Mauripur is a suburban area of the sprawling metropolis. A mixed population of Pathan, Baloch and Seraiki people resides in Jhaskani Muhalla near Grex Stop on Hawke’s Bay Road and adjoining areas.
Women here are not allowed to step out of their homes without a male family member. They are also not allowed to get their CNICs made, which deprives them of voting right.
These women, who say they are keen to bring about a change in the country, would not have been counted in the census had the primary requirement of the exercise to have a CNIC not been relaxed by the chief statistician of the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
Standing at the gate of her residence, 20-year-old T* shares her ordeal. "I want to do a lot in my life,” she says. “But living in this part of the city, it is a dream to even avail the development programmes running in our area and learn something. Because we do not have CNICs, the programmes do not enrol us."
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T speaks about the reasons their male family members give to justify not letting the women obtain CNICs. According to her, the men do not allow them to get their pictures clicked, which is an essential requirement for the CNICs.
“What is the use of CNIC for women who are not allowed to even step out of their houses without their husbands, brothers or sons?” she laments. “Our forefathers never got their wives’ cards made. How can we go against them?”
Samina Bernard, a local who is actively working for the rights of women in the area, talks about the daily struggle that women face. According to her, the men say that why women would want CNICs when they have been getting everything at home since ages. “They will keep getting food and clothes without CNICs, they say.”
Confined to homes
Some years ago, a small office was set up in the streets of Father's Colony, where a man was appointed to register the female residents for CNICs, shares Bernard. However, the office shut down recently when no one went to register themselves.
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Benazir Bhutto Shaheed Youth Development Programme (BBSYDP), running under the Benazir Bhutto Shaheed Human Resource Research and Development Board, was also set up in the area.
"The BBSYDP requires CNICs to register women to get vocational trainings at their centres,” shares A* a resident, hiding her face behind her veil. “The trainees get stipend, too, but people like us cannot avail anything."
A long way to go
"We usually go door-to-door during the day to tell the women about their rights and how they can make the men in their houses realise that their CNICs are as important as the men’s," says Bernard. However, she regretted, the women are afraid of the men and cannot go against them.
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"We are trying to educate people but women here obey their males blindly,” she says. “They do not step out no matter what the conditions are despite knowing that they are deprived of many rights."
*Names withheld to protect identities
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