Women being empowered in line with Benazir’s thinking

KARACHI: The International Working Day of Women was marked here on Friday under the auspices of the Directorate of Women Development (DWD) and the Women Development Department (WDD), Sindh government.

The ceremony was chaired by Tauqeer Fatima Bhutto, Sindh Minister for Women Development. Quite a number of women representatives and activists participated in the function. This was aimed at appreciating the services of the working women in Sindh province.

Addressing the gathering, Tauqeer Fatima Bhutto said that today we honour women from all corners of the province and the contributions they have made towards the development of women. She said that for over one hundred years, International Women’s Day had been a beacon of hope for so many women who have fought for the uplift of their communities and societies.

The minister further highlighted the practical steps taken by her department to end the deprivations of the working women. She said that thousands of women had been empowered socio-economically, politically and legally, enabling them to stand on their own feet.

In addition to this, a wide range of facilities and opportunities had been created by her department for the working women across the province of Sindh. In this connection, Day Care Centers, Working Women Hostels, Ladies Civic Clubs, Skill Development Trainings and Sales and Display Resource Centers are of tremendous importance.

She said that the Women Development Department was accelerating efforts to advance and institutionalise women’s participation for their real empowerment in line with the thinking and approach of Shaheed Benazir Bhutto.

Hamida Masood Shah, Director, Directorate of Women Development, Government of Sindh, said Sindh women who possessed diverse qualities and skills as a result of her department’s efforts may be given ample opportunities to participate in the provincial and national development.

Furthermore, she announced that an ADP Scheme namely Advocacy of Women Empowerment in Sindh as well as next phase of Benazir Bhutto Shaheed Youth Development Programme would soon be starting for socio-economic and legal empowerment of women across the province of Sindh.

She said that every possible measure would be taken by her department for the welfare of women in Sindh. She further added that the Directorate of Women Development, Government of Sindh, was committed to make women and their advancement a cornerstone of her government’s policy not just because it’s the right thing to do.


Daily Times

Empowering our women

By: S T HUSSAIN

I do not know why Imran Khan is issuing the kind of statements that adversely affect his popularity. Every thoughtful Pakistani knows that the elite ruling class will make a hue and cry when any question of a change in the political status quo is raised. It is true that the women nominated in the National and provincial Assemblies are not true representatives of the majority of Pakistani women, particularly those living in rural areas. This is because the majority of women nominated by political parties belong to urban areas and political families. Women who belong to the have-not part of society do not have any women to represent them.

I suggest that female voters vote for female candidates contesting the election through their own political party’s ticket in each constituency and for men to vote only for male candidates. This will help achieving not only equal status for women but will really empower the women of Pakistan. It is imperative for our women to have political power and for themselves to solve the problems faced by them in male-dominated Pakistan. Women have proved that they can perform as well as men in different professions. Already there are more female students in colleges and universities and they are performing better in education than the boys. By allowing women to control their own destinies, we will solve many multi-faceted social and economic problems.


Daily Times

Two schools blown up in Khyber Pakhtunkhwah

PESHAWAR: Militants blew up two scholls in KHyberPakhtunkhwah and its tribal areas on Wednesday, DawnNews reported. A government primary school was targeted in Budh bher area in Peshawar’s surrounding.

No loss of life had been reported whereas two rooms of the school were completely destroyed as a result of the explosion. According to the Bomb Disposal squad, 15 to 20 kilograms of explosive material was used in the bomb.

The bomb disposal squad also defused another improvised explosive device (IED) planted on the school premises. In another incident militants targeted another government primary school in Khyber agency’s Akakhel area. Security forces reached the site of explosion as investigations into the blasts went underway.


Dawn

Three women wounded: Bride, cousin killed in armed clash after wedding

SUKKUR: A dispute over a matrimonial alliance triggered an armed clash in Atal Muradani village within the remit of the Sarhad police station on Friday left the bride and her young cousin dead and another three women injured. One of the injured women was stated to be in a critical condition.

Reports from the area suggested that the marriage of a Solangi clan woman, Rabia, daughter of Mohammad Ibrahim, was solemnised on Friday night with a member of Mahar clan, Sahib, son of Ramzan Mahar. Some people belonging to the Solangi clan, who had already been opposing the matrimonial alliance, continued to raise their objections during the Nikah on Thursday night but the ceremony concluded without any untoward incident. However, a group of Solangi clansmen carrying arms came to the house of Mohammad Ibrahim and took up with him the matter of his daughter’s marriage. Ibrahim’s other family members and close relatives also joined in.

During the course of an exchange of views, both the sides indulged in heated arguments and finally the visiting clansmen brandished their guns, prompting the other side to counter the attack.

Sources said that the bride, Rabia, 20, and her sister-in-law (brother’s wife), Zohran Solangi, 30, sustained fatal bullet wounds.

Samia Solangi and Darya Khatoon Solangi and an unidentified woman also received gunshot wounds in the shoot-out. The bodies and injured victims were taken to the Ghotki Civil Hospital in Mirpur Mathelo town.

