Women Empowerment Conference organised

Lahore: Mazars in Pakistan organised a ‘Women Empowerment Conference’ recently in Islamabad.

The conference included female public representatives, CEOs, NGO activists, media celebrities and entrepreneurs who highlighted their experiences cherishing womanhood and the daily professional challenges they encounter.

Ms Muriel de Saint Sauveur, International Marketing and Communication Director at Mazars, who has worked extensively to identify the needs and suggest ways to empower today’s women, shared her thoughts at the event.

‘A Women’s World, A Better World’ a compilation of interviews of successful women by Muriel was also showcased at the event, followed by a thought provoking debate on the significance of women empowerment in Pakistan.

During the event, Ms Muriel said, “Women are a fundamental segment of any society.

Without their unhindered participation in all spheres of national life, no nation can stride towards its esteemed goals of economic, political and moral progress.” Mazars is an international, integrated and independent organisation specialising in audit, advisory, accounting, tax and legal services with presence in 67 countries, drawing expertise of its 13,000 professionals.

Business Recorder

Sharmeen Chinoy launches anti-acid campaign

KARACHI: Pakistan’s first Oscar winner launched a campaign on Tuesday, hoping that her documentary about survivors of acid attacks can help eliminate a crime that disfigures hundreds of women each year.

“Saving Face” by Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy won the short documentary category at the Academy Awards on Sunday.

The film follows survivors in their fight to bring their attackers to justice and focuses on the work of British Pakistani plastic surgeon Mohammad Jawad, who helped restore their faces and lives.

The team behind the documentary are using their website to launch a campaign designed to raise awareness about acid attacks, which can disfigure around 200 women a year in Pakistan, and to strengthen legislation against the violence.

“The film must be more than an expose of horrendous crimes, it must be a recipe for addressing the problem and a hope for the future,” co-director Daniel Junge says on www.savingfacefilm.com.

Pakistan’s parliament last year adopted tougher penalties for acid attacks, increasing the punishment to between 14 years and life, and a minimum fine of one million rupees ($11,000).

Obaid-Chinoy’s mother, Saba, told AFP that the campaign was launched formally after her daughter won the Oscar, which had “provided her with a unique opportunity and strength to strive for her goal more effectively”.

“The campaign is mainly aimed at making our society more humane and better to live. It is to help and remedy those who are victims of such brutality and injustice,” she told AFP.

“Saving Face is uniquely positioned to advance awareness, education and prevention efforts,” the website says.

The chairwoman of Acid Survivors Pakistan, which is a partner in the campaign, told AFP that the fight to eliminate the crime had only just started and that the outreach programme was designed to generate “systemic change”.

Dawn

In-laws torture woman to death after quarrel over suitcase, court told

Shamim Bano

Karachi: At the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of the Civil Hospital Karachi (CHK), another woman has succumbed to her wounds after being allegedly tortured by her in-laws.

Saima’s parents’ suspect that their daughter’s in-laws are involved in what they claim to be a ‘parricide’ but police says the woman was mentally disabled and committed suicide by hanging herself to a ceiling fan.

On Tuesday, Saima’s husband, Mairaj, who is suffering from Parkinson’s disease, and her brother-in-law, Shahzada, were produced in the court of the Judicial Magistrate South, Inayat Ali Bhutto. They have been nominated in the case by the woman’s family.

On January 24, when Saima was about to leave for a marriage ceremony at her parents’ house with her husband, a quarrel erupted between her and the mother-in-law over the contents of her suitcase, which contained clothes and some jewellery.

Later, Saima’s parents received the news that their daughter had been admitted to the CHK and was in a critical condition. The family rushed to the facility only to be told that they could not see their daughter.

For seven days, she fought for her life and stayed in a coma. On February 7, the 22-year-old breathed her last. The defence counsel told this correspondent that Saima had married Mairaj around 14 months back and had a two-month-old baby.

She said the woman had been brutally beaten by her in-laws, but neither chemical report nor any medical report was produced before the court. Even the investigation had not been properly conducted.

The family says the in-laws were demanding Rs0.3 million from them if they wanted the dowry returned. The defence said it was the worst case she had seen throughout her career, as Saima’s throat had been slit open by a sharp object.

The mother- and sisters-in-law, Jameela, Malika and Rani respectively, who were also indicted in the case, obtained bail before arrest from Additional District and Session Court South Abdul Razzak.

The News

SHC dismisses bail plea in Karo-Kari case

Karachi: The Sindh High Court on Tuesday dismissed a bail application of a man in a murder case.

Khajan, along with others, was accused of murdering an 18-year-old-girl, Taslima Solangi, who had been declared a Kari by a Jirga in Khairpur in 2008.

