Women, nongovernmental organizations, and a council of conservative Muslims are doing their best to avoid a repeat of the poor 2008 election showing among women.
EnlargeThe last time Pakistanis went to the polls, few women from the rural conservative areas of Pakistan cast a vote. And as the country marks its first-ever civilian to civilian transition of power?this?month,?officials worry it will happen again.
Skip to next paragraph' +
google_ads[0].line2 + '
' +
google_ads[0].line3 + '
Subscribe Today to the Monitor
While many women in urban areas actively engage in civil and political society, in rural areas of Pakistan it?s a different story:?Tribal tradition shapes the way the patriarchal society works, keeping women in this region largely out of public life.?
Local woman?s rights activists are working to inform women about their right to vote, in the hopes of challenging the paradigm here.
?Although the political culture in the [rural parts of the] country is not [accommodating]?of women, there is more attention being paid to women issues. We are seeing a difference because women are raising their voice against this injustice,? says Farida Shahid, executive director at Shirkat Gaah, a prominent women rights organization in Pakistan.
There is much to do: Only 37 million women registered to vote, compared with 49 million registered male voters.?This year some?11?million voter-age women, mostly in Pakistan?s conservative rural areas, do not even have the national identity cards required to register to vote, according to the watchdog group.
In 2008, out of the 28,800?special polling stations set up for them, women did not cast a single vote at 564 polling stations ? the majority of which were in conservative northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Province. Though that could be because men did not permit women to vote alone,?only 38 percent of registered women voters cast ballots, compared with 50 percent of male voters, according to the Pakistani independent polls watchdog Free and Fair Election Network.?
Door to door?
There are a dozens of?organizations, including the Election Commission of Pakistan, working to inform women about their right to vote, encourage them to sign up for national ID cards, and educate men and women about women's rights and their equal status in society, including?South Asia Partnership Pakistan.?
Sidra Ali?works with the Aawaz Voice and Accountability program,?which?specializes?in social mobilization in rural areas. She?is going door-to-door in Charsadda, a village in the northwest of Pakistan, urging woman who have ID cards to make the trip to one of the?estimated 18,000?women?s polling stations on May 11.
storm shelters nick lachey lifelock chevy volt christina hendricks camp david hawaii weather
কোন মন্তব্য নেই:
একটি মন্তব্য পোস্ট করুন