Woman raped by cop, accomplice

LAHORE: A woman was raped by a cop and his accomplice in Harbanspura police area. The police arrested accused Qadir Hussain and Iftikhar. A case was registered against them on the complaint of the victim. The victim said the accused had called her at their place on the pretense of giving her a job, but she was raped there. The accused were handed over to the Gender Cell for further investigation.

Burnt body of abducted boy found: Body of an eight-year-old boy kidnapped from Islampura area was recovered from Ferozewala on Sunday. Police arrested accused Zeeshan who confessed to kidnapping the boy and burning him to death after a bitter argument with victim Ahad’s father. The boy’s grandfather said accused Zeeshan lived in his property on rent of Rs5,000 per month. He got infuriated on being asked to clear two-month rent. Police said the accused killed Ahad and set him on fire. The accused said he had abducted the child to take revenge from his father. Police said the accused was a fake Pir.

Duo arrested for blackmailing woman: Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Sunday arrested two persons over the charges of blackmailing a woman through sharing her pictures on social media.

The agency has arrested accused including Wahid Ali and Inzmam ul Haq and seized a mobile phone carrying the blackmailing content. A case has been registered against the accused under PECA Act.

Youth kidnapped: A 16-year-old youth was kidnapped in the limits of Manawan police. Manawan police registered a case of kidnapping on the complaint of the victim Irfan’s father. The CCTV footage of the kidnappers was released. According to the CCTV footage, the kidnappers abducted Irfan in a van.

Youth found dead: A 17-year-old youth was found dead in the Rohi drain in Manga Mandi police area on Sunday. The victim was identified as Rizwan. The police shifted the body to the mortuary. The police said that the facts of the death will be known after the post-mortem report.

Source: The News

‘Most of Pakistani women prone to hydro disasters’

The 14th edition of the three-day Karachi Literature Festival, which concluded on Sunday, lacked indigenous voices in most of its panel discussions, especially those on climate change.

During a panel discussion on ‘Climate Justice and Embedded Injustices’, investigative journalist Zoha Tunio, who has a special interest in climate change reporting, rightly pointed out how in discourses related to climate change and climate justice we talk in silos.

“I don’t think I’m the right person to be speaking on behalf of a woman who has given birth in floodwaters,” she pointed out. “I’m not a girl who’s impacted in a way that she can’t go to school again.”

She said that as an impact of a climate disaster, it is very unlikely that her family’s first reaction would be to marry her off because she is vulnerable or a liability.

She added that if you are seeing one name over and over on a particular subject, there are other experts out there as well. “Make an effort to find them.”

Speaking on climate injustices, Pakistan Mohaliati Tahaffuz Movement founder Ahmad Shabbar said demolitions were carried out around the Gujjar Nullah on the pretext of flooding, but garbage still ends up inside the storm water drain as it used to.

He pointed out that the Nasla Tower was demolished because it was encroaching upon public space, but other residential and commercial towers illegally constructed over reclaimed pieces of land in the DHA are not even touched.

He said the DHA has no legal right to reclaim lands in sea and creeks. The National Institute of Oceanography also has no record of who reclaimed these lands, while there are six towers already constructed and inhabited on the reclaimed land, and 33 others are under construction, he added.

“Do we realise what impact it will have on the sea belt and on Port Qasim?” he asked. “Justice has to be equal all around.”

Shabbar said Pakistan is especially vulnerable to climate change impacts, which include high temperatures, riverine and coastal flooding, and sea level intrusion, and we have pollution and environmental degradation that are making air and water unsafe for humans, especially for the vulnerable communities.

Maha Husain, the session’s moderator, is the team lead for the Climate and Environment Initiative and a research associate at the Research Society of International Law, Pakistan. She spoke on the idea of privilege and class.

“When we talk about the adoptive potential of these communities, there’s a certain class who’re able to buy masks to protect themselves from the smog, who’re able to install air purifiers in their homes, who in the summer are able to sit inside with air conditioners, but we have to recognise that most communities in Pakistan, those most vulnerable experiencing the impacts of climate change the most might not have access to these things.”

