This law may be late, but it’s great

By Aisha Sarwari

When attacking a woman becomes a crime — sticks, stones or even punches — people call it a landmark law. Perhaps we will award the same grandiosity to outlawing sticking pikes in the eyes of defenceless children. The Punjab Protection of Women against Violence Bill is not a landmark law, it is a law that has come to the largest province of Pakistan with glacial crawl. That is shameful. The resistance it faced is even more telling of the state of denial this country is in, in terms of where it stands on the global gender equity scale — third-worst.

We often deploy the word ‘property’ when depicting how women are mistreated in society. I am willing to bet some public toilet doorknobs have seen better days than most women in Pakistan. A country that is so haunted by the image of the respectable woman that we often leave her worse off than an ancient slave — bare-footed and scalded. Over 5,800 women faced violence in Punjab alone, in 2013. Those that go unreported are multi-fold. The province is black and blue. At least its women are, and yet we have only now gotten legislation that matches the horror on the street corners and stove rooms of our country.

The law not only caters to addressing psychological and emotional harm to women, but also includes stalking and cybercrime as punishable offences. The reason why this is important is because there is a tremendous momentum to silence women online — not just their sexuality but their very presence on social media as well as in terms of their freedom to have an email. For women, the Internet is not just about access, it is about escape. It is the gateway through which they learn skills and rights — all of which lead to empowerment and a shift away from all pervasive abuse.

The law also has upped the fine for transgressing against a woman. As a society, we need to put a value on women and the way to do that is when the state fixes a cost on hurting them. There is a reason why women are respected in the West — they are feared, both for their ability to extract a grievance fee when harmed and also because they have the ability to counter-attack legally. There is much to emulate, despite the conservative brigade convincing us that women are respected in honour-frenzied cultures like ours. No, thank you. We will take the real value as opposed to the one that is dished out by any mould mouth.

Then there is the well-meaning feminist brigade that feels this is a toothless law, only to be shamed. For one thing, it is really difficult to get laws passed in this country, let alone laws that demand more assurances and rights for women. Reminder: the Council of Islamic Ideology endorses child marriages and just recently said women cannot divorce unless they get consent from their husband, even when they want a khula. So, in all fairness, some hard work has been done, some spine has been shown by the legislators and some people deserve congratulations. Also, let us take what we can and have — perfection in increments rather than truckloads — it is more difficult to roll it back in the former case.

Laws can always be designed more intelligently, drawing in better from technology and research and I am sure this law is lacking in some instances. What is important, however, is that a benchmark is set to define acceptable standards of society and that those standards are effectively enforced. We can have masterpieces but they will just be that sitting in a legal, dusty cabinet of law stacks if there is no will to bring them to life though our law-enforcement agencies. This law needs an efficient funding for both, the training of law officials and awareness campaigns for serial aggressors. Someone needs to give aggressors a memo that the party is over. They need to sober up and wear the invisible cloak because the victims just got a dagger placed in their hands.

Film after film in Bollywood and Lollywood makes a hero of the man who saves the woman’s honour. But hardly any credit goes to the woman who uses the law to save herself. It is time to change the script. Here’s to a Pakistan where women don’t need to be saved. This law in Punjab helps towards that.

Express Tribune

Speakers discuss the ways to ensure safety on social media

KARACHI: Growing instances of cyber-stalking and exploitation, tampering, defamation, morphing, visual surveillance and tracking in the country have made it necessary to take steps for the protection of rights of social media users.

This was the opinion of participants at a panel discussion, titled “Social Media: New Dimension of Violence against Women,” held to commemorate the 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence.

The event was hosted by Aurat Foundation at Sindh Madressatul Islam University (SMIU), with the support of United States Agency for International Development (USAID), under its Gender Equity Programme (GEP).

Speaking about the psychological impact of social media violence on young girls, Dr Nousheen Shah said that it is still a largely unspoken issue even though it has increased over the past few years. There is a need to counsel the victim as well as the perpetuators, she added.

