07 Jun Women are more important than cookies
Most of this month, Pakistan, its legislators, media pundits, policymakers and intellectuals are in feisty debates surrounding cookies, helicopter per km rates and the banning of cheese imports to Pakistan. I would like to insist that this is a great strategy that works in favor of anyone who wants to distract from pressing issues such as the fact that women are holding up this nation with great peril and cost to themselves. They are unsafe in their bedrooms, in their kitchens, in their offices, in the fields, when they travel and when they dare to speak up and let out a peep of protest.
Here are some recommendations that could double as a caution: Unless women of Pakistan are not elevated in status and in body integrity, nothing in terms of public policy and sovereignty will work out for the country.
I dare to caution because 21 percent of underage girls in Pakistan are married off without consent. I dare because our glorious Gender Inequality Index Rank is 130 and the Global Gender Gap Index Rank is 143. Put simply, we are among the first countries to prioritize, protect and fuel male toxicity and oppression. Put another way for those who don’t like women whining, we are among the first globally to crown men that violate women. So if there were a medal for that, Pakistan would be its first honorary recipient.
I also dare to make these recommendations to the current government because the number of women selected to make up the cabinet, both federal and provincial, can be counted on the fingers of a chimpanzee’s left hand.
I put forth some legal suggestions because the law is part of the violation of women’s status as equal citizens: Hudood Ordinances, the Law of Evidence and the Citizenship Act.
Here are some preachy two cents, which if I were a man, could be worth a million dollars.
Give all women cell phones. Give them Internet on the cell phones. Then leave them alone to browse, learn and find solidarity networks to escape from violence. About 93 percent of women face violence here. Women teledensity numbers in Pakistan are among the worst. UN’s ITU reports a few years back, shows the gap between male and female Pakistani cellular phone users, is highest globally at 17%.
Punish violence against women such as acid burnings, honor killings (Average of 1,000 a year according to HRW) and rape. Almost all men get away with murder, abuse, harassment and rape in Pakistan. As seen from the recent hashtag campaign #JusticeForKhadija, no matter how many times a woman in stabbed in daylight, with witnesses and video evidence, chances are the accused will walk away. Until there is no justice for violators, women will continue to be soft targets. Unless the judicial system, dominated by men are not gendered sensitized, women will suffer.
Engage men in public policies to change laws against violence against women. Since it is men who perpetrate discrimination in workplaces, government and in the fields, they must be part of the dialogue. Conversely, women telling men what to do and how to do it, does result in much noise, and awareness, but hardly translates into impactful legislation and implementation. Men block them. Other men, those with kind mothers, those who do not harbor hate for women, should be asked by this government to pass on their power, their mic and their security to women.
Respect expertise. In Pakistan, people who hold irrigation ministries, go ahead and run sports or even religious affairs portfolios. I urge the government to put in charge of women, those who have not held, say, waste-management portfolios. Employ leaders instead who certifiably understand the pain of human rights violations.
Let there be a revolution of women’s rights over their own bodies. Move away from the tenth century model where women were regulated for having women bodies. Let them, love, marry and have children as they please. Don’t punish them for changing their minds. Holding women’s bodies sacred is immoral because, if men were regulated this way, it would drive them mad. The only difference is that women are not permitted to be angry. When I say command over bodies, it includes the brain. Let women nourish their thoughts and cognitive concepts as ambassadors of this country. Not as relics. GDP will go up, honor killings will go down and motherhood, which this society values, will be in it’s the healthiest form.
Lastly, abolish and eliminate parallel legal systems and informal dispute resolution mechanisms that discriminate against women. Think of jirgas or panchayatts as the place where women and young girls go to be killed. Hardly is there a decision from these male-only self-appointed jurists, that allow a woman to walk away without being gang raped, ripped off dignity or killed.
Once we do some or all of this we can go back to the national debate about cookies, helicopter rides and cheese import bans.
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