‘Burka Avenger’ wins US award

NEW YORK: Burka Avenger, a Pakistani animated series about female empowerment, was among the international programmes honoured on Wednesday at the annual Peabody Awards, the oldest and one of the top honours in broadcasting.

Other winners were Danish political drama “Borgen” and a Philippine television network’s coverage of November’s Typhoon Haiyan that killed more than 6,000 people.

The Peabody Awards recognise the best in television, radio, internet broadcasting, producing organisations and individuals. A record 46 awards were handed out this year.

The winners will be honoured at a ceremony in New York on May 19.

Netflix political thriller “House of Cards” and jail house comedy-drama “Orange Is the New Black”, along with a trio of HBO documentaries, headlined the American winners.

Public broadcaster PBS won 12 awards, including one for “League of Denial: The NFL’s Concussion Crisis” about football’s long-term health risks and “Broadway Musicals: A Jewish Legacy”, which examined the Jewish roots of American musical theatre.

“House of Cards”, which was the first online-streaming show to win an Emmy award, was praised for Netflix’s unique approach of releasing all the season’s episodes at once.

“Netflix took binge viewing to a new level and obliterated the idea that a hit TV show needs a slot in prime time,” the Peabody panel said.

Netflix’s “Orange Is the New Black”, about a bisexual woman reunited with her ex-lover in prison, was lauded for its “complex, riveting character study rich in insights about femininity, race, power, and the politics, inside and outside prison walls, of mass incarceration”.

DAWN

Deputy speaker reiterates Sindh’s demand to scrap CII

By: Azeem Samar

Karachi: After unanimously adopting the resolution against the “anti-women” recommendations of the Council of Islamic Ideology (CII), the Sindh Assembly has suggested the federal government to do away with the council and has made the move in that direction keeping in view all the constitutional aspects of the issue.

This was stated by Sindh Assembly Deputy Speaker Shehla Raza on Thursday. She defended the move of the provincial legislature, where the lawmakers from all the political parties had unanimously adopted the resolution.

Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl chief Maulana Fazl-ur-Rehman has taken exception to the March 31 resolution of the Sindh Assembly, which reacted against the recommendations of the CII on the issues of minimum marriageable age for girls, mandatory DNA testing for investigation into rape cases and taking the wife’s consent for contracting a second marriage.

Rehman was quoted as saying that the provincial legislature should be dissolved over adopting the resolution against the recommendations of the CII, which had strived for the imposition of Islamic and Shariah laws in the country.

Shehla Raza said the resolution, which had been moved in the assembly by a woman lawmaker of the Pakistan Muslim League-Functional, had secured the overwhelming support of all the political parties having representation in the house; therefore, the Pakistan People’s Party alone should not bear the brunt for the passage of the resolution.

She said the lawmakers had unanimously decided to recommend the federal government to do away with the CII, as the women of the country had great expectations from the constitutional advisory forum.

The deputy speaker said the resolution was not passed on a whim, as for the past several decades the women of the country had been constantly denied their due constitutional rights by several state institutions.

In such a situation, those striving for women’s rights had great expectations from the CII, but after the council’s recent recommendations, the forum has also denied the marital and other socio-economic rights of the women, she added.

Shehla said long-pending issues like lawfully disallowing marriages of underage girls needed to be resolved, but the scholars associated with the CII had failed the women by putting forward their “anti-women” recommendations.

She said that it was high time that the CII be completely reshuffled, as the members of the council should comprise scholars with thorough knowledge of the religion and they should also apply scientific and pragmatic ways of thinking, which would help in resolving the long-standing problems of the women.

The deputy speaker said that it seemed that the CII currently consisted of people who had been politically inducted into the body, adding that they could apparently not handle women’s issues with the desired method of thinking.

The News

The missing woman

The CII is currently centre stage after its verdict on issues regarding second marriage and child marriages. The CII is a constitutional body that advises the legislature whether or not a certain law is repugnant to Islam. But as per the constitution the CII must include minimum eight and maximum 20 members including the chairman wherein one seat is reserved for women. It is strange that after the death of Dr Farida Ahmad Siddiqui last year that seat is still vacant. The CII, though, while ignoring the women’s representation problem in the council has continued to give verdicts on women-related issues.

Riaz Daavi Advocate
Mardan

The News

Rape victim attempts to end life

LAHORE: A raped woman on Thursday attempted to end her life outside the Punjab Assembly in protest against police for their dillydallying to arrest rapists.

Shahdara resident, Asifa doused herself in patrol, when on duty cops leapt to rescue her. She was brought to hospital, where she told the media that Shahdara police had not been heeding to heal her wounds. And Shahdara police say the crime took place in Factory area police precincts.

Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has taken notice and sought a report from Punjab Inspector General Police. The chief minister directed that the culprits involved in kidnapping and molestation of the girl be immediately arrested and the injured girl be provided best treatment facilities in the hospital.

The Nation