Gender Discrimination: Implications For Pakistan Security: Hamid Iqbal, Saima Afzal, Mavara Inayat
Gender Discrimination: Implications For Pakistan Security: Hamid Iqbal, Saima Afzal, Mavara Inayat
Gender Discrimination: Implications For Pakistan Security: Hamid Iqbal, Saima Afzal, Mavara Inayat
Abstract: Gender discrimination is a non-tradition security threat to Pakistan and it has implications for
Pakistan security. Pakistani women are more than half of the total population, but women are treated
inhumanly within their homes by their husbands or dominant males through different ways like Domestic
Violence, Sawara, Vani, Karo Kari, Honour Killing, Acid Throwing, Forced Marriages etc. Gender
discrimination is also deeply rooted in Pakistani society in education and employment sectors. The security of a
state like Pakistan is connected with the security of whole population and a country cannot be considered secure
until its whole population feel secure. For the progress and prosperity of a country there is needed to eliminate
the discriminatory attitude of the society towards the women. There are multiple ways to improve gender
balance in the country which will reduce gender discrimination.
Key Words: Gender Discrimination, Education Sector, Employment Sector, Gender and Human Security.
I. Introduction
This study discusses gender discrimination as „non-traditional security‟ threat to the country. It argues
that women are more than half of the population and the security of women is associated with state security.
This is so because no country can be secure until its whole population feels secure. Pakistan needs to empower
its women for the progress and prosperity of a country. Balance has been maintained by the nature in all things
of the world in order to decorate it with exquisiteness, and it produced a feature that sustains balance in each and
every thing. These harmonizing features vary in the ratio that provides to support their accompaniment. In this
perspective men and women are well thought-out as the supporting complement for each other, but the main
clash in this logic maintain is the term „gender discrimination‟.
The term discrimination refers to unequal behavior able to improve or limit a situation. Normally it is
harmful because groups are treated unfairly based on prejudice(s). Discrimination is a „rejection process‟ of the
other, emphasizing on gender, race, sex, age (children, adolescents, elder), social and marital status, class and
caste belonging, political and institutional discrimination (governments, aid agency, spenders), migrant or
refugee status, religion, incapacity, handicap (disability, illness, HIV-status) etc. While Gender discrimination
refers to different treatment based on sex, including different connotations of values that change with cultural
context. It is the most common and longstanding discrimination, and it is triggered by other discriminative
behaviors. Gender discrimination is loftily based on gender stereotype of a fastidious culture, i.e. that considers
males physically powerful and consider females as psychologically sensitive or weak. Due to this term „gender‟
is often clashes with the term „sex‟. Both terms are used as interchangeably in a common perspective, but there
has been a scientific dissimilarity among both. „Sex‟ is genetic differentiation of persons; classify them as men
and women, this distinction of persons is similar in all the cultures of world, whereas „gender‟ is a societal
delineation of persons which classify them as „male‟ and „female‟. This distinction verifies the function of
persons in a fastidious culture. The responsibility of persons in diverse culture is dissimilar and thus the
responsibility of gender is changeable in accordance with the existing societal setup.
Gender discrimination defines the practice of granting or denying rights or privileges to a person(s)
based on their gender. In some societies, this practice is ancient and satisfactory to both genders. Few religious
groups hold gender discrimination as part of their dogma. However, in most developed countries, it is either
unlawful or generally considered unsuitable.
The gender discrimination approach can generally be found in the heredity of certain section of society.
Much of the prejudice is recognized to stories such as a woman being made from a man‟s rib and social
community practices such as dowries paid to fathers by prospective husbands to purchase their daughters to be
wives. Innumerable literature orientation is made to females being the fairer, weaker sex, and males being the
strong, unconquerable hunters of the world. The collective authority of these societal and religious values left
little room for impartial thoughts for centuries.
Gender inequalities have existed form a long time, but currently, it has greatly threatened the security
of the state. Everyday forms of violence that occur within our homes include gender discrimination in intra-
household food distribution, „lack of access to education and health‟, „early and forced marriages‟, „denial of
inheritance right‟, „restriction on women‟s mobility‟, „verbal abuse‟, „physical and sexual violence against
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Gender Discrimination: Implications for Pakistan Security
women by male family members‟ etc. Mistreatment and violence also take place in the name of culture; such as
local customs of Watta-Satta, Swara, Vani, and Karo-Kari etc have also become widespread and acceptable.
