Govt trying to empower women, says Marvi

PESHAWAR: State Minister and Chairperson Benazir Income Support Program Marvi Memon said that the government was taking measure to empower women and eliminate their poverty.

She said this while addressing the closing ceremony of three-day Women Entrepreneur Trade Fair here at Peshawar Services Club on Sunday.

The event was organized by Trade Development Authority of Pakistan with collaboration of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chamber of Commerce and Industry Peshawar.

Marvi Memon said that it was the responsibility of government to facilitate skilful women at their door step, therefore BISP budget have been increased from Rs 40 billion to Rs 105 billion.
She said that interest-free loan would be given to beneficiaries trained by Trade Development Authority of Pakistan.

She said that the BISP was aimed to bring socio-economic uplift in society by imparting vocational and technical skills to enable them for getting employment opportunity.

She added that the government is focused on program to promote sustainable poverty reduction by exploring national and overseas employment potential.

President Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chamber of Commerce and Industry Zulfiqar Ahmad, President Women Chamber of Commerce Nasira Luqmani was also present on the occasion.

At the concluding ceremony Marvi Memon distributed shields and certificates among the skilful women.

The Nation

Know your rights: Decoding the Nikahnama

By Taha Kehar

KARACHI: Couples are mostly unaware of the rights and privileges that are safeguarded under the Nikahnama when they put their names on the dotted line.

This was the premise of an interactive seminar on family laws held at a vocational centre in Yousuf Goth on Sunday. The event, organised by Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Insitute of Science and Technology Legal and Research Clinic in collaboration with Women Workers Association (WWA), focused on marriage laws out of the courtroom and into the mainstream.

A group of lawyers and law students decoded the terms and conditions of the Nikahnama and showed how they could be used to adequately protect the rights of women.

“The purpose of the law is for people to recognise their rights and privileges,” said lawyer Hiba Thobani. “Limited awareness about the law makes us feel exploited and the only way forward is to educate ourselves about these matters.”

Maryam Riaz, a law student, said the Nikahnama marks the foundation of a relationship. “The act of signing the document is often taken for granted,” she said. “We tend to get carried away by the wedding hype and focus our attention on clothes and jewellery. Little is known about what is written in the Nikahnama.”

According to Riaz, various sections of the Nikahnama are removed before the couple gets to see the document. “These sections include a woman’s right to divorce her husband,” she claimed. “This is separate from khula and could help women in vulnerable positions. Other privileges include restricting a man’s right to divorce his wife and the opportunity for spouses to impose conditions on the marriage.”

Riaz insisted this practice indicates the extent to which social pressures dictate marital relationships. “Some parents also tend to lie about their daughters’ ages on the Nikahnama,” she said, adding that these are illegal attempts to validate child marriage.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, Abira Ashfaq, an organiser of the event, said the seminar was merely an initial step toward identifying problems faced by women. “Such events are meaningless without continuity,” she said. “Through these sessions, we hope to identify community organisers who can help spread the word.”

Express Tribune

Violence against women has increased: report

By Aroosa Shaukat

LAHORE: The first ever Gender Parity Report for the province suggests that there has been a 20 per cent increase in cases of violence against women reported every year from 2012 to 2015.

The report compiled jointly by the Punjab Commission on the Status of Women and the Urban Unit is set to be launched on Monday (today). The event will also feature the launch of a cyber-based Gender Management Information System that will provide data on 300 indicators affecting the status of women in society.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, Fauzia Viqar, Punjab Commission on the Status of Women chairperson, said that the report would help improve government policies in view of empirical evidence.

She said data used for the report had been collected from government sources. “The government cannot ignore the findings as these are based on its own data,” she said.

The report states 5, 391 cases of violence against women had been reported in the province in 2012. The number of cases reported in 2015 were 6, 505. It says that in 2015, 173 women were killed in honour-based crimes.

Viqar said the number of reported cases of violence against women was relatively higher in districts with 50 per cent or lower literacy rate. Rahimyar Khan, Sargodha, Multan and Vehari were among these districts. She said the report found an overall decline in the number of convictions in cases of violence against women. There were 81 convictions in 2015, compared to 378 in 2012.

In health sector, the report notes a gradual increase in budgetary allocations over the 2012-2015 from 10 percent to 15 percent.

However, it says that the condition of public health infrastructure had deteriorated in southern districts. It notes a direct correlation between literacy rate in a district and the utilisation of healthcare facilities by women.

