Up close and political: Women are the future, says Kanwal Noman

Up close and political: Women are the future, says Kanwal Noman

By: Sher Khan

LAHORE: “If I just wanted to relax and sit on the sidelines, I wouldn’t have joined politics,” says Kanwal Noman confidently.

And confident she has a right to be. As a former actress, and now an MPA for the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), she is used to basking in the spotlight.

However, the spotlight is not at all why she joined politics almost six years ago; she wanted to, and still wants to, make an impact on a broader level.

Her unwavering voice, strong beliefs and evident determination speak louder than her words.

It’s a man’s world

Noman is unequivocal about the importance of working for greater women’s rights. She was provided a ticket on reserved seat and stresses how difficult it is for independent women to run unless they are from big families or have powerful backing.

“Men are very intelligent beings, they are able to judge a woman instantaneously,” she claims. “I have always been a bold woman. Whether in showbiz or politics, I have never allowed anyone to bother me.”
She expresses disappointment over the failed implementation of the laws protecting the rights of women, especially working women, during the previous tenure.

“Women work more than men. They not only have to work outside the house, but they also have to come home and take care of the families,” she explains. “Laws must be implemented so that no person can harass or bother any woman. If someone does, there should be a safe place, and concrete processes at work, for women to complain and get justice.”

In this vein, Noman highlights the significance to address the question of violence against women, such as victims of acid attacks and karo kari, and to also liberate those who spend their entire lives working in brick kilns to pay off unending loans.

“These women work day and night, but have no security and no rights. We have to liberate them from this insecurity,” she says determinedly.

Change in the offing

Despite the skewed workings of a deeply patriarchal society, Noman is certain that things are changing, especially within political parties that traditionally did not cater to women wanting to run in the elections. Now, according to her, PML-N is planning to award tickets to women to contest in the next tenure.

“In the next elections, those women who want to run and have done work in their fields will be given tickets,” she says. “The idea is to give party support to competent women who are not financially or familialy strong.”

Although Noman acknowledges that it is a male-dominated society, she asks rhetorically which field, which sector does not boast of a strong female presence.

“They [the women] have made it this far,” she states. “Our goal is to make their presence stronger.”
Meant to be

For Noman, this move into politics isn’t a simple fluke, as it may seem at first glance.
She was a television actress at a time when Pakistani dramas were in a league of their own. According to her, she chose the medium because dramas provided a social commentary, and were rooted in deep issues prevalent across the country.

Her approach to both acting and politics has been uncompromising, built on hard work. She is not afraid of getting her hands dirty, and aspires to help others above all else.
“People thought I would just join the culture wing and go home,” she says, with a slight smile. “But I joined the women’s wing. Culture is a part of me, and I will always fight for it, but want to do something for the masses.”

Express Tribune

Protest demonstration: Frustrated with the police, women take to the streets

Protest demonstration: Frustrated with the police, women take to the streets

FAISALABAD: Dozens of people from Chak 235-RB on Sunday staged a protest demonstration against the police for releasing several men accused of rape.

The protestors, mostly women, staged a sit-in in front of the district government secretariat and chanted slogans against Saddar DSP Khalid Bashir.

The protestors also blocked the Zila Council Chowk causing a traffic jam.

Abida Bibi, one of the protestors, said, “Sadi Ahmad, Muhammad Rauf, Imdad Hussain, Javaid Akhtar, Haq Nawaz, Mazhar Ali abducted three sisters and raped them.”

She said, “We filed a complaint against the men. However, the DSP declared them innocent. He was paid a lot of money by these men.”

“The men are not only roaming free but also threatening us with dire consequences unless we withdrew our complaint,” she said.

The protestors demanded immediate arrest of the men and action against the DSP.

Later, a police team headed by Rail Bazaar SHO Muhammad Asif met the protestors. They were assured that the case would be investigated thoroughly and the culprits would be arrested in accordance with law.

The demonstrators then called off their protest and dispersed peacefully.

Talking to The Express Tribune, SHO Syed Sibtain Hussain said the case was found baseless by the DSP and hence not pursued by the investigation officers.

In another protest, two dozen people of Model Town staged a demonstration against the police for the recovery of two abducted girls.

Najma Bibi, resident of Chak 222-RB, said Afzal Butt, Umar Butt and Shehzad Jara had abducted her two daughters.

She said she had lodged a complaint at Gulberg police station but so far, the police had not recovered the girls.

“Some police officials have asked me for bribes but I cannot afford to pay them,” she said.

The protestors chanted slogans demanding safe recovery of the girls and immediate arrest of the kidnappers immediately.

The demonstrators also staged a sit-in at Zila Council Chowk.

A police team assured the protestors of speedy justice.

