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Pakistani women empowered
by learning to sew
By: Megan Rowling
October 23, 2006 - (Reuters) Young women sit demurely
behind hand-operated sewing machines in the mountain village of
Attyasa in Pakistani-administered Kashmir practising their newly-acquired
sewing skills on scraps of fabric. "After I've finished this
course, I'm going to sew clothes for my family," said 24-year-old
Shazia Raheem. "I'll also be able to earn money and that will
improve things for us." Raheem is one of thousands of women
receiving training from aid groups seeking to help Pakistani women
become more self-reliant and empowered in their traditional society
by teaching them skills to earn an income.
Pakistan has one of the largest gender gaps in
literacy rates in the world. Male literacy is around 60 percent,
while only around 36 percent of females can read and write. Those
rates drop in rural areas where only 22 percent of girls complete
primary school, compared with 47 percent of boys. Many girls are
taken out of school to work in the family home. Women in rural areas
perform around 15 hours of menial labour a day, a third of that
caring for livestock.
Raheem is a student on the first course at one
of two "women's empowerment" centres opened by the International
Rescue Committee (IRC), a relief and development group. The students
are learning Urdu, English, maths and basic healthcare, as well
as sewing and embroidery. Many hope to use the skills they're learning
on the four-month course to earn money. "They are poor and
want to support their families. They need money for school fees,
books and uniforms for their children or siblings," said trainer
Nazia Sharif.
IRC began providing support to communities in Danna
Union Council, 50 km (30 miles) southeast of the Pakistani-Kashmir
capital Muzaffarabad, after a huge earthquake hit the region a year
ago, killing 75,000 people and making 3.5 million homeless across
northern Pakistan and India. IRC hopes to run longer courses to
equip the women with more advanced skills, including how to market
their handicraft products. "Once their work is of high-enough
quality, they can really start generating income, and for that we
have to help them establish linkages with markets," said Naveed
Nawaz, IRC team leader in Danna.
EMPOWERING WOMEN
IRC plans to open five more centres for women in
the areas of Mansehra and Battagram in North West Frontier Province
(NWFP), which was also badly affected by last year's quake. These
will focus on a wider range of vocational skills, including small
business management and information technology. Ideally, the centres
will be run by local women. "If women are able to generate
income now, they sell small amounts of milk or eggs, or make clothes.
But what if they could have 50 birds instead of five? We want to
help them build up small enterprises," said Suzanne Smith Saulniers,
IRC's programme director for recovery and rehabilitation.
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),
which runs livelihood projects for men and women across Pakistan,
recently announced two projects in partnership with corporations
to train women in managing livestock and working in the textile
industry. Shakeel Ahmad, an official with the UNDP, believes women
have the most to gain from improving their skills.
"(Rural) women don't have much mobility --
some rarely get out of the house," he said. "But now they
are forming their own organisations and receiving credit from banks.
A few are even lending on to others and making money from the spread."
He added that, when women do have access to credit and training,
their income tends to rise by around 50 percent more than men participating
in the same projects. But as yet only a small proportion of women
in rural areas have access to microcredit schemes, which were launched
in Pakistan around five years ago. Microcredit schemes have been
successful in Bangladesh where they were started by banker, Muhammed
Yunus, who won this year's Nobel Peace Prize for his work.
In 2005, the fledgling microcredit industry in
Pakistan had around 500,000 customers. That's a relatively small
client base in a country of 158 million people, around a third of
whom live below the national poverty line. Aid groups are seeking
to spread the word about microcredit as well as teach women skills
to capitalise on any loans they might receive. When women are able
to raise their incomes, they become more independent, start travelling,
and have a larger say in family decisions, according to Ahmad of
the UNDP. "Once you become economically empowered, then you
have a better chance of social empowerment," he said.
From : http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/SP75860.htm
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