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The
decade of the 1980s has truly been a decade of the women of Pakistan.
A powerful women's movement made a dramatic impact on Pakistan's
political scene. The concrete achievements of the women's movement
in its struggle against policies of General Zia's military regime
which were directed against women in the name of Islamisation, have
not been inconsiderable. A number of women's organisations in the
country came together in this struggle, which included the Women's
Action Forum (WAF) which has been the leading and the most effective
of these, the Democratic Women's Association, the Sindhiani Tehrik
and the Women's Front as well as the All Pakistan Women's Association
(APWA) the oldest of these which has been run by wives of senior
bureaucrats and politicians and has had a reformist but rather a
patronising orientation.
The decade of the 1980s was also a decade of degradation of Pakistani
women. The Zia regime, in its search for legitimacy, in the name
of Islam, embarked upon a series of measures that were designed
to undermine what little existed by way of women's legal rights,
educational facilities and career opportunities - as well as the
simple right for freedom of movement and protection from molestation
by males. That galvanised women of the country into militant action
in defence of their rights. The military regime's actions, rhetoric
and propaganda created an atmosphere which encouraged bigoted and
mischievous individuals to take the 'law' into their own hands and
harass women under the pretext of enforcing 'Islamic' norms of dress
or, indeed, for simply appearing in public. Such lawlessness was
allowed to go on with impunity. Women had to defend themselves not
only vis-a-vis the state but also against hostile mischief makers
in the society at large. Such attacks still continue. The women
have fought back.
These developments must be viewed against the background of quite
far-reaching changes in Pakistan society in the four decades since
independence, that have affected women's place in it, both in the
rural society and the urban It is the latter, the urban society,
with which we shall be most concerned here, for this is where the
changes challenge most forcefully established social practices and
attitudes.
It must be kept in mind, however, that everywhere, in both the rural
as well as the urban society, Pakistan remains a rigidly patriarchal
society in which women are treated as chattel, 'given' or 'acquired'
through arranged marriages, to spend their lives in the service
of a male dominated social system. By and large women are married
within biraderis (lineages) and the biraderi organisation provides
a framework within which women's lives are ordered. In the case
of corporate biraderis the power of the biraderi panchayat (council)
derives largely from control over decisions about whom a woman is
to marry. It is not only a single patriarch, the head of a nuclear
family, but the whole male dominated kinship organisation which
has a stake in the subordination of women. (for an account of biraderi
organisation cf.Alavi, 1972). No woman, even one with an independent
career in a city can set up a home on her own, without the 'saya'
(lit: shade or protection) of a male. A divorced woman or a widow
must turn to her father or brother, if they will have her. unless
she has a grown up son under whose protection she can live. This
is a powerful factor of control over women. Furthermore, not altogether
infrequently, especially amongst the poorer sections of the society,
especially in cities and amongst kammis or 'village servants'. a
daughter is 'sold' for money to a prospective husband and likewise,
husbands divorce and 'sell' their wives. A woman who is not prepared
to accept such a fate has little choice. She is a valued object,
a prized chattel.
Demographic statistics provide a measure of the effects of discrimination
against women. Pakistan is probably unique in the world in having
a lower number of women in its population than men i.e. 906 women
for every 1,000 men (Census of Pakistan - 1981) as against a world
average of 111 women to every 100 men. In the population segment
of 15 to 40 years olds there are 75 per cent more female deaths
than male. This is attributed to nutritional anemia that affects
most women in the country resulting from discrimination against
women in the sharing of food. They are given less and have often
to make do with left-overs. Because of the lower resistance of their
underfed bodies women are more susceptible to killer diseases; malaria,
gastro-enteritis and respiratory diseases, especially tuberculosis.
Repeated pregnancies also take a heavy toll by lowering their resistance
to disease. In the case of urban lower middle class women their
condition is aggravated both physically and psychologically by their
incarceration within the four walls of their appallingly confined
and insanitary homes. They get little of the sun and fresh air and
no recreation at all while their men go about everywhere freely
and are not affected therefore quite so much by their poor housing
conditions.
When attention is drawn to the subordination and oppression of women
in Pakistan and demands made for improvement in their lot, Pakistani
ideologues are quick to rebut such charges by painting an idealised
picture of the high status of women in Islam. But this is a non
sequitur, a specious line of argument that is intended to obscure
the real issues, those of the actual conditions to which women in
Pakistan are subject. It is against such a background that questions
about women in Pakistan society need to be looked at. Changes of
a variety of kinds are under way, some improving their condition,
others worsening them.