The study is divided in five sections. The first section is about the gender discrimination in Pakistan. The second
and third section elaborates respectively gender discrimination in education and employment sector. The fourth
section discusses gender and human security whereas the final section elaborates women empowerment during
military and democratic regimes.
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Gender Discrimination: Implications for Pakistan Security
a survey which was conducted on 1000 women in Punjab, the 35% of the women admitted in the hospitals
reported being beaten up by their husbands. The survey also revealed that at least two women were burned every
day in domestic violence occurrence and around about 70 to 90% of women experienced spousal abuse.Honor
killing is another form of domestic violence against women in Pakistan. The practice of Karo Kari is known to
occur in many parts of the country.
Honour killing is one of the most horrible forms of brutality against women. It is a severe type of direct
physical violence, which is noticeable by immense misery. In contemporary scenario, Pakistan has been
criticized because of the dramatic increase in the occurrence of honor killings in the state. It is necessary to
know about definitions and genuine reasons behind the brutal murder of females in the name of honour. Honour
killings can also be explained as extra-judicial penalty of a female relative for implicit sexual and marriage
offences. These offences, which are considered as a transgression or abuse, include sexual faithlessness,
marrying without the will of parents or having a relationship that the family considers to be wrong and rebelling
against the tribal and social matrimonial customs. These acts of killing women are justified on the basis that the
offence has brought disgrace and dishonor to family or tribe.
In Pakistan honor killing is known as Karo Kari in Sindh, Siya Kari in Balochistan, Kala Kali in
Punjab and Tora-Tora in KPK. Karo is the name for the male offender and Kari is used for female offender.
Both means black. Siya, Kala and Tora also mean black denoting the dark color of crime being punished.
Karo Kari traditionally means the right of community or near relatives, husband, father, or brother to
kill the female relative and her paramour for an illicit sexual relationship outside marriage. Presently the
tradition is misused and murders are justified in cases merely based on suspicious or where the male or female
marry or seek a divorce without the consent of the family. The tradition is also misused in murders for ulterior
motives.Sadly, by and large, honour killing has become an honourable institution in Pakistan. Those who
commit the murder for vindicating their honour are applauded by their peers. In police custody and in the jails
such persons are given special protocol for killing on the name of honour or ghairat.
Honour killing is pre-Islamic and not supported by Islam. The custom of honour killing is centuries
old. It has survived with the patriarchal family system. The tribal system is prevailed in Pakistan especially in
northern and remote areas. In some tribal areas the tribal laws coexist with the state laws. According to state
laws honour killing is considered as a crime, though a lenient view is taken by courts. Under the tribal laws it is
not considered as crime and it is legitimate to kill to avenge the violation of honour.
According to press reports, the incident of honour killing are high after 9/11 in Sindh especially in
upper Sindh , as in those areas Pathans are living as well as settlers from Afghanistan, Balochistan and Southern
Iran. These groups have not changed their customs, which is the reason why women are targeted for revenge.
These crimes against women are part of feudal society. There are three reasons for honour killing revenge,
property and loan. In the matter of revenge a women of the family is killed and blamed on enemy that she had
illicit relationship and that murder is an honour killings. Women are killed due to the distribution of property for
inheritance. Swara and vani traditions are also violation of women rights in Pakistan and threat to women
security. Swara is centuries old custom practiced in Pakistan and Afghanistan, especially in Pakhtun tribal
societies. The genesis of this custom is obscure but different sources confirm that it developed as gesture of
goodwill to end blood feud. The word Swara mean in Persian riding on horse or any other animal used for
traveling. Today in tradition terminology Swara refers to a girl given over to aggrieved family as compensation
for blood.
Swara practiced today is extremely derogatory to women as it violates their human rights and makes
them a mere commodity by giving them over to victim party for reconciliation in case of rivalry, murder or
abduction. When a case of murder comes up before the Jirga for a solution and Jirga announced the
punishment. In a case of murder the punishment is either revenge; blood for blood or money or Swara. The
nearest virgin girl daughter, sister, niece etc of the offender is given to the aggrieved family. Since it is forced
marriage between enemies so there is no wedding ceremony. The girl suffers from this connection because she
is merely considered as a punishment of enemy.
