan that has no female representation in the National Assembly, or the Senate. In addition, the issue appears to be looming nowhere on the horizon.

Looking up to PPP

Giving qualified and eligible women of Fata proper representation in Parliament has been our longstanding issue, said ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) sympathiser, and a lawmaker from Fata, Akhundzada Chitan.

Chitan, who has been raising his voice for the rights of women of Fata, said he has talked to the party leadership several times and drawn their attention towards this important issue.

The PPP government recently amended the Frontier Crimes Regulation (FCR) and extended the Political Parties Order 2002 to Fata, opening the region to political expression.

“It was almost impossible for us to even think about changes in the FCR but the PPP made it possible; that’s why the women of Fata are looking towards the PPP leadership to give them their basic rights, especially when there are no more political sanctions in Fata,” Chitan said.

In Pakhtun society, women, by virtue of strict gender segregation, are the only ones aware of women’s needs, especially at home, he said.

They face a host of challenges – reproductive health, financial stability, and ancient, discriminatory customs – and therefore a Pakhtun woman parliamentarian would help in formulating national policies regarding women-specific issues, Chitan added.

Who’s responsible?

Female parliamentarians shifted the onus of political uplift of Fata’s women to their male counterparts.

PPP lawmaker Yasmin Rehman called for equal rights for Fata’s women but urged the Pakhtun men to ‘help their women contribute towards strengthening of institutions’.

Only education can improve the lot of women, Rehman said, adding that she will discuss this particular issue in the meetings of women parliamentary caucus.

Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz’s (PML-N) lawmaker Anusha Rehman said granting political representation to Fata’s women should be ‘the prime task’ of Fata’s male parliamentarians.

She suggested they draft a private members’ bill, instead of delivering rhetoric on points of orders.

The region’s human rights representative blamed the ‘establishment’ for Fata’s general backwardness.

“In Fata, the real power rests with the army which, professionally, has a security-oriented approach in dealing with things, rather than a welfare-oriented one,” said chairperson of the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa chapter of Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, Sher Mohammad Khan.

Social change is a continuous process and sooner than later, those in power would have to grant rights to the tribal people guaranteed in the Constitution, Khan added.

Women to herald change

Women need to be empowered and no one but themselves should bring about this change by raising their voice against violation of their rights, said educationist Dr Mairaj Humayon.

We are celebrating the recently-passed landmark bills upholding women’s rights, but when will such celebrations take place for Fata’s women, said filmmaker and women rights activist Samar Minallah.

“If policy makers are serious about empowering them, they will have to think of some practical steps to bring about a change from within,” she said.

Minallah insisted that women have to be part of the decision-making process.

“There are effective decision-makers concealed behind the chadors; they can only emerge if they are given a real chance,” she added.

Call in PA for steps against honour killings

Habib Khan Ghori

KARACHI: A woman lawmaker highlighted a horrendous incident of Karo-kari vengeance in the Sindh Assembly on Tuesday and demanded punishment for the culprits and measures to curb the scourge in the province.

The law minister said he had already sought a report on the Monday incident and assured the house that the culprits would not get away with the crime.

Tuesday being private members day, neither any of the resolutions nor any motion could be taken up from the order of the day for want of time. The house was called to order at 1.30pm, hours behind its scheduled time of 10am. After the points of order and question hour sessions, the house continued general discussion on a resolution moved jointly by a number of lawmakers on the 84th birth anniversary of the founder chairman of the Pakistan People’s Party, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.

It was the third day of discussion. Before the resolution was put to the vote and passed unanimously, 12 lawmakers had spoken on it. In the resolution the assembly paid tribute to “the unparallel leadership of Quaid-i-Awam Prime Minister Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto”.

After the resolution was passed, when the chair was about to take up the next item from the order of the day, the law minister proposed that the session be put off to Friday so that the lawmakers could go back to their constituencies and supervise development and relief work. At 2.15pm the chair called it a day to meet on Friday at 10am.

Earlier, the assembly was stunned when Nusrat Seher Abbasi of the Pakistan Muslim League (Functional) on a point of order recalled the incident of a young couple of Ghotki who had escaped an attempt to have them crushed under the wheels of a train.

She referred to a video recording aired by a private TV channel on Monday showing Afzal Sher and Saeeda Sher tied to railway tracks with some gunmen keeping a watch over them and waiting for the arrival of a train to crush the couple as a punishment for an alleged Karo-kari offence. But someone informed TV channel people who rushed to the scene. They
were reportedly fired upon by the armed men to scare them away.

However, apprehending their identification in the video film that was being made by the channel team, they ran away leaving the couple tied to the tracks. She said the couple were rescued by the media team.

She condemned the incident and lamented the failure of police to reach the spot to save the couple.

Demanding arrest of the culprits, she expressed the need to take effective measures to stop the Karo-kari menace in Sindh.

Law Minister Ayaz Soomro, responding to the point of order, condemned the incident and assured the house that an inquiry had already been ordered through the SSP concerned and a detailed report sought, which would be laid before the house.

The minister blamed military rulers for the menace of Karo-kari, claiming that dictators had done nothing to increase literacy in the country to increase awareness among people.

Before giving the floor to Ms Abbasi, Speaker Nisar Khuhro had allowed Sports Minister Dr Muhammad Ali Shah to make a statement under Rule 215.

