National Working Women’s Day: On a day of celebrating achievements, a resolve for nation-building

Hundreds of women march from Fawara Chowk to Raja Bazaar in Rawalpindi.



RAWALPINDI/ ISLAMABAD:


Despite all the hardships they face, working women in Pakistan have refused to give in to the patriarchy in our society and have proven their commitment to working shoulder-to-shoulder with men.


To acknowledge their contribution, December 22 was designated as “National Working Women’s Day” last year by the government. To celebrate how far they have come, working women from across the twin cities held a walk from Fawara Chowk to Raja Bazaar in Rawalpindi on Saturday.

Holding placards inscribed with slogans such as “Empowered women - Enlightened society” and “Gender discrimination - a hurdle in institutional progress,” hundreds of working women teachers, health workers, engineers, journalists, lawyers, civil servants and government workers took part in the hour-long walk on the busy Benazir Bhutto Road. They all resolved to extend their role in nation-building.

Assistant Commissioner Cantonment Nazia Perveen Sudhan, Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N) Senator Najma Hameed and Member National Assembly (MNA) Tahira Aurangzeb were among the participants.

Senator Hameed said steps need to be taken to ensure security to women, especially those whose jobs required them to work outdoors. She said there is no doubt in the fact that the pace of national progress can be accelerated through women education and empowerment.

“There is a need to provide secure and congenial atmosphere to women at workplaces. And this can only be ensured through raising awareness and sensitising men,” opined a female college lecturer who took part in the walk.

Insecure work environments, job insecurity, family opposition and lack of recognition in the informal sector and transport facilities are only some of the problems that working women face today.

College

Among such women is Aleena, a courageous 27-year-old who began working at a young age a as a helper at a  saloon in Rawalpindi some fifteen years ago. Her father had passed away and her mother was unable to work after loosing her eyesight to diabetes. She was the only one left to earn for her family.

“I still remember the day I quit school and started working at the  saloon,” she recalls. “I had no choice, I was the eldest one and there was no one else for us.” She says her family would raise objections over her job but shed braved the criticism because she knew what was at stake.

When she started working as a receptionist at a call-centre, where she had to work late hours, she was often subjected to sexual harassment at the hands of fellow commuters in public transport. But that too did not falter her commitment and she went on to continue her studies.

Aleena now works for a telecommunication company at a reputable position, but for that she has come a long way.

Sadia*and Maryam*, who have been serving as nurses at a public hospital for the past ten years, say they are subjected to sexual harassment by patients and attendants almost every time they are on a night shift.

“There are times when we think about changing our profession,” said Sadia. “But we love our jobs, all we need is some security,” she adds.

According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics 2008-09, the combined percentage of working women in both the formal and the informal sector is 21.7, out of which 17.9% are in rural areas and 3.28% in urban. Of the total working women, 12.87% are skilled agriculture and fishery workers, while a mere 0.36% of the total working women serve as senior officials, legislators and managers.

Farzana Bari, a prominent women right activist says that women in the informal sector are working in miserable conditions. “They are given a minimal pay of Rs7,000, which too they are sometime denied, and they are not covered under any labour law.” Meanwhile in the formal sector, women lack facilities such as day-care centres and even basic ones such as separate washrooms, she says, adding that they are not even given the chance to work on senior posts.

Maliha Hussain, program director at Mehergarh, says some laws have been passed recently for the protection and welfare of working women, their implementation remains the major challenge.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 23rd, 2012. 

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