One million children in school under BISP’s initiative

BY: BAKHTAWAR MIAN

ISLAMABAD: The Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) claims to have achieved their target of enrolling one million children of the programme’s beneficiaries in schools under the Waseela-i-Taleem initiative.

The social safety net also announced that the official celebration for this achievement will be launched by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Finance Minister Ishaq Dar early next year.

BISP’s chairperson MNA Marvi Memon visited on Tuesday some schools where children of the social welfare organisation have been enrolled.

The programme is a four-year Co-responsibility Cash Transfer (CCT) project which was initiated to financially support primary education of five to12-year-old children from BISP beneficiary families. Each child receives a cash transfer of Rs 750 per quarter on meeting the admission verification in the first quarter and attendance requirement of 70 per cent in subsequent quarters till completion of primary education, said a statement issued by BISP.

The design of the programme was developed by BISP in consultation with World Bank, Department for International Development (DfID) and provincial education departments.

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‘Give safe environment to working women’

ISLAMABAD: On the eve of Working Women’s Day, the Senate unanimously passed a resolution urging the government to undertake initiatives to provide a safe, secure, healthy, and harassment free environment for working women.

It said that women and men are equal partners and should have the same rights, responsibilities and working opportunities.

The draft of the resolution was tabled by Senator Sitara Ayaz from the Awami National Party (ANP). It stated that the house appreciates the endeavours of working women, who are contributing to the betterment of Pakistan’s socio-economic life, and shows solidarity with them. The resolution also commended the performance of women in parliament and as parliamentary secretaries.

It said that women should be encouraged to participate in economic activities for the betterment of their household as well as the national economy.

The house criticised unequal pay for women in certain sectors, and condemned horizontal and vertical segregation.

The resolution called on the government to implement proactive policies to encourage women to embrace careers.

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Assault in Hyderabad: Journalists protest for colleague

freedom of Expression

KARACHI: Journalists covering the assembly session on Tuesday protested against the Hyderabad police for not taking action against culprits who tortured a female journalist in Hyderabad. Shouting slogans against SSP Ifran Baloch, journalists demanded to register an FIR and initiate an impartial inquiry into the incident.

“Even after five days, a case has not been registered,” a journalist complained to home minister Sohail Siyal who reached the press gallery to hear reporters’ grievances. Protests were also held across Sindh after Hyderabad-based journalist Ume Alisha was tortured by unidentified men who barged into her house and physically assaulted her.

The home minister, flanked by other cabinet members, assured journalists of providing justice and issued directives to the SSP to register a case immediately. “We will initiate an impartial inquiry,” Siyal said.

Express Tribune

Working Women’s Day: ‘More women have jobs but low wages persist’

LAHORE: Speakers at a conference held to mark the National Working Women’s Day on Tuesday noted that women’s contribution to the country’s economy was no longer limited to a few sectors.

They said large numbers of women were now entering professions long considered suitable for men only. These included the armed forces, the police and the media, they said.

The speakers said women outnumbered men in home-based and informal sector work, including labor-intensive jobs like cultivation and livestock management.

Alongside the expansion in working opportunities for women, there had been no improvement in the disparity between wages paid to women and men for same work, they lamented. They said there were instances where for the same job women were paid less than half the wages men got.

They said other important issues faced by working women were gender-based discrimination and sexual harassment.

Provicnial Ombudsperson Farkhanda Wasim Afzal said her office was working with employers to ensure safe working environment for women. She urged women in the audience to not shy away from bringing genuine complaints to her office. She said the complainants should get in touch with her if prompt action was not taken by her staff on their complaints. The ombudsperson said the use of the term housewife should be discouraged. Women who stayed at home should be identified as home makers, she said. She said there could be no development of the society without women’s contribution.

Aurat Foundation resident director Mumtaz Mughal stressed the need for increasing women’s representation in public decision-making forums. She said lack of adequate public transport facilities was keeping women from benefiting from working opportunities.

Women In Struggle for Empowerment (WISE) executive director Bushra Khaliq highlighted the lack of enforcement of pro-women policies. She said poor budgetary allocations for issues that concerned women showed that the government lacked political will to enforce these policies. She said there was a need to push the government to increase budgetary allocations for its pro-women programmes.

Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf MPA Sadia Sohail said women were good at management of finances and maintaining public relations and in parliamentary politics. She said efforts to bring down corruption in the society could not be successful without women’s participation.

The conference was organised jointly by the Ombudsperson’s office, the WISE, the AWAZ Accountability Programme at the auditorium of the Lahore of Commerce and Industry (LCCI).

Other speakers were Lubna Mansoor from the Ministry of Human Rights, Ruqiaya Bano of the Rescue 1122, Syeda Ghulam Fatima of the Bonded Labour Liberation Front, Salman Abid of the Strengthening Participatory Organisation, journalist Fakhara Tehreem and Operations SP Ammara Athar.

Express Tribune

Malala meets ‘Syrian Malala’ in UK

NEWCASTLE TYNE: The picture shows Nobel Laureate Malala Yousafzai welcoming her friend Syrian fellow schoolgirl activist Muzoon Almellehan to her new home in rainy northern England on Tuesday, nearly two years after they had met in a dust-blown refugee camp in Jordan. Reuniting at a gleaming public library in the northeast English city of Newcastle, 18-year-old Malala and Muzoon, 17, pledged to campaign together for access to education for Syrian refugee children.

The setting was a far cry from the sprawling lines of tents comprising the Zaatari camp for Syrian refugees in the Jordanian desert, where the two had first met in early 2014. Malala now lives in England’s second city and Muzoon, called Syrian Malala, is among the first Syrians from refugee camps in the Middle East to have come to Britain.

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