Dr Shah emphasised the need for confidence building among victims, as generally they suffer from fear and depression after going through such emotional and psychological trauma.

Jehan Ara, the president of Pakistan Software Houses Association for IT and ITES (P@SHA), highlighted the various ways to employ and ensure safety and privacy on social media.

Technology in itself is not bad or negative but it is its use that makes it so, she said.

The younger generations need a platform for discussion and social media provides just that, she claimed.

The government must pass the cybercrime draft bill immediately to control such cyber violence and victimisation, said Advocate Muhammad Mushaffy.

Awareness programmes should be held in educational institutes to change the mindsets and attitudes of the populace rather than placing sanctions on the use of social media, said painter Nilofer Farrukh

“We cannot and should not stop the flow of technology, but should rather educate our children to use social media in a responsible and ethical manner,” said Bolo Bhi director Farieha Aziz.

The discussion was followed by an interactive question and answer session.

Express Tribune

Climbing K2: Three women begin their journey to the top

By: Shabbir Mir

GILGIT: Three women climbers from Nepal set out on Thursday to ascend Pakistan’s highest peak in Gilgit-Baltistan – K2.

“Maya Sherpa, Dawa Sherpa and Pasang Sherpa begin their expedition today,” said Nira Gurung, senior communications officer at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) in Nepal.

“The expedition will take around 65 days from mid-June to the end of August and starts from Kathmandu,” said Gurung in an email sent to the media on Thursday.

Upon reaching the top, the team will place ICIMOD’s banner on the sumit, becoming the first Nepalese women to conquer K2.

The expedition is expected to help women demonstrate their strengths and potential for positive change. “The team will raise awareness on climate change besides help raise funds for the protection of mountains.”

During the expedition, the climbers will also document and record events and happenings with respect to women and climate change for the consumption of ICIMOD. The mountaineers will share their findings and experience at a seminar at ICIMOD once they are back in Nepal.

Gender equity

The expedition was supported by ICIMOD with the objective of integrating women into climate change research and adaptation as well as sustainable development in the Himalayas. It also hopes to further gender equity and gender transformative change.

“We hope the expedition will help raise awareness about climate change and bring about a positive change in gender-related perception and behavior,” states the email.

At an elevation of 8,611 metres above the sea, K2 is the second highest peak in the world after Mount Everest in Nepal at 8,848 metres.

Express Tribune

Women face a testing time to secure an MBA place

Business schools are eager to be seen as working towards gender equity. Harvard Business School, for example, has been experimenting with techniques to support female students. Other schools have professors who lecture on females in the workplace. Babson College runs the Center For Women’s Entrepreneurial Leadership, which is targeted at female students who wish to run their own businesses.

Everyone, it seems, is keen to promote advantages for women.

Yet although women are making strides in education generally, accounting for a majority of university students overall in most developed countries, they remain in a minority in business schools.

Data from the Graduate Management Admission Council, which runs the Graduate Management Admission Test, might help explain why this is the case. The problem is that women appear to underperform men by about 20 points in the GMAT. In the 2011-12 testing year the mean total score for men was 557, while the mean total figure for women was 536. The top score in the GMAT is 800.

Lee Weiss, executive director of graduate programmes at Kaplan Test Prep, says that a 20-point gap could make all the difference.

“When youíre applying to top business schools, breaking the 700 barrier is very important and our latest annual survey of business schools shows a low GMAT score is the biggest application killer,” he says.

“If the highest score for women was 690 and men got 710 that would put women at a disadvantage.”

A similar gender disparity emerges in the Graduate Record Examinations (GRE) tests. The GRE scores are expressed as three separate numbers, one for verbal reasoning, one for quantitative reasoning and the last for analytical writing. The most recent test scores, for June 2012-June 2013, reveal that men and women perform equally well on verbal reasoning, scoring a mean of 150.5 each. Women outperform men on the analytical writing section with a mean score of 3.6 compared with 3.4 for men. On quantitative reasoning, however, men score 154.9 against women’s 150.2.

