Women Empowerment By: Aamir Hussain
Women Empowerment By: Aamir Hussain
Social and political spaces of expression for women
have increasingly been squeezed in Pakistan over the years. The concerted
social media vilification campaigns run against outspoken women by our
misogynists, in the millions, are one of the indicators of our societal
downfall.
The facts of our downfall stare at us with an
alarming caution that Pakistan has become one of the worst places for women to
live in. Let us dwell on some of these alarming facts to make sense of the
appalling state of affairs vis-a-vis women’s rights in Pakistan.
According to the Global Gender Gap Report (2017),
Pakistan ranks 136th on the attainment of education index, 140th on health and
survival and 95th on the political empowerment of women, out of the 144
countries assessed in the report. Pakistan scored 0.546 overall on a scale
wherein a score of 1.0 represents parity and 0 represents imparity. The
country’s female/male population ratio was recorded at 1.06. The index denotes
the country’s widening gender gap over the decade, as it ranked 112 out of 115
in the year 2006. In the 2017 index, Pakistan only beats Yemen, whereas,
interestingly, war-torn Syria is ahead of Pakistan.
The fifth objective of the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs) aims to end all forms of discrimination and violence against women
and girls. This includes eliminating harmful practices, ensuring women’s full
participation and equal opportunities for leadership at all levels of
decision-making, and adopting and strengthening policies and legislation to
promote gender equality. There are also a number of international conventions
providing some overarching policy principles for the promulgation of
context-specific provisions in the national constitution to ensure the
protection and promotion of women’s rights.
In addition to SDGs, Pakistan has ratified the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), the Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and other
international commitments to uphold, protect and promote the rights of women.
Pakistan’s constitution has defined protection against gender-based violence as
one of the fundamental rights in Article 25(2). Article 26(2) of the
constitution provides for affirmative action or positive discrimination to
ensure that women have equal access to opportunities that they are otherwise
denied in a male-dominated society.
Despite the fact that Pakistan is signatory to most
of the international conventions on women’s rights and has a constitution that
provides legal protection to women against violence, we have failed to build a
gender-sensitive society. Our downfall as a society is becoming imminent with
each passing day as we hear about the tragic news of women being lynched for
speaking truth to power. Our religious clerics, scholars of secular pursuits,
politicos, journalists, human rights activists, the legal fraternity as well as
the educated classes have all failed to create a counter-narrative against male
chauvinism that holds sway on the media and public discourse today. We suffer
from collective amnesia when it comes to acting upon constitutional covenants
and our international commitments on women’s rights.
Women’s empowerment is not only about upholding the
fundamental rights enshrined in our constitution and the international
conventions that we have ratified. It is also about sustainable economic
development and prosperity of this country, the progress of which is marred by
the exclusion of 49 percent of its population from participating in its
development. How can a country prosper if half of its population has been left
out from participating in nation-building processes? Equitable development is
the precursor for sustainable change in the lives of the most vulnerable
segment of our society, ie women.
Women in Pakistan face dual exploitation. One is
their structural exclusion from the mainstream institutions of representation
and policy making, and the other is the behavioral and attitudinal animosity of
a patriarchal society. In a nutshell, the practice and discourse of
development, and representation and empowerment in Pakistan, is shaped by a
feudal mindset, which then adds to the popular notion of women being
subservient to their male partners.
The perspective that has influenced the discourse
on women’s empowerment in our contemporary theory of change stems from the
feminist view of the equality of the sexes. This means appreciating,
articulating and ensuring equal rights for women in all spheres of life. To me,
this must be the outcome of institutional and policy reforms to enforce
constitutional and statutory provisions. Having said that, we cannot ascertain
the equality of the sexes only through changes in the mindsets and without
attempting to dislodge the power structures of subjugation. The unreconstructed
postcolonial institutional structures are built around the masculinity of power
and subjugate the weaker one. We need a major overhaul to challenge the power
structures of subjugation through radical institutional reforms.
These radical institutional reforms worked well in
Turkey, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Brazil and many other developing countries in
which the status of women has significantly improved as compared with Pakistan.
I hope that the new elected government will undertake some drastic policy
reforms to build well-governed and inclusive institutions of representation. In
our case, this means unleashing the trans formative potential of 50 percent of
the country’s population, who will play a critical role in the progress and
prosperity of Pakistan.
The central principle that governed the agenda of
reforms in these countries was the political will of the leadership to
formulate inclusive development programmes and invest in creating and sustaining
women’s institutions. Run by women, these institutions proved to be a bulwark
against physical and structural violence. The genesis of women’s own
institutions in Bangladesh goes back to the 1970,s. These institutions received
undisrupted government support for decades, which came to fruition in the form
of improved gender equity in the country. In Pakistan, one such institution for
women’s empowerment was set up in 1982 with the establishment of the Aga Khan
Rural Support Programme (AKRSP) in Gilgit-Baltistan. But the government’s
support for this institution dwindled over the years.
Today, we have some success stories that have the
potential to create a radical change through locally informed institutional
responses to the multiple vulnerabilities of women. The most apt example of
this is the Sindh government-funded Union Council Based Poverty Reduction
Programme (UCBPRP) and its successor the EU-funded Sindh Union Council and
Community Economic Strengthening Support (SUCCESS) Programme – being implemented
by the Rural Support Programmes (RSPs) under the technical supervision of the
Rural Support Programme Network (RSPN).
SUCCESS exclusively organised rural women in their
own grassroots institutions and helps them climb out of poverty through
skill-development, income diversification interventions and linking them up
with government services and supplies. The programme envisages to impact two
million poor women in eight districts across the province of Sindh. The women
who formed their own local organisations included those who neither had a voice
nor economic wherewithal to assert their position in a male-dominant and
conservative society.
The process of mobilizing women as the primary
actors of change has created a pragmatic and sustainable model that must be
replicated in order to get a larger impact, and must have consistent
governmental support across the country. Interestingly, these rural women have
representation in the district development committees along with all the
district line departments chaired by the deputy commissioner, with the aim of
reshaping the local development agenda in favour of the poor and women.
This process of engagement has put women at the center of the household economy and decision-making. SUCCESS is a good prospect
for formulating evidence-based women’s empowerment policies, both to meet our
development targets, and fulfill our commitment to SDGs and other international
conventions.
The writer is a freelance columnist based in
Islamabad.
Email: ahnihal@yahoo.com
Source : The News
Source : The News
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