Journalist Afia Salam said population is also the fundamental issue that leads to climate injustices. She said if children are dying, it is the issue of maternal health.

Afia said that repeated pregnancies are giving birth to weaker children. Climate change in Pakistan is viewed as a disaster but not as a scientific phenomenon, and women are the least equipped to deal with it, she added.

She said that half the population of the country is mostly prone to hydro disasters, and asked how many women are culturally allowed to swim.

Women for most of their reproductive life are pregnant, and when there is the onrush of water, they are asked to get out of the way, she added.

“How’re they going to get away? How many of them? How easily can they do that? They have other children in tow — usually there’s a baby in the lap, there’s a baby in the belly and there are four or six children with them.”

She said that this is a burden on them that they would not like to carry with their lives. These women are supposed to carry the water, which might be a culturally embedded injustice, and there is climate change, there is water scarcity, so who is going to bear that burden on their bodies, she added.

Zoha explained that climate justice works in two ways, saying that there is inter-country responsibility, which is to say that high gas emitting countries are more responsible for climate change as opposed to lower emitting countries, and then there are climate injustices within countries. “Existing inequalities in Pakistan are going to be exacerbated because of that.”

She said that at COP 27, for the first time in 30 years, there was an intent by developed countries that since they have impacted the planet the most, they have a certain responsibility towards developing countries.

However, existing inequalities within our own system need to be addressed, she added. She also said that developed countries have the intent and political will, so the next important thing is to establish systems and see how there can be monetary help, in what percentage and to whom, “even within developing countries there are a lot of disagreements about who deserves this money the most”.

Shabbar pointed out that Pakistan’s relation with the environment is very deep. He explained how our identities, cultures, economy and politics are somehow based on the environment.

He explained how we allow the establishment of mega hotels on the bank of rivers in mountainous regions, and then see what happens to them during the floods. Likewise, he continued, when we give deep sea access to China and restrict access to local fishermen, there comes a movement like that of Gwadar. “Justice has its own forms. We need to really identify how that translates on the ground.”

Source: The News

Two women lawyers vying for key Lahore High Court Bar Association (LHCBA) slots

LAHORE: The campaign for the Lahore High Court Bar Association (LHCBA) election 2023-24 has entered its final round with two progressive women lawyers vying for as many key positions.

The candidature of Rabbiya Bajwa and Sabahat Rizvi for the vice president and secretary slots, respectively, has also been welcomed by a majority of the male-dominated legal fraternity this year. Both are known for their progressive posture and struggle for human rights.

Ms Bajwa, a senior member of the Hamid Khan-led Professional Group, was previously elected the bar’s finance secretary in 2006. The candidature of women lawyers is typically considered acceptable for the office of finance secretary.

She has been on the forefront in the lawyers’ movement for the “restoration of the judiciary” deposed by late president Gen Pervez Musharraf. She was also polling agent of retired justice Wajihuddin Ahmad, who had contested the presidential election against Musharraf as a candidate of the legal fraternity.

She was the first woman candidate for the bar secretary’s office in 2009, but lost the contest.

If Ms Bajwa wins this year, she would be the third woman vice president of the LHCBA.

The bar had elected Rabia Sultan Qari as its first woman vice president in 1959. Ms Qari shot to fame for her struggle against the military rule of Gen Ayub Khan.

Firdaus Butt was the second, after a gap of nearly half a century, in 2007.

Ms Bajwa vows to continue the legacy of Rabia Qari, if elected to the office.

Ms Rizvi says she faced a little challenge to establish her candidature for the secretary’s slot during the initial months of her campaign. She believes that a lawyer should not be judged by his/her gender in the bar politics.

She hopes to make history by becoming the first ever woman secretary of the LHCBA.

Ms Rizvi is a senior partner in the law firm of the Pakistan Bar Council (PBC) member Abid Saqi.

Saqi sees the candidature of the women lawyers as a positive step towards gender balancing in the bar politics. He says a tangible majority of women exists in the legal profession.

The Progressive Democratic Lawyers Forum has announced its support for the both women candidates, who also enjoy unanimous backing by various factions of the women lawyers, including the “Women In Law”.