Darya Khatoon and the unidentified woman were admitted to hospital while Samia Solangi was referred to a hospital in Rahimyar Khan due to her precarious condition. Doctors at the Ghotki Civil Hospital said that a bullet had pierced through the throat of Samia.

Sources in the village said that Solangis and Mahars maintained cordial relations and the matrimonial alliance was not also controversial until the date for the Nikah was finalised. They said something went wrong some days before the marriage took place.

Meanwhile, the bodies of Rabia Solangi and Zohra Solangi were handed over to the heirs after a post-mortem examination performed at the Ghotki Civil Hospital. No FIR of the incident was registered till late Friday evening.


Dawn

Waiting for Malala to grow up

By: Abbas Nasir

WHEN the state and the political elite of the country cannot be on the same page even on how best to deal with an existential threat to it, is there a point in debating anything else?

The Taliban and their various franchised terror groups keep attacking at will, killing innocent, unarmed men, women and children. And we cannot respond because there isn’t a ‘consensus’ on how to.

The state of Pakistan continues to resemble a crumbling edifice. Today, it is an assault on an airbase, tomorrow on school-going girls. Then, a girls’ school is blown up, a bus is stopped, with Shia passengers identified, pulled off and executed.

Condemnation follows. Both from you and I. And from those whose responsibility it is to safeguard the life and limb of every citizen. But if we cast our eye over the past so many years we see very little beyond words.

When it appeared the army may have been prepared to somewhat distance itself from its obsessive belief that the jihadi ideology coupled with nuclear weapons and conventional forces offered the most robust defence of the country, the civilian political elite balked at the prospect of a clean-up.

To some action against militancy was an ideological issue so they opposed it, others let anti-Americanism dominate their response while some felt that any such an exercise would jeopardise or at least delay the next general election due in the coming months.

Swat’s Malala Yousufzai was shot and wounded in October. The attempt on the life of a teenager for the crime of wanting to go to school was justified by the Taliban ‘because she represented and promoted western culture/values’. The outrage was spontaneous, widespread but to no avail.

As November was drawing to a close, 12-year old Mehzar Zehra was gravely wounded in an armed attack when she was being driven to school by her father in Karachi. The ostensible reason for this attack was that they were Shias.

And December saw multiple attacks on women in Karachi and Khyber Pakthunkhwa in which a number of them were killed.

What did Naseem Akhtar, Kaneez Fatima, Madeeha, Fehmida and others have in common? They were poorly paid (on a daily wage of Rs250) health workers contracted to visit dozens of homes a day to make sure children received their polio vaccine drops. Given the security environment generally and specific threats to polio workers their work was marked by valour.

Experts say the exercise involves in excess of 80,000 workers with some 33 million children to be vaccinated. Now the fate of the programme is in limbo. Who’d blame the health workers if not a single one ever agreed to step out of their home for the vaccination programme?

Let me declare a personal interest here. I contracted polio when I wasn’t even three. I can walk on my own but have restricted mobility. In the early 1960s the knowledge of the virus and its symptoms was so sketchy that I was ill for a number of weeks before a diagnosis was made.

I was fortunate in having devoted, doting parents (and lovely siblings) who spared neither effort nor whatever little material resources they had to ensure my upbringing in an environment free of complexes, sent me to good schools and supported me hugely in early life.

The best orthosis was always fitted no matter how they had to cut corners elsewhere to be able to pay for it; the best physiotherapy was made available. The list is endless and I could go on about how blessed I was after my initial misfortune.

But that isn’t the point. Even with a middle-class family, its values, resources and an indescribable amount of love behind me, life wasn’t (and isn’t) easy. When you are growing up and all the children around you can run while all you do is watch, imagine the frustration every day.

Although I have always believed I am more ‘normal’ than many able-bodied people, it is also a fact that when you go through most physical activity, and I am not talking competitive sport here, at about a sixth or a tenth of the pace of the rest of the world, you are always playing catch up.

Boy it gets exhausting. Sometimes you just want to stop. That’s me. Imagine the life of a polio victim in a poverty-stricken environment. With physical disability would inevitably follow challenges in earning a livelihood through manual labour. A begging bowl and reliance on others the next step.

Today such dilemmas are easily avoidable but we have created a society where the simplest of issues become the most complicated, with the result that we don’t shy away from putting even our children at risk.

The reader, one is certain, must get fed up when all columnists do is write laments, pen elegies and practically little else. I have often wondered if among the handful of readers who still read the op-ed pages of a newspaper there is growing irritation at the subject matter of columns such as these.

One so wishes to focus on the positive, but also has to reflect reality which keeps getting direr all the time. One can only ignore that at the risk of appearing delusional. Let me sound positive for a change.

A befitting response to the attackers would be for the president, the governors, the prime minister, the chief ministers along with their cabinet members, opposition politicians and the military leaders to go to each attack site and personally administer drops to the children there.

Now wouldn’t that be an uplifting, positive sight? But I suspect it can only be a reality when 15-year-old Malala and others like her grow up and assume leadership roles in Pakistan for that sort of courage and conviction is nowhere in evidence right now.

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