Saturday, May 26, 2012


Gandhara

Pakistan: Finally An End To Bartered Brides?

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Here is some welcome news for women's rights in Pakistan.
 
The Pakistani National Assembly this month passed a bill that outlaws the onerous practice of settling disputes between tribes and families by using women as peace tokens. 

The practice, known as Sawra, has a long history, but the parliament decided that there is no reason to continue it, particularly when the bartered bride is doomed to a lifetime of unhappiness in her forced marriage.
 
A word about how Sawra works: when someone is killed in a blood feud between tribes, the guilty party can make amends by giving his sister or daughter to the victim's family. The "peace token" is forcibly married to one of the victim's male relatives and usually will be treated as an object of recrimination and bitterness by her new family, which will work her like a slave.
 
But outlawing the practice of Sawra is one thing; ending it is another.
 
As the new law was passed this month along with bans on other forms of forced marriage and sexual discrimination, at least one victim of Sawra was in hiding.

The girl, Zarwari, did something unthinkable earlier this year when she went to a high court to challenge her parents' right to award her in marriage for an alleged crime committed two decades ago.
 
That crime centered on one of her uncles allegedly eloping with a neighbor's daughter. To settle the dispute, Zarwari's father promised upon her birth that she would marry the aggrieved father of the runaway bride. The fact that the aggrieved father is now 80 years old, and Zarwari is in her early 20s, seems not to matter to either family.
 
Zarwari, who took shelter in a safe-house run by the government during her court appeal, won her suit. But her court victory has done little to guarantee she is now out of danger. She remains in the safe-house today, afraid to go back home. 
 
The question now for all victims of forced marriages is how long it will be before mindsets change to fit the new law. That is the job of community activists and no-one should underestimate either the size of the task or the importance of trying.
 
As Sima Munir, a leader of the Awrat Foundation, a women's NGO working in Pakistan, tells Radio Mashaal, bartered brides face enormous social pressure to submit to their fate.
 
"Sawra is an inhuman tradition where girls are treated as animals after [forced] marriage," Munir says. "But whenever a woman asks for help against all this cruelty, the society does not regard her well for demanding her rights. The women who tolerate this cruelty are considered noble instead."
 
Under the new law, forcing a woman into marriage for settling a dispute will be punishable by 3 to 5 years of imprisonment and a fine of around half a million rupees (about $5,600). 
 
-- Ahmad Shah Azami

Tags: human rights , women , Pakistan

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by: Anonymous
November 27, 2011 14:37
Progress...

by: abbas kassar from: hyderabad, pakistan
November 28, 2011 03:52
In Sindh feudal system still prevails in which women or girls have no right to choice of marriage. Hundreds are killed under family honor to refuse arranged marriages. Women Protection Law is there but all feudal lords of country are sitting in parliament and cabinets so no law is implemented. Police and administration officers are appointed from among the relatives of these feudal lords. Whole system is corrupted.I am rights activist and journalist but 180 million people of Pakistan are helpless before influential feudal lords patronized by president, prime minister ( always from same class) and generals.The whole cruel system is supported by USA. So God help us or world community to get us rid of feudal system. Feudal lords hold their own courts called Jirgas despite ban by higher judiciary but because the rulers belong from this class.

by: abbas kassar from: hyderabad, pakistan
November 28, 2011 13:51
8000 INCIDENTS OF VIOLATION AGAINST WOMEN IN 2010
BY ABBAS KASSAR
HYDERABAD, November 28, 2011: There has been no let up in violence against women in Pakistan rather incidents are on increase each succeeding year. According to Aurat Foundation there was increase of more than 33 percent in violation of women in 2010 in comparison of preceding year. In 2010 there were 8000 incidents of violations against women with 5295 in Punjab and 1652 in Sindh, 650 in KP, 79 in Balochistan and 127 in Islamabad. 2236 women were kidnapped 1436 killed, 486 of domestic violence and 633 had committed suicide after being weary of the miserable life. 557 women were killed under honor killing while 928 were gang raped. More than 100 incident occurred of sexual harassment and acid throwing. The figures were told in a gathering held in Hyderabad last day which demanded that legislation be made declaring violence against women as crime and special courts be set up to hear cases of rape. The gathering was told that violence against women was on rise in Pakistan and especially in Sindh where the authorities were silent and get the issue taken for granted. Due to which in almost all districts of Sindh the cases of killing women under Karo Kari, rape, gang rape, torture, domestic violence and child marriages are happening. The speakers were of the view until the culprits were not punished the violence against women which was continuing since centuries could not stop. They said at present the law does not admit violence against women as crime and takes it as personal matter of a family. They said it was not issue of home but of state and to stop it needs harsh legislation. The leader of Women Action Forum professor Amar Sindhu said the continuous struggle of women rights organizations has brought some kind of awareness among women and society due to which few laws were under process of legislation. She said it was due to their struggle that todays most women members of assemblies raise the issue in parliament and that the victim woman now is approaching the law enforcement agencies and courts for justice. She demanded cases of rape be tried in special courts. She lashed out at Jirga system and said if the feudal lords and Jagirdars were to decide fate of victims then how they can get justice. She said despite participation of women the process of legislation for protection of women rights has not been completed. Women activists Arfana Mallah, Zahida Detho, Hussain Musrat Shah and others also spoke on the occasion. They also deplored that the state has failed to implement the provisions of law which was passed to bust the attempts of sexual harassment of women in work places. They also criticized that the centers for providing legal aid to women set up by this government in various cities have remained inactive due to which women victims of violence were suffering.
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About Gandhara

Gandhara is a blog dedicated to Afghanistan and Pakistan written by RFE/RL journalists from Radio Mashaal (Pakistan), Radio Azadi (Afghanistan), our Central Newsroom, and other services. Here, our people on the ground will provide context, analysis, and some opinions on news from the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. Send comments or questions to gandhara [at] rferl.org.