The quant score might be what is holding women back, but altering the test to benefit those who find maths hard does not seem to be the answer. There is no getting around the fact that you need to be highly numerate to do well in business school.

“First year at business school is going to be quantitatively demanding, so you need to be sure that they can handle it,” says Laura Tyson, professor of management and director of the Institute for Business and Social Impact at University of California’s Berkeley-Haas School of Business.

However, she does not believe women are less capable. She says that there is growing evidence from many parts of the world that the perceived difference between men and women on quantitative skills either does not exist or is getting smaller over time.

GMAT data from China, where women slightly outperform men on the test, would seem to support Prof Tyson’s theory.

It is unclear what weighting top schools give to women’s GMAT or GRE scores during the admissions process. HBS says that it had a relatively high proportion of women students – they accounted for 39 per cent of its MBA cohort in 2013 – but added that it would like to “pass” on commenting on its admissions policy.

The Wharton school at the University of Pennsylvania, whose MBA class of 2013 was 45 per cent women – making it a school with one of the highest proportions of women – was also reluctant to make any comment, as were deans from several of the top schools.

Both GMAC and Educational Testing Services, which administer GRE tests, say that they advise schools that it would be unwise to look at just one metric.

Clearly, however, a better score would put women in a better position. Elissa Ellis Sangster, executive director of the FortÈ Foundation, a non-profit consortium which aims to promote women in business and business education, says the problem could be due to lack of preparation. She says that FortÈ tries to encourage women to think about the three Ps: planning, preparation and persistence.

“Anecdotal information is that women often go in three to four years after graduation. They have lots of things going on in life. They take the test and are disappointed,” Ms Sangster says, adding that the disappointment often leads to women giving up.

She says it is all about confidence and preparedness. “Preparing and persisting through that process is so important.”

Simone Pollard, director of business school relations at ETS, would agree that preparation is the key to doing well at either GRE or GMAT. “They are all learned skills. These tests are testing what you know at this particular time. People are arriving at different milestones at different levels of preparation.”

If consistency in GMAT scores is to be believed, and Tracey Briggs, director of media relations at GMAC says that it is one of the organisation’s chief concerns, then women are to be applauded for gradually closing the gap over time. The latest publicly available figures show the gender performance gap has narrowed from about 40 points in the 2002-03 testing year to the 20-point gap reported in 2011-12.

If women can also manage to close the gap in the other parts of their application, then gender equity in business schools could soon be a real proposition in the not-so-distant future.

But there are other factors at work. Prof Tyson says that one should ask why women do not apply, not why they are not doing so well. She points out that women are in the minority of GMAT test takers.

“Maybe they have already decided business school is not for them,” she says.

“I think it’s [business school] a terrific education because it gives you skills which are applicable to a variety of different sectors and activities.”

“A low GMAT score is the biggest application killer”

An eastern exception

There is an exception to every rule and for GMAT scores it is provided by students in southeast Asia in general and in China in particular.

In east and southeast Asia there is virtually no difference between men and women’s performance in the GMAT. In 2013, figures provided by GMAC show women in the region achieved a mean score of 575 compared with the figure of 574 achieved by men. In China in the same year, both the mean scores were higher but were also more or less the same – 583 for women against 581 for men.

Perhaps more interesting is that in China men appear to be getting worse at the test. In 2003 women achieved the same score as in 2013 but this was not the case for men. In 2003 men’s mean score was more than 20 points higher at 605, showing it is not only possible to improve; you can also go backwards.

Women’s steady performance in China could be due to their goals, says GMAC, which collects data about test takersí intended course. This information reveals that most test takers in China are aiming to study a master of accounting degree, something that Tracey Briggs, director of media relations at GMAC. suggests might be more attractive to women in China than an MBA.

This choice of degree would be a practical one from an employment perspective, she says, because China has stated that it is eager to increase the number of accountants in the country.

The News