A one-on-one contest is going to be held for the bar president slot between Chaudhry Ishtiaq

A Khan of the Professional Group and Lehrasib Khan Gondal of the Independent Group, famously known as Asma Jahangir group.

Khan is a sitting member of the PBC and a former president of the Lahore Bar Association.

Gondal is a former vice chairman of the Punjab Bar Council.

Other candidates vying for the office of the vice president are Iftikhar Ali Bhatti, Chaudhry Ahmad Khan Gondal, Abdul Rauf Bhatti, Mian Sardar Ali Gehlan and Waris Ali Saroya.

Qadir Bakhsh Chahal and Mian Muhammad Irfan are also vying for the office secretary.

Irfan is last year’s runner-up and trying his luck again for the same office.

Shahrukh Shahbaz Warraich, Amir Sohail Bosal and Adil Naeem Sheikh are contesting for the post of finance secretary.

As many as 26,043 voters would exercise their right to vote in the polling to be conducted on Feb 25.

Source: Dawn

Women owned tech startups in Pakistan, a different kind of unicorn.

According to a post by Aljazeera, Pakistan has been one of the last untapped markets for startups and even though the growth has been significant since 2018, there’s still paucity of startup resources, economic health and a viable infrastructure of growth in the country. Tech industry is even more lacking, as per United Nations Conference on Trade and Development’s(UNCTAD) Technology and Innovation Report, out of 158 countries, Pakistan ranks 146 in terms of technology and development. The good news is that in recent years there’s been a steady increase in the number of startups and it has gathered interest from investors across the world.

A somewhat concerning aspect is the disparate gender gap in startup founders. Pakistan is ranked at 153 out of 156 countries, for its gender gap according to the Global Gender Gap Report. Of the disproportionately few startups founded by women only 1.56% are technology based which makes female founded technology startups an extreme rarity but rarity does not mean non-existence, we as a nation have many people who are not only driven and daring but tech smart enough to compete globally. Maham Haroon is such an inspiration for many women specially in Pakistan that want to start their own startups especially in tech.

She started a tech startup, KuberSignal, as a solo founder at the junction of cyber security and Artificial intelligence, that aims to protect data privacy of the individual and further creates tools and services to help combat growing cyber threats.

Note that in 2019 Pakistan was ranked the 7thworst country for cyber security and the qualified workforce for cyber security in Pakistan is very scarce. What makes Maham standout is not only her numerous qualifications in highly specialized fields such as Cyber security, Artificial Intelligence, Data Science and Robotics but her belief that everything is “figure out-able” and just requires the first step. She has had an impressive career as the recipient of the President’s Gold Medal in Robotics and AI from NUST, a Computer Science degree with focus on Machine Learning Research from UMass Amherst in USA, a certification in Business from Isenberg School of business in the USA.

She has recently also achieved the prestigious certified Ethical Hacker certification, from EC-Council, an internationally recognized institute, for which she scored above 95% collectively in the two rigorous exams. Educational achievements aside, Maham has also served as a thought leader and guide in her various roles and has been an invited judge and industry expert at various international awards including the much coveted Globee Cyber Security World Awards.

In a data driven world, her vision of having a user-empowered and safe internet is something we need more of. We also need a safe internet, a tech smart Pakistan and individuals who believe in themselves and aren’t afraid of taking on difficult tasks because very often failure is only another chance to succeed.

Source: Pakistan Observer

Women harassment

In Mardan, seven-year-old innocent girl Asma was killed after being sexually assaulted and similarly in Nowshera district, seven-year-old Noor was sexually assaulted and then this innocent girl was killed. In both these incidents, the accused have been sentenced by the Sessions Courts.

Sharmeen told her story that I have been working as a government teacher for the past twenty-six years and have served in various schools¡ people think that teaching is more secure profession due to being inside the wall but the reality is different, I have been harassed many times by the officers during my career and I have also faced forced transfers many times in case of not fulfilling the “demands”.

Source: Pakistan Observer (By: Laraib Ather)