Current state of women’s rights in Pakistan discussed

KARACHI: From November 25 to December 10 every year, the world marks 16 days of activism against gender-based violence; on Friday the Pakistan Institute of International Affairs (PIIA) in collaboration with the Aurat Foundation organised an interactive session that delved into the current state of women’s rights in Pakistan against the backdrop of this year’s theme: ‘Orange the World: #HearMeToo’.

PIIA chairperson Dr Masuma Hasan spoke about the importance of the campaign, which is a global movement, and said that in Pakistan over the past 10 years there had been many pro-women laws passed. Some of the laws passed were possible due to the civil society, in particular the Aurat Foundation, who worked very hard to make citizens, parliamentarians and the government aware of women’s rights, she said.

Mehnaz Rehman, resident director of the Aurat Foundation, spoke about how there had been a change in the reporting of harassment the world over; first women were afraid to report it because of several reasons which included being blamed for being raped or harassed. Now however, they are more willing to fight back, she added.

“There is a need for attitudinal changes in society that both men and women are equal and deserve equal treatment. For this we need men to be part of the conversation and without political education in the country we cannot achieve women’s rights. The infrastructure that governments posses civil society activists do not have access to; institutions need to be set up in Pakistan that are not corrupt and function purely for human rights and this is the responsibility of the federal and provincial governments.”

Legal punishment, she said, was not sufficient to eliminate violence against women. “Punishments don’t always have a long term effect; there is a need to empower citizens on a social and economic front.”

Nuzhat Shirin, chairperson of the Sindh Commission on the Status of Women, shared her journey which started off as a journalist reporting on women’s rights. She credited the Aurat Foundation for sensitising her, along with many others, to the way in which women’s issues should be reported. “I started my career in Urdu newspapers by reporting on Sindh Assembly proceedings. It was during that time that I was introduced to the Aurat Foundation and was sensitised to women’s rights.

Nowadays, she said, activism is much more informed. It was however, not so much a few years ago and Ms Shirin credited the Aurat Foundation for training her and teaching her as to how to raise the issue of women’s rights. “I was taught that there even needs to be a separate diction to write about such issues. I was taught how to raise the issue within the agendas of political parties and function within legislative bodies.”

However, women’s rights in Pakistan greatly suffer due to lack of political commitment, she added. “Budgetary allocations, human resource allocations are just some of the hurdles, including lack of political commitment and implementation of laws. For instance, we have seen that safe homes and shelters in Sindh have been established on paper for many years now and budgets allocated for them. However, when we visit them we realise that the funds are being misused and abused on many different levels.”

Other speakers included MPA Rana Ansar who shared her 18 year old struggle of being from a humble family with no political aspirations to becoming an integral part of the struggle for women’s rights in Pakistan.

Jamil Junejo, a writer with a master’s degree in human rights and democratisation from the University of Sydney, explained that in the fight for women’s rights, laws were an essential requirement and the state could galvanise change in great ways if it took this responsibility seriously.

Dawn

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Uplifting female workers

The country’s first-ever gender audit of labour laws may not have turned up any major surprises for those familiar with the existing disparities between male and females in the workplace but they still serve as an eye-opener. As suspected, women’s participation in the labour force is not only less in Pakistan but the ones who are part of the labour force are deprived of their rights and discriminated against. The audit reinforces the need for urgent and thorough review of the existing labour laws and following the international standards in order to provide constitutional rights to the working class and women in particular.

It is no secret that women in South Asia are discriminated against at the workplace. It was identified in 2016, according to the World Economic Forum Global Gender Gap Report, that it will take the region an entire millennium to reach gender equality. Whether it comes to maternity benefits, wage gap or sexual harassment policies, companies are found violating the existing laws without any remorse. The same report placed Pakistan — along with Syria — at the bottom two spots of countries that have closed less than 50% of their economic gender gap.

Pakistan does worryingly little to bridge the gap and administrative weaknesses in the system are to blame for it. The audit report had revealed that both federal and provincial labour departments — responsible to ensure labour laws are implemented — not only lack qualified staff but have poor gender ratios and too few female staff. Participation of women in a team that works towards uplifting their gender is significant.

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International Day for Rural Women: Punjab CM praises rural women’s role in growth

LAHORE: Chief Minister Sardar Usman Buzdar in his message on the International Day of Protection of Rights of Rural Women said that rural women of Pakistan are very hard-working.

He said that role of these women in the development of rural economy is appreciable. The rural women work side by side with men in the agricultural economy as they help men in every walk of life.

He said that role of women in the sustainable development of agricultural sector can’t be ignored and added that we will opt every measure to protect the rights of rural women.

New Pakistan will provide due rights to rural women, he vowed and said that women living in villages were deprived of legal, economic and social facilities. He said that measures for improving the condition of rural women are our responsibility and the role of NGOs is also important for this purpose.

We have to reassure the commitment that effective measures will be taken to protect rural women’s rights.

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Pakistani girls strive for job skills despite social barriers

TORU (Khyber Pakhtun­khwa): She’s just 10 years old, but Ansa Khan’s day is a hectic one. At the first hint of dawn, she is up saying her morning prayers before reading her Quran. Those are Ansa’s quietest moments.

After that, her day is a whirl of chores, school, studying and the occasional moments stolen away to play marbles.

Since 2012, the United Nations has reserved Oct 11 as the International Day of the Girl Child “to recognise girls’ rights and the unique challenges girls face around the world”. This year the theme is employable skills for girls, particularly in poorer economies.

Since 2012, the UN has observed Oct 11 as the International Day of the Girl Child “to recognise girls’ rights and the unique challenges girls face around the world”

Early marriage is often the first option for girls in many of the world’s poorest countries and Pakistan is no different.

According to the global organisation Girls Are Not Brides, in 2017, there were 1.9 million women in Pakistan between the ages of 20 and 24 who had been married off before they turned 18. The organisation had an even higher figure for India — 15.5m.

There are no official figures for the current numbers of child brides. Poverty and patriarchy are the oft-cited reasons for child brides.

But Pakistan also has its girl heroes, most notably the youngest Nobel Laureate Malala Yousufzai, who was shot by Taliban insurgents at just the age of 13 for speaking out in favour of girls’ education.

Yousufzai survived and made educating all girls everywhere her goal. She was only slightly older than Ansa when she first blogged for the BBC advocating education for girls, even as the Taliban burned girls’ schools and threatened harsh punishments for those who would send their girls to school.

Like Yousufzai, Ansa is from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Also, like Yousufzai, Ansa enjoys school, saying her favourite subject is Islamic Studies. Electricity is not always reliable in Ansa’s village of Toru and she is often forced to study by flashlight.

Ansa’s father, Tajbar Khan, said his young daughter often helps him on the land he farms for a large landowner in the area. She runs to help feed the cattle and spends hours with her mother making the dung or manure collected from the animals into large round cakes that are dried out and later used for cooking.

The farm produces tobacco, a major crop in the province. While her father and older brother harvest and shred the leaves from the tobacco plants, Ansa, her older sister and mother sew the leaves together to be dried.

This year’s UN statement about girl child day called for a focus on gaining skills.

“Of the one billion young people — including 600m adolescent girls — that will enter the workforce in the next decade, more than 90pc of those living in developing countries will work in the informal sector,” the statement said.

“The most disadvantaged girls, including those in rural areas and those with disabilities, have even less access to decent work,” it added.

Dawn