On this assurance, the demonstrators called off their protest and dispersed peacefully.

Talking to The Express Tribune, Gulberg SHO Omer Hayat said, “The police have raided various localities for the recovery of the children but no arrests were made.”

He said three localities were identified by the complainant. He said arrests were expected in the next 72 hours.

Express Tribune

‘Honour’ crime: Man thrown acid at ‘by in-laws’

‘Honour’ crime: Man thrown acid at ‘by in-laws’

By: Owais Jafri

MULTAN: A 24-year-old man in Jatoi, Muzaffargarh, was thrown acid at on Sunday allegedly by his in-laws for not making up with his wife, who had left his house following a quarrel.

The injured was taken to Nishtar Hospital, where doctors treating him said that his condition was critical.

Baitmeera Hazaar police have registered a case against the victim’s wife, mother-in-law and their three relatives nominated by the victim’s father, Hazoor Bakhsh. No one has been arrested.

Police said Muhammad Liaqat, a resident of Baitmeera Hazaar, had married Sumaira Bibi a year ago.

Two weeks ago, they quarrelled and she left home and returned to her parents’ house. Police said some neighbours said that she and her mother-in-law did not get along well.

Police said Sumaria Bibi’s parents had demanded that Liaqat and his parents visit their house and apologise for “insulting their daughter”. Liaqat and his parents had refused to do so.

Liaqat’s brother, Muhammad Jafar, said on Sunday, his mother-in-law Fatima Bibi and three men entered their house and beat Liaqat up. They later threw a jug full of acid at him.

Jafar said he heard his brother scream for help. He said he saw the assailants flee as he entered Liaqat’s room.

Liaqat was taken to the hospital, where he was reported to be in critical condition. Doctors treating him said that he had 60 per cent burns.

Jafar claimed that some of Sumaira Bibi’s relatives had earlier made threatening calls to them “for throwing her out of the house”.

He said Liaqat had visited her parents’ house to bring her back, but they had told him to leave and that he should bring his parents along.

Police said they were investigating.

Express Tribune

Gender equality, still a farfetched dream for women

Gender equality, still a farfetched dream for women

By: Fawad Hasan

KARACHI: When a nineteenth century philosopher observed that it was impossible to bring about any social change without the ‘feminine upheaval’, he left a point for the readers to ponder on and extract great lessons for generations to come. To right the wrongs of a society, the most disturbed, victimised segment will have to spearhead the movement of ‘social justice’ and ‘equality’. The country we live in is an abode of violence and suppression against women; hence, to change the current deplorable situation, the oppressed gender has to ‘raise’ the flag of freedom high.

According to a research conducted by the Aurat Foundation, an NGO working for the advocacy of women’s rights, in 2011 some 8,539 cases were reported under ‘violence against women’ charges. With a sharp increase of 7 percent during January and June 2012 alone, 4,585 cases were registered. Not to mention here that if our society encouraged women to file the cases having been assaulted or attacked, the number of registered incidents would have soared to a frightening number.

We as a nation have failed to neutralise ‘male chauvinism’, something our society is awash with. There is more to talk and write about the menace our women have to survive through. It is not only physical violence that women become victim to, but a ‘deep-rooted’ mentality of the stronger sex too inflicts non-physical violence against women. It is more excruciating, but regrettably, never makes to the headlines.

One of the largest educational institutes of Pakistan, University of Karachi, has around 60 departments falling under 8 faculties. KU literally is a ‘city within a city’, an academy currently educating 25,000 students, out of which more than 60 percent are females. But shockingly, the number of female students ‘shrinks’ as soon as the 3rd year of any programme begins and the marriage season kicks off. The degrees are then awarded and very few of these ‘social-principle-breakers’ struggle to get employment.

The trend stems from the morals, principles and man-made limitations that do not want women to participate in the overall progress of the society. The ‘progress’ is hampered deliberately lest the woman becomes equal to man whose superiority is holy and has been promised by god.

“I know I am wasting my time studying here. It is of no use since my cruel parents for whom I am a burden will marry me as soon as I graduate to a man who will then follow the legacy and will enslave me the way my parents did,” said a female student of Karachi University, a victim of non-physical violence.

“At least I tried, although futilely, to access freedom by getting into a prestigious department of my varsity,” she adds woefully.

Regrettably, professionals as learnt and valuable as doctors are prone to this sick, detrimental mentality. A mother of a 2nd year MBBS student shared her views with the Daily Times, and said that now her daughter will get an impressive ‘rishta’ (marriage proposal) as families keep on searching for doctors to get their sons married to. Recently, this norm of getting a doctor ‘bahu’ (daughter-in-law) to make her work like a maid got its share of criticism on legion of social media sites moderated by Pakistani feminists.

