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Kashmir: Do women have say in
deciding Kashmir's future?
By Sarwar Kashani
July 29, 2007 - (India eNews) Women have been some
of the worst sufferers of the 17-year-old violence in Jammu and
Kashmir, but they seem to have no space on the dialogue table as
efforts are made for a final, peaceful solution to the conflict.
In recent times, though Kashmir has seen some women politicians
- mainstream as well as separatist - there are hardly any instances
of their trying to empower the fairer sex.
Asiya Andrabi, a hardline Islamist woman heading the Dukhtaran-e-Millat
outfit, remains busy in propagating separatist politics and also
in moral policing. Mehbooba Mufti, the People Democratic Party chief
and MP, is caught in the web of a larger political game.
In the 89-member state assembly, there are just three women members
of whom only one, Kanta Andotra of the Congress, is an elected legislator.
The two others, Khem Lata Vakhloo and Shanti Devi, are nominated
members.
Caught between the guns of terrorists and troops, the Kashmiri woman
- anyway oppressed by the burden of patriarchy - has been left doubly
scarred. She is left with no option but to grapple with mental trauma
and economic hardships.
As a mother she has lost the apple of her eye. As a wife she has
lost her emotional and financial support. She has been robbed of
a brother endlessly. The violence has often stripped her of her
honour. And yet, she finds herself outside the political spectrum.
Amid this sensitive and controversial reality, a Delhi-based NGO
and research institute, Women in Security, Conflict Management and
Peace (Wiscomp), has documented a first hand account of Kashmiri
women.
The document, published here recently, is an initiative to break
the silence of women in Kashmir and facilitate a process that 'encourages
them to assert their agency'.
'Women in dialogue: Envisioning the road ahead in Jammu and Kashmir'
is a step to tell policymakers and social and political activists
that 'excluding more than half the population (from dialogue) risks
the possibility of keeping several creative solutions and options
out', says Sumona Das Gupta, assistant director Wiscomp.
The report is a collection of deliberations made during a Wiscomp
convention that brought together political leaders, teachers, activists,
journalists, academics and doctors - mostly women but men too -
from the three regions of Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh in order to
facilitate a dialogue amongst diverse stakeholders.
The meeting, held here last year, led to recommendations by four
working groups focusing on political, economic, cultural and other
issues.
'When we talk about a gender sensitive discourse on Kashmir, we
don't mean to exclude males. It's about building partnerships between
men and women who agree that if conflict affects them differently
it's only natural that they may want to access the peace process
differently,' Gupta adds.
The report says participants underscored the role of women in deciding
the political and economic future of Kashmir, while drawing attention
towards 'disenchantment with the palpable and glaring absence of
women on the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's roundtable confabs'.
'The absence of women in these working groups is both unacceptable
and short-sighted, especially in view of the fact that women and
children have been the worst affected by the conflict in Jammu and
Kashmir,' said the participants, according to the report.
Drawing special attention to the case of half widows - women whose
husbands have disappeared and are presumed dead but are bound by
personal law not to remarry, the participants recommended that complete
rehabilitation should be provided to all widows and half widows
regardless of whether the husband was a militant or non-combatant.
'The act of the perpetrator should be de-linked from the plight
of the widow and the family,' the report quotes participants as
having said.
In order to empower the oppressed Kashmiri woman and help her gain
financial independence, the participants recommended that an enabling
environment should be created in different parts of Jammu and Kashmir
and confidence generated among women to set up their own income
generating units.
According to the report, Kashmiris unanimously underlined the need
for 'adequate representation of women in the legislature of Jammu
and Kashmir'.
Empowering women would shape the path for peace and reconciliation
that would organically grow out of participatory dialogue and lead
to peace and development of the state, opined the participants.
From:http://www.indiaenews.com/india/20070729/63012.htm
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