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PAKISTAN: Women Push For
Political Space In Patriarchy
By Ashfaq Yusufzai
March 7, 2008 - (IPS) Saeeda Anwar is a 38-year-old
Pakistani schoolteacher. She works in a school here in the capital
of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), but she is not allowed
to exercise her franchise.
"My family is strictly against women voting. They don’t
like us to vote. Although, I am allowed to work as a teacher because
I give them all my salary," she says of the male members of
her family.
Patriarchy is deeply embedded in the NWFP. The Pakistan government
has neither been able to implement modernising programmes nor Article
34 of the Pakistan Constitution (1973) that says ‘steps shall
be taken to ensure full participation of women in all spheres of
national life’.
Here women are banned from participation and decision-making --
a tribal feudalism almost as rigid as in adjacent Afghanistan under
the Taliban. It is the men who decide who their women can talk to
or whether they can go out of the house, also who their daughters
should marry and when.
Yet, 15 women challenged political exclusion and contested the Feb.
18 polls to parliament and the national assembly from the NWFP.
Not one won, and polling by women, both in the province and in the
neighbouring Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), was once
again the lowest in Pakistan.
Dr Simin Mehmud Jan, the Pakistan Muslim League’s (PML-Q)
candidate for the assembly election from Peshawar city, blamed her
defeat on "Pukhtunwali" (the code of Pakhtuns or Pashtuns
who are the majority in northern Pakistan). "The NWFP and FATA
are ingrained with Pukhtunwali, and not yet ready to accept a woman
as their political representative," she told IPS.
But she was not about to give up hope. People will start accepting
women as their political representatives by the time of the next
general election, she said very optimistically, in an interview.
A medical professional, she was a former member of the provincial
assembly, nominated by her then ruling party.
The first woman elected to the National Assembly, Pakistan’s
parliament, was Begum Nasim Wali Khan, wife of the late Awami National
Party (ANP) leader, Khan Abdul Wali Khan, in 1977. She was elected
an unprecedented four times.
Women won 15 of the 272 seats where direct elections were held last
month, improving upon their tally of 13 in the last 2002 general
election. There are 342 seats in parliament, but the Pakistani constitution
reserves 10 seats for religious minorities and 60 seats for women,
to be filled by proportional representation among parties with more
than 5 percent of the vote.
"I am less known as compared to other candidates (male), perhaps
that is the reason I lost," says Shazia Asif Baghi. "But
I have not lost heart and will contest again." Baghi had hoped
to win the votes of women, but very few made it to polling booths.
Ghaliba Khusheed, a former member of the provincial assembly who
contested as an independent candidate from two constituencies in
Peshawar, believes her crushing defeat was the result of "negative
propaganda about women’s participation by male rivals".
"The major reason for this nondemocratic behavior is gender
disparity due to tribal culture," comments Rakhshanda Naz,
resident director of the Aurat Foundation, part of a civil society
Alliance for Protection of Human Rights (APHR), which campaigned
widely for the voting rights of women in the run-up to the polls.
"The reason for the dismal electoral performance may be many,"
observes Rabia Begum, a political scientist at the Univeristy of
Peshawar. "That no woman won reveals the extent to which our
society is conservative," she told IPS.
The alliance of civil society organisations has called for an investigation
into the disenfranchisement of women. Women comprise 47 percent
of the population of NWFP and FATA.
"We demand from the new government that they probe how women
were disallowed from voting in Peshawar, Malakand, Dera Ismail Khan,
Dir Lower, Swabi, Shangla, Kohistan, Batagram and Charsadda districts
and in the tribal areas," said Aurat Foundation’s Naz
speaking on behalf of the eight-member APHR.
Zahira Khattak, president of the ANP’s women’s wing,
and Bushra Gohar, nominated to parliament by the ANP, said their
party, which won the provincial elections edging out the ruling
religious right coalition, would work towards bringing more women
to the polling booth in the next election. In the 2002 polls, hardline
candidates had signed an agreement to prevent women from voting.
The left-leaning ANP is poised to form the government in the NWFP
with the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) of Benazir Bhutto,
the assassinated former prime minister.
Meanwhile, Shazia Aurangzeb, the provincial secretary-general of
ex-premier Nawaz Sharif’s party, Pakistan Muslim League, said
empowerment of women was their one-point agenda.
"My party has very ambitious plans for women. We will introduce
micro credit schemes for poor women. Once they get empowered they
will learn that voting is their right," she told IPS. Women
are back centre-stage in the politics of Pakistan’s patriarchal
north.
From:http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=41496
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