A similar custom of marrying young girls for the settlement of disputes also takes place in the rural
parts of central Punjab Province of Pakistan where this practice is known as Vani. There are different sources
which confirm degrading practices of offering and accepting women on order of Panchayat in many parts of
rural Punjab and the tribal areas in Khyber PukhtoonKhwa KPK but since most cases these are unreported, there
is no reliable statistics on how many girls are given in vani or Swara every year in Pakistan.
Acid throwing is a horrible and alarming form of violence against women. It is the violation of human
rights of women. In this brutal form of violence the perpetrators throw the acid on the faces of victim which not
only disfigure their face but also burn tissues of their body. These incidents cause the blindness and permanent
scars on the body. Mostly women are victim of such terrible attacks. According to an estimate there are four
hundred females in Pakistan who annually become a victim of this heinous act of violence by their husbands and
in-laws.
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Gender Discrimination: Implications for Pakistan Security
There are many reports which indicate the reasons behind these brutal acts. Mostly the acid towing
incidents occur due to the refusal of sexual advances, proposal for marriages and demand for dowry. Property
dispute is also a cause of such incidents, acid throwing has been used as a strategy for taking revenge of above
mention causes. There are very few cases of acid throwing which are registered in Pakistan, because mostly
influential people of society are supporting the perpetrator. Belonging to the poor and marginalized fringes of
the society, most acid survivor can hardly affords the expenses of treatment.
Depression and anxiety become a part of such victims because due to scars on their faces they feel ashamed and
embarrassment. According to a survey from May 2004 to May 2006 in 14 Districts of Punjab 65 were reported,
in 2008 there were 24 and in 2009 there were 27 cases reported.
Forced marriages are also violation of women rights in Pakistan. Pakistan has a strong patriarchal
system in the society. Marriages within the clan and family are common in Pakistani society and it is considered
as a strong bondage between the two families. According to an estimate 40 to 60 percent marriage occur
between the close biological relatives. Parents decide the fate of their daughters and female have no right to
choice a partner on their own choices.
In the feudal families of Pakistan the daughters are married to the paternal cousin to prevent the
distribution of lands outside the family by inheritance. At times, a girl is married to a younger cousin to her
which is a complete mismatch. In such marriages the husband later marries a woman of her own choice and with
her and children, ignoring her cousin wife. She is often left alone childless in the village. Even Pakistan‟s former
Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, was married with his cousin at his early age who was elder than him. She
remained childless.
Where there is no possibility of marriage of girl with cousin or within the family the girl is guided into
the custom of Haq Bakhshi, marriage with the Quran, denying her all the advantages of matrimony. She is
considered as a pious female who cut off from the worldly affairs. This practice is prevailing in the province of
Sindh, which is the great discrimination of gender.
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Gender Discrimination: Implications for Pakistan Security
1.3. Gender Discrimination in Employment Sector
The women in Pakistan have seen discrimination in employment more than males. There are many
factors of female employment discrimination like low literacy rate, marriage, and child bearing and the
environment. Many female are not allowed to do job with a male in Pakistani society, because it is considered
against the honour of family. It is a male dominated society and mostly family males do not want that their
daughters and sisters to work on an equal basis with them. To provide the safe environment free of harassment
and implementation of “Protection against harassment of women at workplace” bill will take a time to change
the mind set of society.
In the past two decades, in Pakistan, there has been little change in the organization of work in the
employment sector. Now women are entering into professional employment which was previously considered a
male domain. Women work is getting recognition as being essential for development of the economy and for
improving their status. However by keeping the same idea in mind most women are still discriminated against
the employment sector. Employment laws in the formal sectors do not discriminate against men and women,
there the same rules apply in the promotion, and there is also no discrimination of male and female pay scale in
same the grade. However, a recent study on women employment in formal sectors show that despite the equal
legislation women are still discriminated when it comes to the matter of promotion.
In the employment sectors there are fewer females in decision making and there are very few females as
compare to male in the higher posts. The group of 2005 federal Government district management group study
clearly shows how female are discriminated and very few females reached the highest posts.
These are the positions where most planning and development matters are decided but women are not
fairly represented and given an opportunity to participate in decision making. Due to this discrimination women
needs are not address in policy and planning matters. Positive change in women empowerment can only be
achieved if women are able to participate in open, transparent, and accountable decision making process of law
and policymaking institutions.