In rural areas, the place of women in society and their role in
the division of labour in production differs very widely from region
to region and also between different classes. And there have been
far reaching changes everywhere. To give only two instances, in
the Potohar area of North West Punjab, for example. which is a region
of fragmented bankrupt farms, massive numbers of men of working
age have left the villages for jobs in the army, in factories all
over Pakistan and, not least, as migrants, for work in Britain and
Western Europe and especially in the Middle East where they are
not permitted to bring their families to live with them. This has
brought about an extra-ordinary situation in villages of the region,
many of which are, as a result, inhabited mainly by old men who
are past working age, young children and women. It seems that in
these cases women have to carry the main burden of working the land
over and above their customary share in the farm economy and their
domestic responsibilities.
By contrast, in the rich canal Colony districts of the Punjab. in
the wake of the Green Revolution, many women have been withdrawn
from the farm economy and confined within purdah. Until these developments
in recent decades (with the exception of landlord families) women
have always had an active role in agricultural production in weeding,
harvesting and threshing of crops, and other operations. It is their
duty to cut fodder and to look after farm animals. Accordingly these
women enjoy freedom of movement and are not confined behind purdah.
A custom that gives them a degree of economic freedom is their exclusive
right to pick cotton . This is being undermined by recent changes).
For this women are paid in kind. The cotton that they receive in
payment is ritually sacrosanct, their privileged property which
men cannot lay their hands on. After the cotton harvest it is a
common sight to see women walking to town with a bundle of cotton
perched on their heads, going shopping, to barter the cotton for
something for themselves or, more likely, their children, without
having to ask the husband for permission. But after the Green Revolution
of the 1970s many well to do peasants, who had prospered, withdrew
their womenfolk from the labour force and confined them, to the
purdah, secluded and isolated within the four walls of their homes,
as a mark of their new higher social status. In the course of research
in Punjab villages my wife and I found that far from rejoicing in
this partial relief from the burden of work, the women resented
this change. Many of them described their new situation to my wife
as the equivalent of being locked up in a prison. They had lost
the small degree of economic freedom and with it their freedom of
movement. When one considers the implications of such a change,
one is led to a conceptual distinction between exploitation of a
woman's labour and a woman's oppression. While the burden of labour
on women has eased, though only slightly, their oppression has increased
enormously, a change which the women themselves see as one which
has left them feeling greatly deprived.
It is in the urban context that women's contribution to the family
economy has changed beyond recognition, as compared to conditions
forty years ago. These changes seem to be having a greater impact
on lower middle class families than either working class families
or upper class ones. A large component of the working class, in
Pakistani cities consists of migrant workers from the north of the
country whose families have been left behind in their villages.
We know too little about the consequences of that fact on the life
of single male workers in the city nor about the families left behind
in the villages. In the case of workers whose families live with
them in the cities, many of the women either do unskilled work in
factories or operate in the so-called 'informal economy' or are
engaged in domestic employment. They often prefer such employment
over home-based work, for waged employment pays better. Despite
the great increase in their burden of work and their independent
contribution to the family budget, judging from evidence brought
up in court cases during the last decade, it seems that the women
continue, nevertheless, to be subject to patriarchal domination.
By contrast problems of the majority of upper class women are different.
They have servants to do their chores and they do not need to (or
are not allowed to) take jobs and have careers. Their worries stem
from their total dependence on the husband and consequently insecurity
for fear of being abandoned by the husband in favour of a second
wife. In the absence of the possibility of an independent job or
career, compounded by extreme difficulty for women in setting up
an independent household without the 'saya', or protection, of a
male head of family, their dependence on the husband is total. They
are therefore reduced virtually to the status of well fed, well
dressed and well ornamented slaves who depend absolutely upon the
whim of their husbands. Where the husband ill-treats or abuses them
they must put up with it. Because of the difficulty in setting up
an independent household even women with careers share this problem.
Amongst the nouveau riche, in particular, a familiar pattern is
one of a first 'traditional ' marriage to a woman from the biraderi
(lineage), possibly not very well educated or fashionable. This
is often followed later in life by a marriage to an attractive socialite,
a fitting spouse for the arriviste, a woman well endowed to perform
the duties of a sophisticated hostess who can receive and entertain
his friends and associates, businessmen and bureaucrats, in style.
The first wife is discarded like an old shoe. She dare not insist
on a divorce for, generally, she has nowhere to go and virtually
no prospects of building a new life in a society that despises a
divorced woman who is invariably blamed for the failure of her marriage.
She is lucky if she has grown up sons who might make it possible
for her to set up an independent home. But in general, given such
prospects, upper class women are likely to live out their lives
in insecurity and anxiety. How common such situations are, would
be difficult to quantify.
