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"Sorry,
no photographs, we are women officers from the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs." Seven of them might be ambassadors in countries around
the globe, and they comprise almost 10 per cent of the ministry's
408-strength cadre, but no photographs are provided of the 39 women
by Riffat Masood, director at the ministry headquarters, because
"permission" to obtain them would be a lengthy and delicate
process, she says, even while demonstrating no qualms about giving
me hers. It is, however, a promise she does not make good: the photo
never arrived.
Nonetheless,
Riffat, a 20-year veteran of the Foreign Affairs Ministry, is easy
to talk to, despite the fact that as Director in the personnel division
she is clearly overworked, seldom finding a moment even to just
sit behind her desk. While waiting for her to arrive from yet another
'meeting,' I glance around her office. On her desk lies a photograph
of two lovely young girls, probably her daughters. It isn't hard
to discern: here is a proud mother. Most of the other offices in
the ministry - the former Sheherezade Hotel - I notice, apart from
a couple on the third floor, are plain depressing. Not unlike the
country's foreign policy. However, with the new building coming
up, Foreign Office officials may have some reason to lighten up.
Treading
the worn-out carpets in the building I wonder whether after a change
of residence, the ministry's hitherto 'permanent fixtures' will
survive the move. For instance, there is the tall and imposing Majid,
the bearded security guard from the Islamabad police, whose customary
politeness disarms even the rudest journalist. Then there are the
dainty vegetable samosas at the Foreign Office cafeteria which are
the staple diet for starving hacks who are called in to attend briefings
at the oddest of hours. These savouries have, just like Majid, retained
their flavour for decades.
But
there have been some changes recently, which are too irritating
to ignore. New 'security' concerns make manoeuverability in a car
difficult once you enter the premises. Fresh cement blocks have
been laid out in a configuration that requires the skills of a stunt
driver to weave one's way through. One can actually sympathise with
VIPs trying to negotiate the mean curves. And what, I wonder, would
happen in the event of a 'situation' that required an immediate
exit?
Although
there has always been a presence of women in the ministry, in a
positive turn of events, their numbers are actually increasing.
And even while it is difficult to access their photographs, the
electronic media has recently been focusing on the women in key
positions at the ministry.
Seated in Riffat's office I also witness a demonstration
of their increasing clout. "You do not have a single mark but
you claim you were down with chicken pox," says Riffat Masood
sternly to a young diplomat who had disappeared from office for
a while. In fact, authority clearly comes easily to Riffat, whose
office has more traffic than Tariq Road on any normal day.
Still,
the women at the Foreign Office, some of whom merit the description
"cream of the ministry," wonder if one of "theirs"
will climb any further in the official hierarchy .
"Presently Fauzia Nasreen, a grade 21 officer, is our ambassador
in Warsaw. Let us see if she makes it to the office of additional
secretary when she returns. She will be the first one to claim this
title if promoted," says Riffat. The other 21- grader is Asma
Anisa, currently serving as ambassador in Beirut. So why is it that
women have been denied senior positions in the ministry? There can
be no arguing with their capabilities, but current Foreign Minister
Khurshid Mehmud Kasuri and former Foreign Secretary Riaz Khokar
were two of perhaps just a handful of men in decision-making positions
at the ministry, who did not hesitate to acknowledge the fact. And
while their entirely professional attention was always welcome,
discloses one woman ministry officer, there were other men - some
in senior positions - whose attentions the women could well have
done without!
Interestingly the situation was not always so bleak. In the
'70s - the Bhutto years - one diplomat, Farida Shah, actually made
it to the post of additional secretary.
Then came General Zia-ul-Haq, who besides having several
discriminatory laws against women introduced during his tenure,
also decreed in an unwritten law that single women in the Foreign
Affairs Ministry should be denied foreign postings. Many women,
including the courageous Asma Nisa and Seema Baloch, fought back,
but some women resigned in protest. And as a result, fewer women
demonstrated interest in joining this service. The late poet, Parveen
Shakir, an outstanding CSP officer, who was already undergoing training
at the Civil Services Academy with a view to joining the Foreign
Office, in fact, asked for another ministry. Her change of heart
reportedly owed to the fact that she had gotten married in the meanwhile,
and felt that could be detrimental to career advancement in this
service.
Marriage does undoubtedly play a significant role in the
lives of women officers. "For women here, the social and cultural
situation is very difficult. A Foreign Office woman's spouse will
always be number two, as the focus, especially if the she is posted
abroad, is on her. That doesn't go down too well in our society,
so many women have opted out of the service," says Riffat Masood.
"The other problem is the family structure - foreign postings
often mean divided families and nomadic living," she adds.
However, in the late '80s women started returning to the
Foreign Office. At first it was just two to three joining every
year, but the '90s registered a steady increase.
And increasingly also, Foreign Office women are making their
voices heard. One Pakistani woman diplomat, for example, walked
out of an American reception while abroad because of what she claimed
was a "humiliating" security check. She received an apology
the next day. She has also made a strong pitch to the ministry that
the issuance of Pakistani visas from the capital she is based in
should be at par with the ones that the host country issues to Pakistanis
- a figure that is presently negligible.
And do their Indian counterparts abroad, with their beautiful
saris and bindis, give our women in the field tough competition?
"Not at all. There is no one-upmanship with the Indian cadre.
In fact, while abroad, especially at the UN, I observed that after
the European and American women it is the Asians - and that definitely
includes us, Pakistani women - who are most outspoken and outshine
all the others," says Riffat.
So will Pakistan finally have its first woman Foreign Secretary?
One woman nearly made it to the office of the Foreign Minister,
even though she was not from the cadre.
All eyes now are on Fauzia Nasreen.
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