Medicine and education are two departments where women are employed in large numbers. In all girls
schools and colleges only females are appointed as heads of institution, where as in co-education institution
heads, chancellors and vice chancellors are male. There are female teachers in such institutions but no female
heads of co-education institutions is found till yet. The number of women on top level institutions indicates the
scarcity of data on women participation in different employment sectors. In the informal sectors the women are
employed in low cadre jobs in industrial units. Hardly any women reach the managerial level. There is also
discrimination in the wages of male and female in informal sectors.
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Gender Discrimination: Implications for Pakistan Security
the aim of the human security model is to address the security concerns of both women and men equally.
Women are often the worst victims of aggression and clashes: they form the majority of civilian deaths, the
majority of refugees, and, are often the victims of cruel and humiliating practices, such as rape. Women's
security is also threatened by unequal access to resources, services, and opportunities. Human security seeks to
give power to women, through education, contribution, and access, as gender parity is seen as an essential
prerequisite for peace, security, and a flourishing society.
Gender security is basically the extension of Human security. Both are interlinked with each other
because in both there has been talked about the human as an individual. Human security is a comprehensive
concept; the basic pillar revolves around both the individual and the state. A state is expected to provide both
physical as well as economic security. Just as physical security implies safety both from internal sources of
threats as well as from external aggression, human security implies that the citizens are being provided with an
environment in which they maximize their potentials. Physical security has to deal with both internal as well as
external sources of threats. However, human security covers freedom from want, discrimination, injustice,
exploitation, food insecurities, and environmental degradations.
Human security simply emphasis, that the security agenda and the development agenda are the
different sides of the same coin. Both sustainable human security and sustainable human development must be
found on the protection of fundamental human rights and require a democratic society. What sets human
security apart is its unifying, holistic character. This mean that the dimensions affecting people‟s security/
insecurity can be determined and the concept of security extended in economic, political, social, environmental,
and cultural aspects.
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Gender Discrimination: Implications for Pakistan Security
In 1989, the First Women Bank Ltd (FWBL) was also established to address women's economic needs. It
operates 38 branches across the country, managed and run by women. It finances small-scale credit schemes for
underprivileged women. The Social Action Program begins in 1992/93 aimed at reducing gender inequality by
improving women‟s access to social services.
In 1997, the Nawaz Sharif government formally ratified the Qisas and Diyat Ordinance, which
introduced Shariah-based modification in Pakistan's criminal law. The law had earlier been reserved in force by
appeal to the president's power to re-issue it every four months. Sharif then projected fifteenth modification to
the charter that would completely restore the existing legal system with a complete Islamic one and would
control the "constitution and any law or decision of any court". The suggestion was accepted in the National
Assembly, due to the huge majority of Nawaz Party. However, it deferred in the Senate because it faced the
opposition from human right activities, women‟s group an opposition parties. On 6 August 1998, Pakistan‟s first
Women University, was inaugurated named after Fatima Jinnah the sister of Quaid-i-Azam.
On September 2, 2004, the MWD was made completely autonomous ministry, disconnected from the
social Welfare and Education Ministry. On July 7, 2006 General Musharaff signed a law for the instant
discharge on bail approximately 1300 women who suffered in jails on accuse other than terrorism and murder.
His government improved women status in assemblies by providing more seats. As contrast with 1988 seats in
the National Assembly were enlarged from 20 to 60. In provincial assemblies 128 seats were for women. It has
brought out enlarge contribution of women for 1988 and 2008 elections.
In late 2006, the Pakistani parliament approved the Women's Protection Bill, and revoked the Hudood
Ordinance. The 10% quota was increased for female in Central Superior Services which was approved by the
cabinet. During same year in 2006, the cabinet passed the Protection of Women Act. In December 2006, for the
first time, women cadets from the Military Academy Kukul assumed guard duty at the mausoleum of
Muhammad Ali Jinnah.
On March 09, 2010, President of Pakistan signed the “The Protection against Harassment of Women at
Workplace Act Bill 2010” which was collectively passed by the National Assembly on Jan 21, 2010, and by the
Senate on Feb 26, 2010. The Act means to provide the safe working environment to females in all Government,
Public/Private Sector organizations & Educational Institutions are required to apply it, inside the 30 days of
circulation. April 11, 2010. The punishment for the crime is up to three years in prison and a fine of up to Rs
500,000. The objective of the bill is to create a safe working environment for women, free of harassment,
violence and pressure.
The Prevention of Anti-Women Practices Bill 2011 was approved on 15 November 2011 by National
Assembly of Pakistan after the much great efforts of the women movement led by Dr Donya Aziz (PML-Q).
