violence against women in balochistan

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    Violence against women in balochistan

    QUETTA, July 6: Speakers at a seminar on Wednesday said that despite various

    laws there seemed to be no reduction in violence against women because the lawswere not being implemented properly.

    At the seminar organised by Balochistan Foundation for Development (BDF),

    Balochistan Minister for Inter-Provincial Coordination Dr Ruquiya Saeed Hashmi

    underlined the need for political parties to raise voice against the menace.

    She said there was a law to deal with harassment of women at homes and workplaces but

    the law was not being enforced properly.

    The provincial president of Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, Usman Kakar, pointed out

    that women were denied the right to inherit property. He described the attitude of religio-political parties as a hindrance in efforts to deal with the problem.

    He said that some feudal lords and tribal chieftains got their daughters or sisters

    married to the Holy Quran in order to save property.

    He said the killing of women in the name of honour was a reflection of the brutal and

    inhuman mindset.

    National Party leader Dr Shama Ishaq said women were being murdered in the name of

    honour in Jaffarabad and Nasirabad districts. She regretted that both educated and

    uneducated people in the society avoided giving property rights to their daughters andsisters.

    She claimed that several women were detained in Balochistan`s jails as they could not

    pay small fines of Rs3,000 to Rs5,000.

    Awami National Party leader Jamali Khan accused tribal system, ignorance and role of

    some religious political parties as major causes of violence against women.

    Ghulam Nabi Marri of Balochistan National Party-M said the women were also being

    subjugated of violence in Balochistan like other provinces of the country. He said his

    party strongly condemned the incidents of karo-kari (honour killing).

    Ms Salma Hashmi of Pakistan Muslim League-Q said although legislation to controlviolence against women had been made but it was yet to be enforced. She said that only

    an educated society could redress violence against women.

    Ms Fouzia Marri of PPP, Raza Ali Hazara and others also spoke at the seminar.

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    Aurat Foundation released a report on Tuesday which states at least 56 cases of

    violence against women in Balochistan in the first six months of 2010.

    Addressing a press conference, Programme Officer Ishfaq Mengal and other officialsincluding Muhammad Haroon Daud and others said that 56 incident of violence against

    women took place in Quetta, Mastung, Chaghi, Kalat, Bolan, Jhal Magsi, Jaffarabad,

    Naseerabad, Zhob, Noshki and Lorlai.

    He noted that 20 out of the total women were killed in the name of honor killing four fordomestic violence, five committed suicide, five were burnt with acid.

    Overall Cases of Violence against Women in Balochistan:

    The study has shown that a total number of 56 incidents of violence against women

    occurred in 28 districts of Balochistan between (January and June) 2010. Out of a total of

    56 cases of violence against women, there were:12 cases of murder:

    20 cases of.honor. killing:

    0 cases of abduction/kidnapping:

    4 cases of domestic violence:

    8 cases of suicide:

    4 cases of rape/gang-rape:

    1 cases of stove burning:

    5 cases of Acid Throwing

    2 cases of miscellaneous in natureOf the total of 56 incidents, there were 20 cases of.honor. killing; 12 cases of murder; 4

    cases of rape/gang-rape; 8 incidents of suicide; 1 cases of stove burning; 15 cases of AcidThrowing; 4 cases of domestic violence; and 2 cases were of miscellaneous in nature.

    Violence against women in Balochistan increased in 2008

    * NGO says 115 of 600 cases were of honour killing

    * Dialogue participant says nationalist and communal sentiments, colonial mindset

    confront those protesting against violence

    By Malik Siraj Akbar

    QUETTA: Aurat Foundation, a non-governmental organisation working for womensrights, has said violence against women in Balochistan intensified in 2008, but Balochsociety still adopts a defensive attitude and justifies the killing of women in the name of

    honour and tradition.

    In a dialogue with media representatives on Problems in accessibility of informationabout violence against women on Monday, the organisation said Baloch women were

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    victims of violence due to widespread illiteracy, entrenched tribal traditions, distorted

    interpretation of Islam and economic dependence of women on men.

    Cases: The organisation said around 600 cases of violence against women were reportedin 2008, which included the murder of 89 women in the first nine months of the year. At

    least 115 women were murdered in cases of honour killing. The reported cases included255 incidents of women being subjected to domestic violence. People are unwilling to

    discuss the violence as a majority of Balochistan people justify such acts in the name oftradition, it said. In some other cases, violence against women in rural areas remains

    unreported in media because of inaccessibility of the area as well as the dominance of

    men in society, who believe the publication of reports of violence against womenamounts to the disrepute of their respective tribes.

    The years most disturbing news concerning the plight of women came from Naseerabad

    district in Balochistan, where five women were allegedly buried alive by tribal elders in

    the name of honour. Federal Minister Mir Israrullah Zehri and Senate Deputy Speaker

    Jan Muhammad Jamli defended the incident on the Senate floor and called it a part ofBaloch traditions and the government failed to expose the culprits and the motives

    behind the killings. The Naseerabad killings still remain a mystery. Violence againstwomen is a global phenomenon. It takes place in different parts of the world under

    varying pretexts, Aurat Foundation Balochistan Co-ordinator Saima Javaid said. She

    said, Our biggest concern is that such violence is unabated, rampant and unnoticed.Dostain Khan Jamaldini, a researcher, said various hurdles hindered objective reporting

    of womens issues in the province. He said violence against women is not taken seriously

    or addressed at the community level.

    Confront: Nationalist as well as communal sentiments and a colonial mindset confront

    those protesting violence against women. Political leaders remain defensive on the issue,and describe media and NGO reporting as an intrusion in internal matters and traditions.

    Similarly, communal segments of society dismiss such reports as Western propaganda

    against Islam. We need to set our house in order before becoming defensive. The poorstate of womens rights is a bitter reality in our society and we cannot ignore this serious

    matter for long under different subterfuges, Jamaldini said. The participants of the day-

    long dialogue agreed that print and electronic media could best highlight violence againstwomen by describing it as a practice being promoted in the name of Islam and tribal

    traditions. Journalists and scholars should not use unqualified religious leaders as their

    primary source in write-ups and reports. Those who contend that Islam is responsible forthe suppression of women and violence against women are oblivious to the true teachings

    of the religion. Islam gives equal status to women in the social, educational and economic

    spheres, according to one of the speakers.

    Illahuddin Khilji, another Aurat Foundation representative, said gender discriminationtowards women by male lawmakers, journalists and religious scholars contributed to

    biased reporting of events, while their female counterparts often exaggerated the issues

    in their reports.

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