Nor is the problem of dependence upon husbands absent in the case
of women of the lower middle classes or the working class. However,
in their case, as well as in the case of members of upper classes
to a lesser degree, pressures from biraderi (lineage) members and
elders tend, to some degree, to restrain husbands from abandoning
wives, daughters of their kinsmen. In Pakistan, unlike the West,
the social life of most people functions within frameworks of extended
kinship, and the values and norms of kinship obligations cannot
be flouted without penalty, except by the rich and the powerful
or those who live in cosmopolitan circles. On the whole one gains
the impression that the risk of a woman being abandoned by her husband
in favour of a more attractive woman is less common, though by no
means absent, in the case of lower middle class husbands, who can
less afford two wives and are in any case ground down by the humdrum
daily routine of their rather ordinary lives for such fanciful indulgence.
In the case of lower middle class families we can identify a two-fold
division. On the one hand there are families whose women are educated,
sufficiently at least to hold down a 'respectable' job. On the other
hand there are more traditional families whose women have not received
a good education who therefore do not qualify for 'respectable'
salaried jobs. In these latter cases women contribute to the family
economy by taking in home-based work under a putting out system
operated by entrepreneurs who are only too happy to exploit this
extremely cheap source of labour. General Zia's Islamisation policies
threatened most directly the first category of lower middle class
women, triggering off the militant women's movement of the 1980s.
Underlying these developments is the growing crisis of the lower
middle class household economy over the last forty years. At the
time of independence it was the normal expectation that man was
the provider for the family. Joint families were favoured because
of economies of scale in the domestic economy. A patriarch and his
brothers, with his sons and nephews would all go to work and bring
in the income needed to keep the family. Burdened with domestic
labour, women of this class were not classified as 'economically
active'. It might be said that urban lower middle class women were
amongst the most oppressed of women in Pakistan. being confined
to the 'purdah and char diwari' or the four walls of their home.
In villages even those women who are confined behind the purdah
nevertheless have relatively easy access to the company of other
women of the village which is very supportive for them. Likewise,
in old cities the layout of the mohalla (wards) has provided a similar
possibility of social interaction amongst women. But with the explosive
expansion of Pakistan's cities such patterns of spatial organisation
of society seem to have broken down. In such circumstances urban
lower middle class women became virtually prisoners in their diminutive
homes for going visiting would entail an elaborate logistic operation
reserved for very special occasions.
The continuous inflation in the cost of living in Pakistan over
the decades has brought about a situation where a man's wage is
no longer sufficient to keep the family. There was therefore a continuous
pressure to broaden the base of the family economy. Gradually and
steadily, more and more women were forced to find jobs to supplement
family incomes. The change is visible and quite striking. Initially
only a few occupations were thought to be respectable enough for
such women. As the pressure for jobs increased the concept of a
'respectable job' was progressively broadened to take in a wider
range of jobs. Initially, apart from high status professional occupations,
notably that of a doctor , what better), jobs in the teaching profession,
especially in girls' schools and colleges, were considered to be
respectable enough. About a third of the doctors and an equal proportion
of school teachers were women. Gradually this changed. The mantle
of respectability was now to cover also clerical jobs inplan
offices where women could work with men, but in public view. The
role of the personal secretary was initially suspect although it
was much better paid, because it entailed a close relationship with
the boss. But that too has changed. Today one finds women in a wide
range of occupations, including laboratory assistants or ticket
clerks at railway stations or clerks at post office counters and
so on, as well as lawyers, architects, engineers, journalists and
broadcasters. Needless to add, the numbers in the latter categories
of occupations are extremely small. With more and more women taking
up salaried jobs and in keeping with an increasing number of women
taking to higher education, new values have emerged. Women now desire
jobs and careers for their own sake so that an increasing number
of wives of well heeled professionals and women from the upper classes
take jobs not out of economic necessity but for self-fulfilment.
Education is the key to acceptable and respectable jobs and careers.
Lower middle class families would find it degrading to let their
women take up jobs as domestic servants or to work on the factory
floor (though some are driven to this out of desperation) i.e. jobs
for which education is not a pre-requisite. But families who expect
their women to take up jobs as teachers or office clerks (or better)
tend therefore to put a higher value on women's education than was
the case before - though financing the education of sons still takes
precedence. There was a time when women's education was thought
to be mere indulgence, wasteful of the money spent on it. There
is demand for women's education also from professional men who want
to marry reasonably educated wives, although not too highly qualified.
There is a concept of an 'over-qualified' woman i.e. a woman who
has better qualifications than her potential spouse. Such a woman
is positively at a disadvantage. Far too many engagements have been
broken when the fiancee has done too well at college or university.
