‘Honour’ crime: Woman killed by brothers, dumped in canal

FAISALABAD: A woman was strangled to death cut up by her brothers after an argument in Sahianwala area on Wednesday.

Police spokesperson Muhammad Ramazan told The Express Tribune on Wednesday that Rahma*, a resident of Chak 10-JB, accused her of having an affair with a neighbor.

He said they told her to give up her relations with the man and “mend her ways.”

The spokesperson said when she argued with them, Ghulam Abbas, Muhammad Sajid and Muhammad Abid strangled her and cut her body with an axe.

He said the men then threw her body in a canal.

He said a few hours later, Abbas went to Chiniot Saddar police station and confessed to killing his sister and throwing her body into a canal.

He said after recording his statement, the police team alerted Sahianwala police.

He said a team from the police station recovered the body from the canal.

The spokesperson said Sahianwala police had dispatched the body to a mortuary for post mortem examination. He said a team had been formed to arrest Sajid and Abid.

*NAMES HAVE BEEN CHANGED TO PROTECT IDENTITIES

Express Tribune

Malala fund to finance education of AJK children

MUZAFFARABAD: The international fund established by Malala Yousafzai for raising girls’ literacy has decided to finance education expenses of poor children in Azad Kashmir as well.

Viki Jonson, the director of the Unesco Malala Fund, along with representatives Zaffar Hayyat Malak and Waqar Shams called on Azad Kashmir’s Education Secretary (Schools) Raja Muhammad Abbas to inform him about the decision.

Jonson told Abbas that the Malala fund would bear expenses of all reading material (books and notebooks) of deserving children besides providing each student from the backward areas a monthly stipend of Rs500.

Raja Abbas expressed the hope that the initiative would prove to be a milestone in raising girls’ literacy in the area.

He also assured the delegation of his full cooperation.

Dawn

High-handedness: SHC CJ takes notice of ‘illegal’ detention of woman by police

KARACHI: Sindh High Court (SHC) Chief Justice Faisal Arab has taken notice of the unlawful detention of a woman and her minor child by Khairpur police from a house in Karachi.

The notice was taken on an application submitted by a junior clerk of the SHC, Zainul Abideen Shaikh, seeking recovery of his sister and her three-year-old child from the illegal custody of the Gambat police.

The applicant alleged that the police, at the behest of Gambat police DSP, Gul Hasan Jatoi, had raided his sister’s house and taken her away along with her minor child. Police were asked to release the detainees but they refused to do so, he stated.

CJ Faisal Arab was requested to order the police authorities to release the detainees, who were being kept in illegal confinement. Taking notice on the application, the SHC CJ sought a report from the Karachi Additional IG, Malir SSP, Khairpur SSP and Gambat DSP on Tuesday.

On Wednesday, the Karachi AIG submitted his report through the Legal AIG. The report said that the SSPs of Malir and Khairpur had been directed to produce the detained woman and her minor child. He assured that all efforts will be made to arrest the culprits.

Khairpur SSP told the court that the Gambat DSP and his team had travelled to Karachi and raided the house to arrest an absconding accused, who is the husband of the detained woman.

He said the police had raided the house of the absconder whose brother, Abdul Baqi, had given information regarding his whereabouts. On the lead, police raided a house but the accused escaped, said the officer.

Converting the application into a constitutional petition, CJ Faisal Arab directed his office to fix the same before the bench headed by him [chief justice] for further proceedings.

Express Tribune

Skewed feminism

By Zehra Husain

In a society where women are constant objects of ridicule and shame, it is hypocritical when a woman in the efforts to express her individuality does it in a language impregnated with the most blatant form of internalised sexism. This condescending habit is most common amongst the urban middle class where the female domestic help would be constantly blamed and shamed for their place in society. “Inn mein jahalat toh itni hai”, for instance, is a phrase used most often to describe the plight of working class women, which more often than not arises from abject poverty which we (the privileged, upper middle, English-speaking class) are complicit in upholding, perpetuating and maintaining.

It, therefore, comes as no surprise that Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chief, Imran Khan’s wife, Reham Khan, in an interview with India Todayalienates women who do not share her position of privilege in society. When asked about the place of women in society, Reham Khan says: “I don’t think that I’m a woman; I am an individual, and it doesn’t limit me from doing anything.” In this assertion, firstly, Reham Khan seems to be saying that she is not imprisoned by her gender identity. As if it is our womanhood that limits us. A woman in a patriarchal society such as Pakistan’s is limited by just that — patriarchy. In a country where a jirga or village elders can bar women from voting, it is not the woman who is limiting herself by not exercising her right to vote but the masculinist authorities around her.

In Pakistan, despite a woman’s willingness to work, she often fails to do so because of the many obstacles in her way. These hurdles comprise pressures from their families or marriage. Women in our society areperceived solely as child-bearers or are only deemed fit for housework which keeps them from stepping out and taking up jobs. It is no wonder that Pakistan’s female labour force participation stands at a dismal 24.4 per cent for the year 2014. Should we not dig deeper into this statistic? Does it not point to the patriarchal structures in our society that continually disenfranchise women, where only a small fraction of women are allowed to work? Or are we still going to give weight to Reham Khan’s statement and believe that it is indeed our gender identity that is holding us back?

In her proclamation of seeing herself as an individual and not a woman, Reham Khan assumes gender blindness. Such an assumption is often invoked in an attempt to look beyond differences between the male and female sex. It also eliminates differences in power and privilege. “First change your perception that you’re inferior in some way. I don’t think that I’m a woman; I am an individual.” As said before, perceptions of inferiority are embedded in our society. Though according to Reham, if women stop thinking of themselves as inferior, the problem will be erased. Moreover, if women start thinking of themselves as individuals and not as women, then we will not be limited in any way. The assumption of inferiority and the erasure of gender both pose women as the problem. The erasure of structural oppression and the emphasis on individuality, when you talk about the place of women in society, as Reham Khan does, leads to the fostering of a victim-blaming culture.

It is precisely this kind of gender blindness, pervasive in the liberal middle class, which leads to all forms of internalised sexism. In Reham Khan’s words: “I really think women need to stop complaining. I’m very unsympathetic to whiners. Stop making excuses for yourself.” Here Reham Khan plays up on all forms of gendered stereotyping: women complain too much, women whine too much, women make too many excuses. When a woman speaks out, she is almost always judged for, to borrow the words of Audre Lorde, “creating the mood for helplessness”. She stands in the way of making things better for herself. Here, she is being blamed for the problems she speaks of, as if she creates the problems. As if she is the problem. In a similar vein, the woman labeled the ‘whiner’ is often shamed for the position she occupies in society. This is telling, as I have mentioned before, in the patronising manner with which middle class women talk about domestic help.

Women in Pakistan are not a monolith. Not every woman occupies the same class position. In fact, the oppression women face in our society intersects class, ethnicity, religion, sect and sexuality. For example, a Christian woman, hailing from south Punjab may face oppression differently from a Muslim woman. Similarly, trans-women are treated differently from cisgender women. Reham Khan, undoubtedly, occupies a position of privilege in society and holds a lot of power to influence public opinion. One needs to be aware of their own complicity in keeping oppressive structures in place. Lack of introspection will only lead to a culture of victim-blaming and the circulation of misogynistic views in the public sphere. Misogyny, classism and other forms of oppression that keep women marginalised can be challenged if there is self-awareness and self-reflection of one’s own privilege. If this is missing, then what remains is a self-righteous blaming and shaming of women.

Express Tribune