Division of Labor: A Sign of Gender Inequality

 

Last Sunday, while doing housework, I asked my brother to make me a cup of tea as I was very much tired. My aunt felt very bad about this and started telling me the difference between the status of men and women. She started lecturing me on my responsibilities. I only asked her who decides that this work belongs to a man and this to a woman. I knew the answer, but I had to make her feel that this field belongs to her, that is, to a woman.

It is strange that the woman who herself has grown old while serving these men forces the other woman to serve them as well. The result of this debate was the same as it always is, I had to stop because arguing with these patriarchal vigilantes meant banging my head against the wall or crying in the wilderness!

It’s bitter but it’s true! Why is work divided? Rather, why is everything divided between men and women? This color is for men, this color is for women, such clothes are for men, so are clothes for women, these jobs are for men and these jobs are for women, these cars are for men and such cars are for women. When man and woman are made with only physical distinction, why do we not accept this act of nature?

And the biggest thing is that by doing so we are only creating problems for ourselves.

I have often heard old women saying that the time has come for a woman to run the house together with a man. In this era of inflation, a man’s earning alone is not enough to run a house.

But when both of them return home exhausted, the man begins to rest, while the woman enters the kitchen, prepares food, and serves it to the man, disturbing his rest.

Someone should ask these guardians of patriarchy, where has your equality gone now? However, she will say that he is tired, whereas a woman is a machine, she wakes up earlier in the morning and sleeps later, earns as well as raises children, and takes care of the house. Even so, she is not forgiven for even the smallest of mistakes. It is good for a woman to do the work of a man, but if a man does the work of a woman, his integrity will be affected. Why is this?

We make this distinction but forget its effects. If a woman has to be busy with her work all day, she will not be able to train her children. Then these old women say that out of education and upbringing, the latter has ended, and only education remains.

A busy mother with mental confusion will not be able to take care of her children. She consoles herself by simply nurturing that she is accomplishing her task. She actually lacks time. Perhaps this is the reason our society is producing more men in quantity, but men of good quality are rare commodities.

Maybe now is the time to change our thinking. Think about your offspring and make time for them, focusing on their upbringing along with quality education, and teaching them equality of both sexes, maybe only then we can progress as a nation.

Source: TNN

Women teachers to be posted to hometowns

 

MANSEHRA: Adviser to the chief minister on culture and tourism Zafar Mehmood on Monday said women teachers would be posted to schools in their hometowns.

“During a recent meeting, I informed the chief minister that many women school teachers are distressed about working in districts other than their own. He understood the issue and promised the early issuance of an order to post women teachers to their hometowns,” Mr Mehmood told a group of such teachers at the Circuit House here.

The visitors, who belonged to Torghar, Kohistan and Mansehra districts, told the CM’s aide that the education department had posted scores of women teachers from Mansehra district to Torghar and Kohistan districts for decades.

Mr Mehmood said the caretaker government was trying to identify and cancel teacher postings and transfers on a political basis.

CM aide says all political appointments to schools to be cancelled

He said teachers struggled to deliver the goods for being subjected to “political victimisation.”

The CM’s adviser later told reporters that authorities had taken the encroachment issue in Mansehra district seriously and were ensuring effective steps to address it.

“I will meet officials of the district and tehsil administrations, National Highway Authority and other relevant departments soon to finalize anti-encroachment drives for Mansehra, Balasko and Ogham tehsils,” he said.

Source: Dawn

Missing girl’s father faces allegation of her murder

 

LARKANA: The man who, according to police, confessed to have killed his eight-year-old daughter by throwing her into Indus river, was on Monday remanded in police custody for three days.

Naveed Khuhawar was produced before the fifth civil judge and judicial magistrate of Larkana with his alleged confessional statement. However, the suspect claimed that police extracted the statement by subjecting him to torture in custody.

Khuhawar had been holding protest regularly since October 12 after reporting disappearance of his daughter, Naveela, 8, after she had left her home in Daya Street of Allahabad mohalla.

The police had registered an FIR at the Allahabad police station against unknown suspects and had been continuing their probe as well as search for the missing girl, but could not find any clue. On a petition filed by the aggrieved father, the chief justice of Sindh High Court on March 22 sought a report from the Larkana SSP and the investigation officer of the case regarding progress of the investigation.

Suspect disowns his ‘confessional statement’ filed by police in court

During the process, police investigators extensively interrogated the complainant, Naveed Khuhawar, and detained him. On Sunday (April 9), the investigators came out with the claim that the complainant himself had thrown his daughter into the river and had been staging the drama of her disappearance to save himself from being arrested and prosecuted.

According to police sources, when he was interrogated, Khuhawar confessed to have committed the crime.

Larkana SSP Dr Mohammed Imran Khan on Sunday said that Khuhawar had reported his daughter Naveela’s disappearance to the police on October 12. He said he (the SSP), during the course of investigation, constituted a committee headed by the Civil Lines DSP, with the SHOs of the Allahabad and Rehmatpur police stations being its other members, to hold a thorough probe into the FIR (No. 25/2022) registered on behalf of state under Section 364 PPC.

The Larkana police also issued a press release on Sunday revealing contents of Khuhawar’s alleged confessional statement recorded during his custody. It claimed: “Naveed Khuhawar confessed to have committed the crime. Later, to save himself he concocted a story that her daughter had gone missing”.