Where both spouses are professionals or academics, if the wife's
career advances more rapidly it becomes a threat to the false pride
of the husband. Because of the heavy price a woman has to pay if
her marriage breaks down sometimes she holds back to keep her marriage
safe. But some marriages do break down on this account.
Given these social changes and the high degree of functionality
of women's education for middle class and lower middle class families
the threat to women's education that was posed by Islamic fundamentalism
and General Zia's so-called 'Islamisation' policies was a threat
to the family economy and to the new values and attitudes. These
families have therefore tended to subscribe rather to liberal social
philosophies or 'modernist' interpretations of Islam. They tend
to be sceptical of dogmatic versions of Islam propounded by ignorant
and bigoted Mullahs. There is therefore a considerable and growing
social base of secularism in Pakistan's political as well as social
life, a fact that is reflected in the repeated routs of the Islamic
fundamentalist Jamaat-i-Islami in three successive elections in
the country namely those of 1985, 1987 (local bodies election) and,
again, in 1988.
There are, however, many lower middle class households in Pakistan
where women have been given no education that could befit them for
'respectable' salaried jobs. Traditionally they were relegated to
the role of 'housewives'. But, gradually and with increasing rapidity
new avenues for exploiting the labour of these women haved
up. There are factories with women only work force, notably in the
ready made clothing trade, where they can go and work as seamstresses
or similar tailoring and finishing jobs, which are woefully underpaid.
There is, however, another alternative too whereby the labour of
women of this category is exploited without their having to leave
their 'char diwari' i.e. the four walls of their home. This is by
way of development of a classical form of 'putting out system' whereby
orders for the work to be done and the materials that are required
are brought to them in their homes and the finished goods are later
collected. For their long hours of labour, carried out in the midst
of the demands of a variety of domestic chores and clamour of a
multitude of children, they are paid a mere pittance - much less
even than the outrageously low level of wages for women who go to
work in factories. But for women who have families to look after
there is often no choice.
We can identify two patterns in such cases, although there are no
data available that can allow us to quantify their relative importance.
One is that when the family patriarch controls the operation. He
mediates with entrepreneurs brings home the materials and work orders.
delivers the finished goods and, most important of all, pockets
the money paid by the entrepreneurs. In effect the women of his
household are virtually his slaves. He guards their subordination
quite as jealously as any slave owner, deploying ideological weapons
against the women by a constant invocation of Islamic values, as
interpreted by himself and the Mullahs. On the other hand he builds
up images of the 'modern' ordinary working women who take up outside
employment as corrupt and un-lslamic, which he contrasts with that
of his own enslaved kinswomen who are good and pure, unsullied by
the eyes of strange men. Ideologically fundamentalist interpretations
of Islam reinforce the authority of the patriarch over his enslaved
womenfolk.
There is also another pattern of the putting out system. In this
case the entrepreneurs employ women agents who go around houses
(especially in katchi bastis or shanty town homes) distributing
orders and materials for work and collecting the finished goods.
In this case they are said to make payments directly to the female
head in the household. In the absence of research one can only speculate
whether in this case the balance of power in the household is shifted
thereby (even if only partially) in favour of women. In an interesting
study of Muslim women 'beedi' (cheap 'cigarettes' made of rolled
tobacco leaves) makers in Allahabad, Zarina Bhatty found that as
a result of contributing substantially (over 45 per cent) to the
household incomes, the women acquired a "greater importance
in household decision making process. ... (i.e.) an increased say
in spending money" (Bhatty, 1981: 45). It would be hazardous
to extend such a conclusion drawn from a study of a community of
Muslim rural labourers in India to urban lower middle class families
in Pakistan. Clearly there are a number of issues located here which
invite systematic investigation.
Home-based women workers, denied the freedom of movement and relative
independence of their sisters employed in salaried jobs, rationalise
their own predicament in ideological terms, through a self-image
of their moral superiority. Frustrated by their increasingly straitened
circumstances and lack of freedom, they are easily mobilised by
their men against women who go out to word. They are even made to
join public demonstrations, suitably enclosed in the chaddar or
burqa (the all-enveloping women's overalls that covers them from
head to foot). They parrot the complaints of their men that women's
employment takes jobs away from men and undercuts their salaries
and that, in any case, it is quite shameless and un-Islamic for
women to go about the city and work in offices with men. In their
own minds as well as in the minds of the men who control their lives,
their confinement to their homes offers a gain in respectability.