An indeed favourable sign is the emergence of exemplary women who advocate women’s rights and freedom. One of them is Mahnaz Rahman, Resident Director Aurat Publication and Information Service Foundation, who till date struggles for the just cause. “Our society is bifurcated into classes and among these classes, the most oppressed is woman. The current circumstance has not come out of the blue; instead, it has historical happenings resulting in suppression of women,” says Rahman.

She said it was the conditioning of thousands of years that has lead to gender inequality to which ‘patriarchal’ structure was to be blamed. Talking of marriage as an institution, which supposedly paves way for women oppression, she asserted that before getting into the social contract, the would-be-spouses should visit counsellors and understand the requirements of a new life ahead. “In this way, the man will comprehend the position of her wife-to-be, and will reckon her equal. On the other hand, they will also get aware of the responsibilities that come with marriage.”

When asked if she still had hopes of seeing things changing for the woman, she said, “Our society is replete with contradictions. There is a girl who gets killed on the pretext of honour when she tries to elope with her lover, and then we have women like Sheema Kirmani, the legendary classical dancer and theatre-performer, who never fears going against the tides. I believe the conditions will certainly change.”

In the words of Rahman, freedom for a woman is ‘independence in making her own decisions, choosing her education, and her participation in politics and state-affairs’.

Syeda Elia, a resident clinical psychologist at the Institute of Clinical Psychology, told Daily Times the reasons behind violence against women. “Violence is nothing but a manifestation of power that the perpetrator likes to establish over the victim. Emotional or physical abuse never develops overnight; there are always telltale signs, a gradual buildup before it becomes evident. A slap here, a public insult there, are usually not addressed, which later turn into full-blown acts of violence,” she said.

A renowned historian of our times, Dr Mubarak Ali, has compiled the history of women oppression in his book ‘Tareekh aur Aurat’ (Woman and History) that introduces its readers to hundreds of years of indoctrination, producing male-dominated morality and violence that follows. Ali has cited several ideologues advocating women suppression: Imam Ghazali, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, and Mowlvi Ashraf Ali Thanvi being few of them.

In his book ‘Ahiya Uloom-ud-Deen’, Ghazali writes, “Marrying for a woman means becoming enslaved; therefore, a wife should appear as a slave to her husband. It is incumbent upon her to remain confined to her husband’s house never leaving for the outside world neither is to be seen by any stranger who can get attracted to her. She is not to answer her husband at any cost and should get adorned only and solely for him.”

At a crucial juncture of sub-continent history when education was being debated as necessary, Syed Ahmed Khan categorically asserted that, “I don’t want you (women of the then Hindustan) to read anything apart from the revealed truth which your mothers have been reading for hundreds of years. The contemporary books penetrating our sacred traditions must be shunned from by you.” Dr Ali has done justice in tracing out the roots of the notion on women oppression’s notion.

We live in society, which has not extricated itself from physical violence against women, let alone the non-physical violence that hampers the progress of women by obfuscating, lying about, and confounding the idea of ‘gender equality’. To the misery of the victims, much is discussed neither in social circles nor in the media to put an end to this sheer injustice.

“Our society is bifurcated into classes and among these classes, the most oppressed is woman. The current circumstance has not come out of the blue; instead, it has historical happenings resulting in suppression of women”

Mahnaz Rahman, Aurat Foundation Resident Director

“Violence is nothing but a manifestation of power that the perpetrator likes to establish over the victim. Emotional or physical abuse never develops overnight; a slap here, a public insult there, are usually not addressed, which later turn into full-blown acts of violence”

Syeda Elia, clinical psychologist

Daily Times

Pakistani women use jirga to fight for rights

Pakistani women use jirga to fight for rights

By: Orla Guerin

Women in Pakistan’s Swat valley are making history, and perhaps some powerful enemies, by convening an all-female jirga, a forum for resolving disputes usually reserved for men. Some readers may find details of this report by the BBC’s Orla Guerin disturbing.

Tahira was denied justice in life, but she continues to plead for it in death – thanks to a grainy recording on a mobile phone.

As she lay dying last year the young Pakistan wife and mother made a statement for use in court.

In the shaky amateur video, she named her tormentors, and said they should burn like she did.

A young girl in a headscarf

Tahira’s flesh was singed on 35% of her body, following a suspected acid attack. Her speech was laboured and her voice was hoarse, but she was determined to give her account of the attack, even as her flesh was falling off her bones.

“I told her you must speak up and tell us what happened,” her mother Jan Bano said, dabbed her tears with her white headscarf. “And she was talking until her last breath.”