Citing the confessional statement, the police claimed that Khuhawar threw Naveela into River Indus from the Larkana-Khairpur bridge. They quoted him as stating that Naveela was born to his first wife, who left him along with their son, Mohammad Hassan, over certain disagreements and a tense relationship. His second wife was unhappy over his decision to keep Naveela with him at their home and this dispute was poisoning the couple’s relationship. In order to resolve the issue, Khuhawar finally decided to get rid of Naveela, the police mentioned in his alleged confessional statement.

The police investigators had so far failed to locate Naveela or recover her body.

Meanwhile, Khuhawar’s counsel Advocate Abdul Rauf Korai, speaking to Dawn on Monday said that Naveed Khuhawar, recording his statement before the civil judge earlier in the day, refuted the police claim about his confessional statement.

He stated that the police extracted his confessional statement by subjecting him to torture in custody, the counsel said.

Source: Dawn

Girls abducted from Sindh married in Punjab, K-P: Raza

 

KARACHI:Sindh Minister for Women Development Shehla Raza said on Monday that organised groups were involved in abducting young girls from Sindh and taking them to Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) to be married against their will.

The minister said this while addressing a crowded press conference alongside the parents of two kidnapped girls.

Unlike Sindh, there are no laws against child marriage in Punjab and K-P, the minister said referring to minimum age laws against marriage. Sindh has tried to enforce 18 years as the age of marriage. In Punjab, the legal age is 16. However, in most of the country where the majority is conservative, girls are sometimes married as soon as they hit puberty.

The case of a 15-year-old Karachi girl who was reported missing last year only to surface a few months later married in a town in Punjab brought renewed attention to child marriage laws in the country. Some claimed that the girl was abducted by a trafficking ring that coerced girls into staying in such forced relationship.

Raza made similar claims, saying the families were blackmailed, including from numbers registered in foreign countries.

She claimed that a major trafficking ring was involved in luring girls, including online, with promises of love and then sell them off as property.

She cited the case of the one of the missing girls whose parents were there. She said the abductors befriended the 12-year-old on a gaming application used on a cell phone. They enticed her with drugs and convinced her to steal jewelry and valuables from home. The girl went missing in January.

Raza added that the family was receiving extortion calls, with the family even given in to the demands. “However, the girl is yet to return.”

She said the laxity of laws in KP and Punjab meant teenage girls abducted from Sindh would be wedded in a “staged marriage”. For this, all the preparations from the cleric who solemnizes the marriage to witnesses are already prepared in advance.

She also quoted the case of a 13-year-old who had a digital courtship with the person on the other end of the line asking to marry the underage teenager. Upon refusal, the person kept calling from different numbers.

The girl went missing soon after and finally resurfaced in Lahore. In the meantime, the family was in constant contact with the man who had trapped the girl.

Raza said that the family recently received a video in which the girl was “tortured”. She said the girl, who was married to a Hafiz (memorizer) of the Holy Quran, was “tortured” on the pretext of exorcising a ghost.

She said the police in Punjab, KP and Sindh were exhibiting a lack of interest, adding that they were discouraging parents from registering cases.

Raza added that she would meet the Sindh police chief in the next couple of days to find out the reason behind the inaction in such cases. She added that she was in communication with Punjab’s interim chief minister, Mohsin Naqvi, as well.

Source: Express Tribune

Girls abducted from Sindh married in Punjab, K-P: Raza

KARACHI:Sindh Minister for Women Development Shehla Raza said on Monday that organised groups were involved in abducting young girls from Sindh and taking them to Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) to be married against their will.

The minister said this while addressing a crowded press conference alongside the parents of two kidnapped girls.

Unlike Sindh, there are no laws against child marriage in Punjab and K-P, the minister said referring to minimum age laws against marriage. Sindh has tried to enforce 18 years as the age of marriage. In Punjab, the legal age is 16. However, in most of the country where the majority is conservative, girls are sometimes married as soon as they hit puberty.

The case of a 15-year-old Karachi girl who was reported missing last year only to surface a few months later married in a town in Punjab brought renewed attention to child marriage laws in the country. Some claimed that the girl was abducted by a trafficking ring that coerced girls into staying in such forced relationship.

Raza made similar claims, saying the families were blackmailed, including from numbers registered in foreign countries.

She claimed that a major trafficking ring was involved in luring girls, including online, with promises of love and then sell them off as property.

She cited the case of the one of the missing girls whose parents were there. She said the abductors befriended the 12-year-old on a gaming application used on a cell phone. They enticed her with drugs and convinced her to steal jewelry and valuables from home. The girl went missing in January.

Raza added that the family was receiving extortion calls, with the family even given in to the demands. “However, the girl is yet to return.”

She said the laxity of laws in KP and Punjab meant teenage girls abducted from Sindh would be wedded in a “staged marriage”. For this, all the preparations from the cleric who solemnizes the marriage to witnesses are already prepared in advance.

She also quoted the case of a 13-year-old who had a digital courtship with the person on the other end of the line asking to marry the underage teenager. Upon refusal, the person kept calling from different numbers.

The girl went missing soon after and finally resurfaced in Lahore. In the meantime, the family was in constant contact with the man who had trapped the girl.

Raza said that the family recently received a video in which the girl was “tortured”. She said the girl, who was married to a Hafiz (memorizer) of the Holy Quran, was “tortured” on the pretext of exorcising a ghost.

She said the police in Punjab, KP and Sindh were exhibiting a lack of interest, adding that they were discouraging parents from registering cases.

Raza added that she would meet the Sindh police chief in the next couple of days to find out the reason behind the inaction in such cases. She added that she was in communication with Punjab’s interim chief minister, Mohsin Naqvi, as well.

Source: Tribune