The life of lower middle class women in salaried employment is subject
to rather different kinds of pressures. Her working day starts early,
for she must feed her husband and children and send them off to
school before she herself rushes off to work. Traveling to work
is itself quite a battle, given the state of public transport in
Pakistan cities, especially Karachi. In order to attract women workers
whom they need, many large companies maintain fleets of minibuses
to pick up their women employees in the morning and take them home
after work. In the case of a woman who is the first to be picked
up or the last to be dropped home this can add an hour, or even
two, to the long day spent at work. She comes home tired. Whilst
her husband relaxes with a cold drink under a fan, she has to rush
straight into the kitchen to prepare the family evening meal. And
there are umpteen little chores to be attended to, young children
to be looked after and the family fed and put to bed. Some chores,
such as washing clothes and cleaning the house, are inevitably put
off for the weekend which therefore is not time for rest nor for
demonstrations in aid of women's rights. Given the race against
time only a very few working women can afford the time to go to
meetings and demonstrations even though they sympathise solidly
with their aims; women who happen to have particularly enlightened
and helpful relatives (e.g. a mother-in-law) or a co-operative and
politically committed husband (a rare commodity) who is willing
to take over some of their chores during their short absence. Only
those who are sufficiently well off to have servants to take care
of the domestic front can play an active and continuing part in
such activities. Mobility is another major obstacle in their way
so that only those women can take part in such activities without
too much difficulty who have their own cars or who have women friends
or close male relatives who can give them a lift (going with unrelated
males is unthinkable).
It is because of these difficulties that the vast majority of lower
middle class employed women cannot take a regular, not to say an
active and leading part in the women's movement. But this does not
mean that the vast majority of working women who are not blessed
with the advantages which make such activities possible- 'lack consciousness'
or that they are unaware of the issues that confront women in Pakistan.
One has only got to go and talk to some of them to get a measure
of the depth of their feelings and the clarity with which they themselves
see the issues. Under these circumstances the activists and the
leadership inevitably comes from women of better off families especially
those whom can afford servants and cars, mainly professional women
in their thirties. But it needs to be emphasised that they, nevertheless,
articulate by and large attitudes and demands that affect all working
women. These relatively small number of activists are like the tip
of a huge iceberg, their inarticulate sisters being submerged, for
the time being, in an ocean of work.
The women's movement in Pakistan thus revolves around educated women,
both professionals and those who take up salaried jobs. Official
propaganda under the long years of the Zia regime tried to discredit
the women's movement by caricaturing it as a movement of English-educated,
Westernised, upper class women whose heads are filled with foreign
imported ideas and who, the propaganda claimed, had no roots amongst
true Pakistani women. The fact of the matter is that the vast majority
of activists in the women's movement are closer to working women
of all classes than either the bureaucrats in government or much
of the political leadership or journalists, who all sit in judgement
over them. Most of these activists are new to the tasks that they
have taken upon themselves in organising and leading the movement.
In taking up these unfamiliar tasks they have demonstrated quite
remarkable qualities of leadership -- not only ingenuity and flexibility
but also a noteworthy personal humility. This last quality is reflected
in the commitment of WAF members to non-hierarchical organisation.
The Zia regime itself had much to do in creating conditions that
precipitated the movement and caused it to break out with much force.
Problems that confront women in Pakistan today have been accumulating
over several decades. The reason why the women's movement suddenly
erupted into action in the 1980s has much to do with the outrageous
attacks that were actually undertaken or were contemplated by the
Zia regime, in the name of 'Islamisation', a policy that was designed
(unsuccessfully) by the regime to gain political legitimacy. These
policies were calculated to degrade the place of women in Pakistan
society and to erode such legal rights that they did possess, and
to put up barriers in the way of women's education and their freedom
of movement and to obstruct their access to jobs and professional
careers.
Among the new 'Islamic' laws that were enacted by the Zia regime
was a change in the law of evidence, enacted in October 1984, purportedly
to bring the existing law of evidence in line with prescriptions
of Islam. Except in the case of the Hudood Ordinances of 1979 (prescribing
'Islamic' punishments) which laid down their own special rules of
evidence for hadd offences, the new law of evidence provided that
two male witnesses or in the absence of two male witnesses one male
and one female witness would be required to prove a crime. This
law as well as other proposed legislation, equated one man to two
women. This was so, for example, in the proposed new laws of Qisas
and Diyat which provided for financial compensation to be given
to the injured party by an accused in lieu of punishment in cases
of murder or bodily injury, it being held that in such cases the
'Islamic' remedy lay not in punishment of the offender but in compensation
to be paid to the victim or his family. This law was proposed by
the Council of Islamic Ideology and passed by the Majlis-e-Shoora
(Zia's legislative institutions). The compensation in the case of
women was to be fixed at half that for men. Such laws that put the
worth of a women at half that of a man, were a powerfully symbolic
factor that set the women's movement into action.
