
The cooperation of the international community at large is, indeed, necessary, especially from the nations that have a significantly powerful status. Incorporating women into the peace process is crucial, but not solely because Ms Lodhi says they can act as mediators. Not all women are good mediators. The correct approach is that women are capable of leading other roles, too, but that they have not been entrusted with opportunities. Female participation needs to be nurtured and although somewhat counterintuitive coming from Pakistan having its own women’s issues, we fully support the claim.
While Pakistan has had its share of women in leadership roles, be it a female prime minister or ambassador, the majority of women remain sidelined owing to cultural and societal mindsets. In almost every area of public life, women have prescribed a special set of rules. Examples of differential treatment include separate lines in some public spaces, discrimination and derogatory attitudes shown towards female drivers, and the popular glare in public when women uncharacteristically engage in an errand that men usually do. Both, in Pakistan and globally, attitudes towards women have to be modified. Whereas within the country, we need less protectionism and more encouragement of women to participate in the public sphere, they require facilitation in countries of conflict due to grave human rights violations, such as rape and physical abuse.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 29th, 2018.
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