Tahira’s husband, mother-in-law, and father-in-law were acquitted this month of attacking her with acid. Her mother plans to appeal against that verdict, with help from a new ally – Pakistan’s first female jirga.

Under the traditional – and controversial – jirga system, elders gather to settle disputes. Until now this parallel justice system has been men-only, and rulings have often discriminated against women. The new all-women jirga, which has about 25 members, aims to deliver its own brand of justice.

It has been established in an unlikely setting – the scenic but conservative Swat valley, formerly under the control of the Pakistan Taliban. We sat in on one of its sessions in a sparsely furnished front room. Women crowded in, sitting in a circle on the floor, many with children at their feet. Most wore headscarves, and a few were concealed in burqas.

Probing injustice
For more than an hour they discussed a land dispute, problems with the water supply, unpaid salaries, and murder. The only man in the room was a local lawyer, Suhail Sultan. He was giving legal advice to jirga members including Jan Bano who he represents.

“In your case the police is the bad guy,” he told her. “They are the biggest enemy. ” He claims the police were bribed by the accused, and were reluctant to investigate the case properly.

A woman in a burqa sitting down
The jirga tackled land disputes, water supplies, and murder
The jirga is making history, and perhaps making enemies. In Swat, as in many parts of Pakistan, men make the key decisions – like whether or not their daughters go to school, when they marry, and who they marry. And oppression starts early. Tahira was married off at just 12 years old, to a middle-aged man.

“Our society is a male-dominated society, and our men treat our women like slaves,” said the jirga founder, Tabassum Adnan. “They don’t give them their rights and they consider them their property. Our society doesn’t think we have the right to live our own lives.”

This chatty social activist, and mother of four, knows that challenging culture and tradition comes with risks. “Maybe I could be killed,” she said, “anything could happen. But I have to fight. I am not going to stop.”

As we spoke in a sun-baked courtyard Tabassum got a disturbing phone call. “I have just been told that the body of another girl has been found, ” she said. ” Her husband shot her.” She plans to investigate the case, and push the authorities to act.

“Before my jirga women have always been ignored by the police and by justice, but not now. My jirga has done a lot for women,” she said.

There was agreement from Taj Mehal, a bereaved mother with a careworn face, sitting across the courtyard on a woven bed.

Her beloved daughter Nurina was tortured to death in May.

“They broke her arm in three places, and they strangled her,” she told me, putting her hands to her own throat to mimic the action. “They broke her collarbone. They glued her mouth and eyes closed. Just her face was left, the rest was flesh and broken bones.”

She speaks of her daughter’s suffering with a steady voice, but grief is wrapped around her, like a heavy shawl.

“When I looked at her, it was like a piece was pulled out of my heart,” she said. “I was turned to stone. I see her face in front of my eyes. I miss her laughter.”

Nurina’s husband, and his parents, have now been charged with her murder, but her mother says that initially the courts took no interest.

“Whenever we brought applications to the judge he would tear them up and throw them away,” she said. “Now our voice is being heard, because of the jirga. Now we will get justice. Before the jirga husbands could do whatever they wanted to their wives.”

Women are little seen or heard on the bustling streets of Mingora, the biggest city in Swat. Rickshaw taxis dart past small shops selling medicines, and hardware supplies.

There are stalls weighed down with mangoes, and vendors dropping dough into boiling oil to make sugar-laden treats. Most of the shoppers are men.

‘No justice’ at jirgas
When we asked some of the local men their views on the women’s jirga, the results were surprising. Most backed the women.

“It’s a very good thing,” said one fruit seller, “women should know about their rights like men do, and they should be given their rights.”

Another said: “The jirga is good because now finally women have someone to champion their cause.”

The response from the local male jirga was less surprising. They were dismissive, saying the women have no power to enforce their decisions.

That view was echoed by the prominent Pakistani human rights activist Tahira Abdullah. “I don’t see it as more than a gimmick,” she said. “Who is going to listen to these women? The men with the Kalashnikovs? The Taliban who are anti-women? The patriarchal culture that we have?”

Ms Abdullah wants jirgas stopped whether male or female. “The jirga system is totally illegal, and has been declared illegal by the Supreme Court of Pakistan. It can never be just. There are several extremely notorious cases where we have noticed that women do not get justice from jirgas, neither do non-Muslims.”

One of those cases took place last year in a remote region of northern Pakistan where a jirga allegedly ordered the killing of five women – and two men – for defying local customs by singing and dancing together at a wedding.

And there are regular reports of jirgas decreeing that women and young girls be handed over from one family to another to settle disputes.

But for some, like Jan Bano, the women’s jirga is bringing hope. Every day she climbs a steep hill to visit Tahira’s grave, and pray for the daughter whose voice has still not her heard. Her video recording was not played in court.

BBC News