Out of the four Pakistanis who
made it to Foreign Policy’s influential
Global
Thinker’s List for 2012, three are women. Congratulations to those who made
the list but irrespective of what Foreign
Policy’s selection criteria for the list is (a 15-year-old
student’s intellectual contribution to the society cannot be measured with that
of a parliamentarian who has worked on important legislations affecting
millions), it must be noted that in a country like Pakistan where women are
constitutionally and legally considered of lesser worth, where they are valued
less in cases of Qisas and Diyat, some are at least making a name for being
fearless and courageous thinkers. They are doing things that one would not associate with people
who are handicapped by their very state for being women.
Every citizen has a social
contract with its government. The notion of that social contract implies that
the people give up some rights to a government or other authority in order to
receive or maintain social order where they are allowed to practise their
religion, work freely and live in a secure environment. The state of Pakistan
does not distinguish between its citizens when it comes to citizenship
responsibilities. Women are expected to pay taxes when they are involved in
economic activities, they vote in the elections and help select the government
and are expected to observe the criminal laws enacted by one’s government.
However, the state of Pakistan
does not deliver to its female citizens when it comes to equal rights. It is
very unfortunate but the Pakistani constitution does not view women as equal
and productive citizens of the country. The state views them as Muslim
daughters, wives and mothers and values them according to their assigned roles
in society — not as individual citizens with rights and aspirations of their
own. Take the imposition of laws such as the Hudood Ordinance which gave
control of a woman’s body and sexuality to the state and other members of her
family. The fact that a woman’s role is considered a reproductive one and not a
productive one in the society helps in reducing her worth and legally formalizes
the gender inequality in the society. There is the Qisas and Diyat Law, or the
Law of Evidence, which institutionalised a reduced value assigned to a woman’s
testimony based on the assumption that a woman’s role in society is different,
or perhaps less productive, compared to that of a man.
It is not just that but these
legal and constitutional inequalities have also made certain types of criminal
activities such as honour
killings, domestic abuse and violence within families and tribes
‘compoundable’ — i.e., they are treated as crimes against the individual rather
than as against the state.
Every year, November 25 is
observed as International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women. It
is usually observed in Pakistan as well. This year, it will be followed by a
16-day-long campaign called Take
Back the Tech against gender-based violence. Campaigns such as this can
only work when the women are allowed a level playing field which,
unfortunately, is not the case in Pakistan. The very political parties who
depend on their female voters to get to assemblies have continuously
thwarted attempts to pass a much needed domestic violence bill in the
parliament. If a country cannot acknowledge that a woman needs to be protected
in her home, its government cannot be expected to protect her.
First published in The Express Tribune
2 comments:
& then having to deal with the resentments and "sensibilities" of puny men at workplace.
We need workplace laws FOCEFULLY IMPLEMENTED to break the glass-ceiling. I say, make a woman economically liberated & she'd be able to deal with all the other crap deftly.
Bravo, Tazeen, more power to you! :)
First one has to educate the masses that Islam provides for equality of sexes.
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