Besides these blatantly discriminatory laws that reduced a woman's
humanity by half, there were policies undertaken or contemplated
by the Zia regime that threatened the life and prospects of working
women more directly. Although the militant activities and demonstrations
of the women's movement were, in the first instance, directed against
the new laws, there were some no less weighty and more directly
felt underlying concerns, especially about the future of women's
education. In general laws and policies pursued by the Zia regime
were directed towards discouraging women from taking an active part
in activities outside the home and to limit the scope for their
self-expression.
There were proposals, for example, that threatened women's access
to higher education. Perhaps the most important of these was the
idea of segregating women within 'Women's Universities'. As proposed
by Zia's University Grants Commission, the existing three colleges
of Home Economics located at Karachi, Lahore and Peshawar were to
be upgraded to University status. Women were to be given the education
that was thought to be appropriate for them, namely to be trained
as housewives. They were to be denied a wider education that might
prepare them for professional or academic careers or jobs in government,
commerce or industry. Obstacles, such as higher required grades,
were placed in the way of women seeking admission to science courses
in Universities or places in medical colleges.
There was an attack too on women's participation in sports. Pakistani
women athletes and the women's hockey team were prevented from participating
in international events. Zia's Federal Minister for Sports and Culture
explained that women could participate in sporting competitions
only before an exclusively female audience or one in which only
mehram males and no others males were present ! Reporting this,
the press translated the term mehram inaccurately as 'blood relatives'.
That is not the case. The category of mehram defines relatives whom
a Muslim may not marry. A woman's mehram comprise her siblings,
ascendants and siblings of ascendants, descendants and descendants
of siblings and, amongst some sects, sisters' husbands. A first
cousin, such as father's brother's son is not mehram though a 'blood
relative'. As mehram defines an ego centred kindred, which would
be differently constituted for each woman, male spectators are effectively
ruled out. Women could engage in sports only in purdah ! This ridiculous
and meaningless rule illustrates only too well the arbitrary and
cavalier manner in which religious symbols were invoked to restrict
women's activities.
The issues of higher education and sports, in a society such as
that of Pakistan, affect mostly upper class, middle class and lower
middle class families. There are other policies of the Zia government
that bore down relatively more heavily on the most vulnerable component
of Pakistan society namely women of the poor. It must be said that
degradation of women in Pakistan is nothing new and is not the result
solely of the so-called 'Islamisation ' policies of the Zia dictatorship.
But it reached abysmally low levels in the wake of its legislation
and policies.
In the name of fighting against 'obscenity' and 'pornography' the
Zia government set in motion a mass campaign against women seen
in public. An atmosphere was generated in the country in which attacks
against women became commonplace, legitimated in the name of religion.
Such campaigns against women are led by mullahs, the custodians
of ignorance, and by criminals and mischief-makers in general, who
all seem to derive a kind of perverted psychic pleasure from molesting
women under the pretext of enforcing morality. A spate of directives
were issued by the Zia regime ordering female government employees,
women teachers and girls at schools and colleges to wear 'Islamic'
dress and the chaddar or burqa. As a direct result of such campaigns
against women who are depicted as a threat to male virtue, the morality
of Pakistani males sunk to new depths. They do not seem to be able
to resist the temptation to interfere with and manhandle women,
posing as guardians of public virtue. Violence against women has
been on the increase behind the cloak of 'Islamisation'. The most
obscene examples of such hypocrisy are numerous, widely publicised,
incidents where women's noses have been cut off or they have been
disrobed and paraded in the nude in public to 'teach them a lesson'.
As a result of public outrage aroused by such incidents, the Zia
regime announced punishments for such actions. But his so-called
'Islamic' regime did little to track down the culprits and punish
them. Nor did it engage in any public campaign to denounce such
actions and arouse public opinion against those who perpetrate them.
Such incidents and attacks on women still continue.
The Zia regime introduced Hudood Ordinances purportedly to lay down
'Islamic' punishments for certain crimes. These were barbaric punishments
such as cutting off of hands and stoning to death. There has been
some controversy in the country whether these are truly Islamic
prescriptions. That, as such, is not a matter that we need to pursue
here except to say that even where these were not actually carried
out in all cases, they carried a symbolic charge and provided a
rallying point to mullahs who demanded their full implementation.
Public lashings however, were carried out before vast crowds and
TV cameras, quite savagely - members of the crowd urging the 'executioners'
to hit 'the bastards' even harder. These were incredibly degrading
sights to watch. The law that concerns us here most directly, however,
is the Zina (Enforcement of Hudood) Ordinance of February 1979.
This Ordinance provided a new basis, as we shall see, for intimidation
and terrorisation of women by husbands or male relatives, especially
amongst the urban poor, but not amongst them alone. Ironically,
the Ordinance has also created a situation in which women victims
of rape dare not even complain about the sexual violence done to
them for fear of penalties that they themselves invite under this
iniquitous law, while the culprits go Scot free because of its extra-ordinary
provisions.