The Prevention of Anti-Women Practices Bill 2011 outlines strong punishments for social practices like Vani,
Swara or Budla-i-sulh, wherein women are traded to settle personal, family or tribal disputes. For the first time,
the bill proposes a minimum benchmark for penalizing those involved in “anti-women practices”.
There are following major issue of the Prevention of Anti-Women Practices Bill 2011. Firstly, it
describes force marriage as offence able and non-bailable act and cannot be used to settle disputes. Secondly,
trading a female is not only a punishable and the accused person have to bear the imprisonment for 3 to 5 years
but also have to pay find of RS 0.5 million. Thirdly, to deprive a female from her inheritance is also punishable
and those people have to face between 5 to 10 years imprisonment or a fine of Rs 1 million and sometimes both.
Finally, it elaborates the marriage of female with the Holy Quran is an offence and the person will have to pay
fine of Rs 0.5 million and imprisonment from three to seven years.
However, the supporters of gender empowerment try to eradicate gender-based discrimination in
strategy and agenda, initial evidence point out that several peace building and administrative frameworks and
their implementation continuously unsuccessful to address the fundamental gender function and related
authority dynamics that place the root for institutionalized gender discrimination.
Pakistani women are attentive in a web of dependence and subordination due to their low social,
economic, and political status in society. The majority of women population suffers from all form of poverty. In
order to change women‟s position and communities view of their weakness, fundamental modifications need to
be brought about in the social and economic order that outline our social world. In Pakistan women are entirely
missing from the state construction and administrative organizations that could initiate such structural changes.
Women‟s addition in authoritative structure is necessary to bring about substantive changes in the development
strategy and a program that would lead to a shift in gender relations in the society. Contemporary, in order to
sustain the status quo, institutionalized violence against women at the house, society, and government levels are
used as a mechanism to ensure their compliance with gender norms. This serves to prevent any attempt leading
to the subversion of the male order.
Ironically, at the time, a great deal of metaphorical concentration has been paid to gender subject at the
public level. Pakistan has also made numerous commitments at state and global forums to guarantee gender
parity at home. Nevertheless, there is a broad gap between promise and execution. The persuasion of the state to
translate its commitment to gender parity into tangible reality is the main confront faced by women in Pakistan.
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Gender Discrimination: Implications for Pakistan Security
As population is an important power, the empowerment of the entire population will maximize Pakistan‟s power
in the international community and hence enhance Pakistan internal security. The security will be enhanced
because the rules will have eliminated any possible discord between the sexes at any future time through the
provision of justice and the use of reasonable laws which are equally fair to both genders.
III. Limitations
How valid are our findings of factors for gender discrimination in Pakistan security? One possible threat
to internal validity is that for any specific article, their reported factors may not have in fact described underlying
reason. We have not been able to independently control this threat. The authors of these studies were not
supposed to report the original reasons why these factors were used during the gender discrimination from
Pakistan‟s perspectives. It is also possible that in some studies there may have been a tendency for particular
kinds of factors to be reported. Many of the contributing studies were self-reported experience reports, case
studies and empirical studies which may be subject to publication bias.
How safe is it to generalise these findings? Our sample contains many articles from many countries. Our
findings are not based on any studies that used a random sample of gender discrimination in Pakistan. However,
in the investigation of our research questions, our study is the most comprehensive to date. The issue of
generalising these findings can also be considered by comparing our findings with results from other related
studies. We found many similarities in our findings and findings by other people, and this provides some support
for generalisation.
IV. Acknowledgment
We are thankful to faculty members of International Relations at Quaid-i-Azam University Islamabad Pakistan
and the reviewer at University of Malakand Pakistan for validation of the paper.
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[56.] Channar, Zahid Ali, Panhawar, Panhawar, Iqbal A, “Gender Discrimination in Employment: A Comparative Study of Public &
Private Sectors of Pakistan”, Australian Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences, Vol.4, No.11, 2010.
[57.] Director Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy won the Best Documentary Short Subject for the film "Saving Face", at the 84th Academy
Awards 26 February 2012,
[58.] http://www.thenews.com.pk/article-37201-Sharmeen-Obaid-Chinoy-wins-Oscar,aswell
http://tribune.com.pk/story/342358/sharmeen-obaid-chinoys-documentary-wins-oscar-for-best-documentary-short-subject/,
retrieved on 27 March 2012.
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