Mr Shah said the Rs50,000 grant he had announced during the last sitting for eminent footballer Abdul Ghafoor Baloch, who had led the national football team for a couple of years, had not only been paid to him but his department had also approved a Rs3,500 monthly stipend and Governor Ishratul Ibad Khan had announced a grant of Rs100,000 for him. He said the footballer’s case was highlighted by lawmaker Rafique Engineer.

Another important issue, raised by Dr Sikander Mandhro, pertained to the arrest of three students of Sindh University’s engineering college who were taken away by, what he called, agencies and whose whereabouts were not known to their families.

Humera Alwani drew the attention of the house towards the suspension of classes for the last five days in the university after the murder of a professor and demanded a formal investigation into the murder with reference to the law and order situation on the campus.

The law minister said he had asked the SSP and the DIG concerned to submit a report explaining the reasons the students were arrested.

Nawab Taimur Talpur of the PPP through his point of order drew the attention of the speaker towards his rulings given during the last four years for activating the privileges committee by holding election for its chairman.

“If it was a decision not to form or activate the committee, a special committee be constituted to deal with my privilege motion which had been pending from the last four years”.

The law minister said the committee was intact but the issue was of its chairman who could not be elected for want of attendance of the members of the committee. Despite the issuance of notices whenever a meeting was summoned, election could not be held for lack of a quorum.

Shaoib Ibrahim of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement said that although the government had increased pension of widows from 50 per cent to 75pc, the decision had not been implemented. There was a need to ensure that widows should be paid 75pc of the pension.

Dr Sattar Rajpar complained that sugar mills were not buying sugarcane from growers of Moro, Mehrabpur and Kandyaro.Agriculture Minister Syed Ali Nawaz Shah replied that there was no zoning system and the secretary for agriculture had recently held a meeting with representatives of sugar mills and had issued them a warning on the issue. If his complaint persisted, it should be brought to his knowledge, he added.

Altaf vows to improve lot of women

NAWABSHAH: The time is not far away when feudal and influential landlords involved in injustices would be brought to book according to laws, chief of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) said this in reference to women.

MQM chief Altaf Hussain said that women here were the most suppressed class, particularly for Sindh being a feudal society.

Speaking to a gathering organised by the MQM`s Women Wing at the Islamia High School here on Tuesday, he said that women of rural areas were treated badly all over the country but in Sindh, treatment meted out to them at the hands of male mastersand family members was ruthless and highly deplorable.

Women here are married to holy book in order to prevent the property from going into the hands of others, tortured on flimsy excuses and killed in the name of honour or karokari. He invited the sons of the soil to support the MQM in wiping out such evil customs from the society, forever.

Altaf Hussain emphasising on female education urged the parents to enrol their wards in schools and colleges so that they could produce a better future nation. He said thataschooland acoHegefor girls would be set up on American and European standards and directed the MQM`s Nawabshah chapter to assist the Coordination Committeeof the party in cherishing their dreams of educationallyarmed and financially independent rural women.

Women deserve respect for being mother, sister and wife and as such they should be fully guarded against evil eyes casting shadows on them.

They should have an equal footing with their male counterparts in every field of life be it home, workplace or a field, the MQM chief reassured.

Nations violating the rights and obligations of their female folks and men abusing their authority over females never prosper, rather such nations get destroyed.

MQM MNA Khushbakht Shujaat and others also addressed the gathering.

Child marriage restriction being flouted in Dir

Haleem Asad

TIMERGARA: Though banned, child marriages are on the rise in Lower Dir and therefore, the society and the government should act together for containing them, said Fakharuddin Khan, coordinator of the Child Rights` Committee (CRC) in the district, on Tuesday.

Mr Fakharuddin told reporters at the Timergara press club that everyone under 18 was a child in line with the law and that an act enforced in India in 1929 had banned child marriages.

He said the act fixed the marriageable age of a man at 18 and that of a woman at 16, calling for end to discrimination against women on the count.

The coordinator CRC said a 13 years old married girl in Ouch area of Lower Dir died during her first delivery of late.

He said child marriages were common in rural areas and among less educatedsegments of society. He said people should focus on their children`s education and health before wedding them off.

Mr Fakharuddin demanded strict enforcement of ban on child marriages.

He said CRC with the help of Society for Protection and Rights of the Children had been creating public awareness of child marriages since June 2011.

ZOONOTIC DISEASES: The zoonotic diseases control committee (ZDCC) will shortly visit from village to village in five selected union councils of Lower Dir district to know incidence of diseases passing from animals to human beings and vice versa.

This was stated by coordinator of the said committee Dr Abdullah on Tuesday during a function at the Farm Services Centre in Timergara on zoonotic diseases.

The function was attended by livestock and health offi-cials and social activists.

Executive district officer (health) Lower Dir Shaukat Ali, district coordinator ZDCC Abdullah and others addressed the function.

Dr Abdullah said many diseases were transferable from animals to human beings and they included tuberculosis, tetanus, rabbis, leshmaniasis, brucellosis and toxoplasmosis.

He said 25-member ZDCC would send its recommendations to the Relief International, which was to provide it with financial and technical support, after completing surveys in Balamabat, Munda, Koto, Munjai and Hayaserai districts.

Dr Abdullah said the committee would detect cases relating to zoonosis before sending its report to the committee.

He said ZDCC would meet once after two months and its meeting would be held at the Farm Services Centre.