The Ordinance provides new weapons to men against women by virtue
of making Zina i.e. adultery and fornication, crimes against the
state, cognisable offences for which the police can take action.
Previously that was not the case, for then adultery was a matter
of personal offence against the husband by the male party to adultery
and extra-marital sex was not a penal offence at all. Now where
a wife leaves her husband, it has become all too easy for the husband
to go to the police and file a complaint against her for committing
zina whereupon the wife is arrested and jailed. Given police corruption
and the interminable length of time that it takes for such cases
to be adjudicated by courts of law (often years) the woman is effectively
punished without even going through the due process of law. The
husband can bail the wife out of jail. But when that happens. she
is totally at his mercy. for he would threaten to withdraw bail
which would return her to prison. Thus the woman's position is made
worse than that of a slave. According to Asma Jahangir, a distinguished
Pakistani woman lawyer and Secretary of the Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan: 'it has now become common for husbands to file complaints
of Zina against wives wanting separation. There are hundreds of
cases every year where women are arrested for Zina on complaints
filed by husbands' (SHE. March 1989: 81). It is likewise in cases
of elopement, where a father refuses permission to his daughter
to marry the man of her choice. The father brings charges of 'abduction'
in such cases and the law presumes zina unless the couple can prove
lawful nikah or marriage according to Islam.
The Zina Ordinance has created a 'Catch 22' situation for women
victims of rape. This arises from the fact that the ordinance brings
both adultery and fornication (zina) on the one hand and rape (zina-bil-jabr)
on the other, under a single law in a manner that is unsafe. Secondly,
the problem arises from the type of admissible evidence that is
prescribed under the Ordinance. The offence of rape is defined as
sexual intercourse against the will and/or without the consent of
the victim or with consent if the consent has been obtained under
fear of death or hurt. It also includes under the category of rape
sexual intercourse with consent of the victim where the offender
knows that the consent is given by the victim because she (or he)
believes that she (or he) is validly married to the offender although
the offender knows that they are not.
The catch in this law, that affects women victims of rape cruelly,
is the specification of the type of evidence that is admissible
for hadood or 'Islamic' punishment for zina and zina-bil-jabr which
is stoning to death (under certain conditions lesser punishments
called tazir would apply). The evidence required is either a confession
on the part of the accused (for an unmarried woman pregnancy is
self-evident proof) or the testimony of 'at least four Muslim adult
male witnesses about whom the Court is satisfied ... that they are
truthful persons and abstain from major sins ... (who) give evidence
as eye-witnesses of the act of penetration necessary for the offence.'
This is a type of evidence that is most unlikely to be found except
perhaps in the vastspaces of the Arabian desert.
In effect, therefore, the offence of rape is unprovable and rapists
now go about without fear. Reports of such offences have become
widespread. The law excludes the testimony of women, so that evidence
of the victim of rape counts for nothing. But if she complains of
rape (which she cannot possibly prove, according to this law) she
is taken to have admitted to having had sexual intercourse with
a man who is not her lawful husband, hence guilty of zina. For this
she invites the heavy penalty of this law. A woman has not only
no remedy under this iniquitous law for the sexual violence done
to her; she herself becomes a victim of the law.
In one way or another, women have been victimised under the Zina
Ordinance. Documenting the phenomenal increase, during the 1980s,
in the number of women who are languishing in Pakistani prisons
as a consequence of this law, Asma Jahangir points out that about
40 per cent of the convicted women whom she interviewed in Multan
Jail had been sentenced for the offence of zina. Most of the women
whom she interviewed belonged to low income families; out of 37
women 16 had a family income of only Rs. 500 per month (the wage
of a single labourer) and no one had a family income of more than
Rs. 3000 (the salary of an office clerk). Newspaper reports of victimisation
of women under this law are legion. For want of space, we will give
only a couple of examples to illustrate the different ways in which
women are victimised under it.