In education, a gender parity index (developed in the compilation of the report) recorded the ratio of literate women to literate men at 0.724.

The report notes that adult literacy in the province is at 69 per cent for men and at 50 per cent for women. It says the ratio of literate men to literate women is better in northern districts than southern districts.

The ratio is lowest in Rajanpur, Jhang, Chiniot, Khushab and Dera Ghazi Khan districts.

The report highlights that 34.5 per cent of women in the province can be considered ‘regularly employed with a fixed wage’ and 50 per cent ‘paid by piece rate’. The corresponding statistics for men are 45.7 per cent and 25.5 per cent, respectively.

It states that 46 per cent of women in the labour force receive remuneration falling in the lowest wage bracket (up to Rs5,000). For men, the corresponding statistic is just 7.7 per cent.

In governance, the number of women who contested general elections in 2013 was significantly more than those who contested in 2008. The report notes a 129 per cent and a 200 per cent increase in the number of women who contested elections (from 2008 to 2013) for the National Assembly and the provincial assembly, respectively. On the local government elections held in 2015, the report says that election of women on the reserved seats will enable a critical mass to take up leadership roles at the grassroots level.

Of the 1,830 judges in the lower judiciary, only 266 are women. The ratio is poorer in the Lahore High Court. There are only three women judges on the bench.

Lahore, Faisalabad and Rawalpindi are the three districts that have a woman police station each. There are help desks catering only to women in 660 police stations in the province.

The report says that governing bodies of statutory entities fail to reflect gender parity as representation of women on their boards of directors was only seven per cent.

It says a similar trend is visible in the membership of press clubs.

Express Tribune

Man kills daughter ‘for honour’ in Sindh village

Honour Killing

SUKKUR: A man surrendered himself before the Saddar police in Jacobabad city late on Saturday evening and confessed to have strangled his 21-year-old daughter for honour a day after she attempted suicide on her wedding day.

A resident of Ahmed Mian Soomro village, Nazar Mohammed Soomro told the police that he killed his daughter after coming to know that she was having an extramarital affair with a man, whom he identified as Asghar Mahar. Mahar, according to the suspect, was making threatening calls to him.

The police collected the body of Anwer Khatoon from the suspect’s house and took it to the Jacobabad Civil Hospital for a post-mortem examination and later handed it over to the heirs.

It was learnt that the woman’s wedding was scheduled for Friday but she attempted suicide by taking a heavy dose of pesticide apparently for being forced to marry against her freewill.

ASI Bajar Khoso lodged an FIR against the suspect and his son, Abdul Fatah Soomro, on behalf of the state at the Saddar police station.

Dawn

Swat jirga seeks effective law for women’s protection

Protection of women

MINGORA: Members of Khwendo Jirga (sisters’ council) here on Sunday demanded of the government to make an effective legislation for the protection of women in the country.

The demand was made during a jirga attended by a number of women of different areas in Swat. The jirga showed concern over the violence inflicted on women and claimed that even the courts failed to give them justice.

“If the religious sects are against the Protection of Women against Violence Act passed by the Punjab Assembly then they should suggest suitable laws for the protection of women in the country,” said Tabassum Adnan, chairperson of the council.

She claimed that she had also received some severe cases of violence against women and swara from different areas of Malakand division.

“I have met a girl whose nose was chopped by her husband, another girl whose leg was axed and recently a girl whose ear was cut by her in-laws,” she added.

Ms Tabassum said that they had received reports from different areas that women who were killed in the name of honour were wrongly shown as suicide cases. She said that the jirga accepted the reservations of the Council of Islamic Ideology (CII) regarding the women’s protection law, but appealed to it that they must talk about the women rights granted by Islam.

“Why the CII is silent on the increasing ratio of violence against women in the country,” she asked.

Other members of the jirga said that the government was not taking notice of the increasing violations of women rights in the country. They said that if a woman asked for share in the property her father or brothers became her enemy.

When contacted, MPA Nadia Sher Khan said that the provincial government was not overlooking the issues concerning women.

“Our government is regularly monitoring the women rights violations and follows them wherever such cases occur,” she said and asked women to immediately report to police if they come across such cases.

MNA Ayesha Syed said that women protection laws should be devised keeping in view the international and Islamic laws besides the cultural and religious values.

Dawn