According to the prosecution, Taslima was murdered by her ex-husband, Ibrahim, a co-accused in the case, and his accomplices when she had remarried one Yaqoob Kanhar in March 2008.

The News

Oscar comes to Pakistan

After a long time I felt proud to be a Pakistani. Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy’s Oscar victory, after the one and only Nobel Prize that our nation once won, is a beacon of hope and pride for the thousands of unsung and unknown heroes who keep the lights of Pakistan burning and manage occasionally to keep us in the right headlines of the world’s media.

I believe I speak for at least a significant number of Pakistanis in extending felicitations and gratitude to her and her team for this great recognition.

With the pride comes shame. The prize winning topic, ‘Saving Face’ that was so dramatically represented, is testament to the unchecked, accepted and almost lauded, torture, disfigurement and mutilation of our women that is seemingly ingrained in our society.

It is also a testament to the goodness in some of our own people, in this case Dr Mohammed Jawad, the now British plastic surgeon, often against enormous odds, who have freely given of their time, efforts and skills to help the miserable and downtrodden back home.

Even as we all briefly bask in Sharmeen’s glory, a news item in the media drove that reality home.

“A seven-year-old employee was tortured and parts of her body burnt by her employer in a house (in Karachi)…The lips of the girl were burnt, the police said. Her employer, Humaira, mother of four children, was summoned to the police station.”

What terrible crime did that little child — who should have been loved and in a school instead of being a hapless statistic of our bigoted religio-feudal mindset, illiteracy, burgeoning population and poverty — commit to have been so tortured and that too by a woman?

What message did the four, some possibly just as young, children of that employer learn from the savagery of their mother? If boys, did they get their first lesson in male domination? If girls, did they learn to accept violence as the natural consequence of their gender and, where possible, to also be its perpetrators on their inferiors?

That little girl who will never see or benefit from Sharmeen’s monumental documentary on her plight joins the ranks of the millions of oppressed women, children and minorities in Pakistan.

As normally happens, I have little doubt the employer will also go scot-free.

As we drove our Nobel Prize away, will we also relegate Sharmeen’s film to the celluloid trashcan? And her tribute to the ‘women who dared to take a stand’ to obscurity? Or are there yet voices in Pakistan still willing to stand up and be heard?”

DR MERVYN HOSEIN
Karachi

Dedicated to women

SHARMEEN has proved that Pakistan is not only what is being portrayed in the media — OBL, angry people burning other countries’ flags, chained students in madressahs, boys, aged 12, exploding themselves while killing scores.

Pakistan is also a country of some very talented people. Pakistani filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy won an Academy Award for her documentary ‘Saving Faces’, Feb. 27.

As expected, she dedicated her award to the women in Pakistan asking them not to give up as tomorrow will be better than today.

‘Saving Faces’ is a documentary which highlights a horrible menace wherein women are disfigured by acid thrown on their faces as punishment.

Punishment for what — resisting harassment, turning down a marriage proposal, settling family feuds, just think of any unthinkable justification?

Congratulations to Pakistanis for this marvelous achievement – the first-ever nomination for Oscar and winning of the same. One day this country will not be recognised by its tribal links which still see women in some parts of the country as a commodity, something to settle feuds among families and tribes.

MASOOD KHAN
Jubail, Saudi Arabia

Significance

SHARMEEN Obaid-Chinoy’s message in her acceptance speech to all the women was: “Don’t give up on your dreams. This is for you.”

The message carries great significance.

The great achievement and success of Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy for winning the Oscar for Pakistan would help in changing the rigid mindset and would allow women to be able to share their grievances.

QAZI NAZIM NAEEM
Los Angeles

Screening in Pakistan

IT is sad that none of Chinoy’s documentaries has been screened by any Pakistani channel on account of costly fees demanded by foreign channels.

Hopefully, ‘Saving Face’ will find its way through DVDs followed by some of her other works. The Oscar Award to Chinoy should encourage other documentary makers to compete for prestigious international awards.

This would help raise the standard of documentaries made in the country.

FARRUKH KAZI
Lahore

Other topics

NOT taking any credit away from the Oscar-winner of the short film, ‘Saving Face’, it is time we asked if the essence of its topic, Pakistani women as victims, has to do anything with the international fanfare this documentary managed to garner.

Imagine a documentary on the plight of those unknown number of Pakistanis in Indian jails, on Kashmiris being raped as an organised policy of torture by Indian armed forces (as confirmed by Amnesty International), on pro-Pakistani citizens killed by Indian-backed Mukti Bahini in 1971 — would these topics ever get to the nomination phase at Oscars, let alone winning?

Nonetheless, I congratulate ‘Saving Face’.

NIZAR DIAMOND ALI
Karachi

Dawn