The most notorious case is that of Safia Bibi, an 18 year old virtually
blind girl, the daughter of a poor peasant, who was employed in
the house of the local landlord as domestic help. She was raped
by her employer's son and then by the landlord himself. As a result
the girl became pregnant. Her illegitimate child is said to have
died soon after birth. The girl's father filed a case with the police
alleging rape. The Court acquitted the landlord and his son for
lack of evidence as required under the zina Ordinance, the evidence
of the girl not being admissible and four pious Muslim witnesses
to the repeated acts of rape not being available. But by virtue
of her accusation the girl herself, being unmarried, was found guilty
of zina, her pregnancy being proof of it, and she was sentenced
to three years in prison, public lashing (15 lashes) and Rs. 1000
fine. In passing this sentence, the Court said that it was being
lenient in view of her age and disability ! This case created an
uproar and turned out to be an issue on which the Women's Action
Forum began campaigning. In the light of public outrage, General
Zia himself intervened and got the Federal Shariat Court to take
over the case, suo moto. An exceptionally liberal judge quashed
the outrageous conviction of the girl on the ground that if in the
case of rape the man (or men) were acquitted due to lack of the
required evidence, the woman too was to be given the benefit of
doubt. But there was no question here of prosecuting the rapists
and bringing them to justice.
A rather different type of case illustrates the way in which the
law is used by male relatives or husbands to terrorise and control
women. A young woman of 25, Shahida, got a divorce from her husband,
Khushi Mohammad. The divorce deed was signed by the husband and
was attested by a Magistrate. Under the law as it stands, however,
the divorcing husband is then required to register the divorce papers
with the local council. That he did not do. This was possibly a
deliberate omission which was to give him a hold over his ex-wife.
Shahida, after spending the prescribed period of ninety six days
of waiting (iddat), as prescribed for a divorcee, with her parents,
married Mohammed Sarwar. Khushi Mohammed, meanwhile decided that
he wanted her back or, in any case, he would not allow her to marry
again. So he took the matter to the law, charging her with zina.
Although Shahida produced before the Court the attested copy of
the divorce document which was signed by Khushi Mohammad and attested
by a magistrate, the Court did not consider it to be admissible
as it had not been registered with the local Council. The Court
decided that the divorce was invalid and therefore that the second
marriage illegal. As the two accused, Shahida Parveen and Mohammed
Sarwar had 'confessed' to living together as husband and wife, the
Court found them guilty, under the convoluted provisions of that
extra-ordinary Ordinance, of raping each other ! Accordingly they
were both sentenced to stoning to death. Happily, due to campaigning
by the women's movement that extreme sentence was eventually commuted-
but not all victims of this extraordinary law have been so lucky
.
In cases of eloping couples, parents deprived of the money that
they would get for marrying off their daughter (bride price is not
a normal custom) file a complaint with the police for abduction.
Even if the girl has found refuge with the family of the boy or
some supportive family, sexual intercourse is presumed in such cases
and both the girl and the boy are penalised for zina. It is by no
means unusual in such cases, especially if the young couple cannot
be found, for the police to arrest the families who are believed
to have given them support, as accomplices to zina.
The fact is that all such cases have affected not only the parties
directly involved but have intimidated Pakistani women in general,
for they dare not leave an oppressive and cruel husband or greedy
and grasping parents wishing to sell them, for fear of the consequences
for them under this terrible law.
Sadly, the eleven years of the so-called policy of 'Islamisation'
under General Zia, have produced in Pakistan a culture of intolerance.
This culture, above all, has persecuted women and subjected them
to all kinds of humiliation and ill-treatment, not to speak of inhuman
punishment under the Hudood Ordinances, as described above. The
Government embarked upon a mass publicity campaign, through all
the media, exhorting people to order their lives in accordance with
Islam, but as interpreted by Zia and his bigoted mullahs. Far more
mischievous was Zia's call to the 'people' to ensure that their
'neighbours' did likewise. This was a charter for the mischief-makers
and the bigots who took upon themselves the task of chastising women,
total strangers, and molesting them under that excuse. For example,
Mumtaz and Shaheed quote an instance, which is by no means unique
or isolated, when a woman who entered a bakery in an upper class
Lahore neighbourhood, was slapped by a total stranger for not having
her head covered ( Mumtaz and Shaheed, 1987: 71). A much publicised
and quite horrendous case is that of a congregation leaving a mosque
after Friday prayers who found a new born baby on a nearby rubbish
dump. The mullah promptly concluded that it was an illegitimate
child and, in accordance with the laws of Islam, as he understood
them, led the congregation of the pious Muslims in stoning the child
to death. Such outrageous conduct was the direct result of incitement
by the propaganda of the Zia regime, which has created an atmosphere
of bigotry and intolerance.
It was hoped that the democratic Government of Benazir Bhutto would
reverse this and, in particular, repeal the Hudood Ordinances (including
the Zina Ordinance. But a year after it was put in office the Government
has shown no inclination to change the laws. This is in part due
to the paralysis of the Government, due to a complex set of political
factors which we cannot go into here. Meanwhile the terrible legacy
of the Zia regime lives on. Prospects before Pakistani women remain
uncertain and threatening.
By: Hamza Alavi
Taken from: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/sangat/pakwomen.htm
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