Another
International Women's Day will have come and gone.
Yes, another day of paying lip-service to the cause
of the Pakistani woman will have passed. Another day
of waxing eloquent on the issue of Karo-Kari and the
Hudood Ordinances. Another photo opportunity for all
those political opportunists who never tire of publicising
how much their hearts bleed at the plight of the Pakistani
woman.
And
yet little has changed on the ground. Women continue
to be slaughtered in the name of honour, the Hudood
Ordinances remain on the statute books, while innocent
women, accused of adultery, languish in jails under
this draconian law.
What's
more, even President Musharraf's edict to ensure one-third
representation of women in the local bodies and the
assemblies is being challenged once again in certain
quarters. In lower Dir, for instance, the menfolk
have decided that no woman will be allowed to contest
in the bye-elections to a local bodies seat that has
fallen vacant and neither will they be allowed to
vote. And supporting them in this unholy mission are
not just religious parties like the JUI (F) and JI,
but Ms. Bhutto's PPP, Mr. Nawaz Sharif's PML and Mr
Asfandyar Wali's ANP. Not a voice of dissent from
these stalwarts who profess to be liberal and progressive
and never let go of any opportunity to lash out at
the forces of extremism in society. Their unstinted
support has strengthened the hands of retrogressive
forces who hold sway over the destiny of women.
As it is, only six of the 136 seats reserved for women
are occupied, the rest are lying vacant. Women's participation
in local politics is not the only thorn in the religious
parties' flesh. Attempts to educate the girl child
are also beginning to alarm them. In the Diamer district
of the Northern Areas, eight girls' schools run by
local NGOs were torched last month, on the grounds
that since they were funded by foreign agencies they
were unIslamic. This is not the only incident of its
kind. Last year, another girls' school was torched
by extremists. However, it's not just a woman's life
that is held hostage by the forces of regression and
extremism.Their all-pervading presence and influence
is being felt equally in all other spheres of life.
Increasingly, they are being allowed to get
away with murder - literally. The Quetta carnage,
in which 45 people were killed by suicide bombings
and gunfire, is a case in point. That this happened
on the 10th of Moharram, when the country's security
agencies were on 'red alert', says something about
the security and surveillance network in the country.
And speaks volumes about the network of the extremists,
who have struck for the third time in the last six
months in Quetta - 80 people have already died in
attacks on police cadets and a Shia mosque.
As always, President Musharraf and Prime Minister
Jamali have expressed "extreme outrage"
at this "dastardly incident," called for
"extreme measures" to bring the culprits
to book and announced compensation. But expressions
such as "extreme outrage," "extreme
measures" and "extreme steps" have
begun to ring hollow, in the face of this continuing
spiral of violence. Had the whip been wielded on these
proliferators of intolerance and hatred, the country
would not have been held hostage to these repeated
bouts of violence.
The press cried itself hoarse on the dangerous
jihadi foreign policy course we were steering, but
they were accused of working against the country's
"national interests." Now that our "national
interests" have changed post September-11, the
powers-that-be are finding it increasingly difficult
to rein in their erstwhile comrades-in-arms and current
partners-in-government.
As the curtain goes up on the first India-Pakistan
Test and one-day series, all of us are holding our
collective breath, keeping our fingers crossed and
praying that no miscreant, or worse, extremist, strikes.
Here's to shanti (peace), tolerance and a good game
of cricket.