Tuesday, July 19, 2011 - 5:22 PM

On Tuesday, Hina Rabbani Khar became the first woman and the youngest parliamentarian ever in Pakistan's history to hold the post of Foreign Minister.
Does this mean that we start cheering? No.
Women like Hina Rabbani Khar may be educated, hardworking parliamentarians, but their elevation to their jobs has been through their political influence, rather than their skills or political knowledge. Khar, for instance, is a talented restaurant owner (anyone who has eaten at the Polo Lounge in Lahore can testify to that), and reportedly a skilled mountain climber, but she has never publicly campaigned to win an election. Her election as member of the National Assembly has been on the basis of her last name and her feudal lineage -- as part of the Khar family, her father is a politician, her uncle was Punjab's Chief Minister in the 1970s -- as opposed to her popularity amongst the masses, or her achievements as a restaurant owner, or as deputy finance minister in the Musharraf regime. As part of the political elite, Khar's elevation to Foreign Minister has very little to do with women's rights, and more perhaps, to do with the lack of candidates that the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) could call on to be the next Foreign Minister, five months after sacking Shah Mehmood Qureshi.
Secondly, it is widely accepted that the civilian government controls very little of foreign policy, and has ceded most of their control over it to the men in Rawalpindi. From relations with India to the United States, it is believed that the Pakistan Army's General Headquarters (GHQ) that is calling the shots. Khar, in her position, will most likely be an administrator, and not a visionary.
Third -- women MPs being elevated to positions of power has rarely translated into real action and change for the women of Pakistan.
In 1988, Benazir Bhutto became the first woman and the youngest parliamentarian to hold the post of Prime Minister. During her two stints in office, the PPP-led government was unable to change the Hudood Ordinance, a draconian law from the time of dictator Zia ul-Haq that deprived rape victims of their rights. Indeed, the government contained coalition partnersthat included religious parties violently opposed to any changes in the Ordinance.
This is not to knock the women MPs that are serving in both the National and Provincial Assemblies. Following a change in the number of reserved seats for women in parliament by the Musharraf regime, now nearly 22 percent of parliamentarians are women. Repeatedly, women parliamentarians such as Sherry Rehman and Farahnaz Ispahani from the PPP have pushed for laws against the sexual harassment of women and the persecution of minorities. The opposition Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz's (PML-N) Tehmina Daultana took the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) chief Gen. Ahmad Shuja Pasha to task when he was testifying in the National Assembly about the presence of Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan.
In the provincial assemblies, parliamentarians like Sassi Palijo (also from a political family) have won on general seats as opposed to seats reserved solely for women in the province of Sindh, and have publicly campaigned for votes. The PPP's Firdous Ashiq Awan has been elected on a general seat in Punjab, and is currently serving as Information Minister. She may have resigned now, but the PML-Q parliamentarian Marvi Memon cemented her reputation by being more than her father's daughter, by working simultaneously on a number of political issues and raising awareness for a number of causes -- from flood victims to rights of workers. The fact that they have managed to do so much in the light of obvious slights and terrible insults, such as when former president Pervez Musharraf intimated that women used rape claims for money or to obtain visas, is heartening. Let us also not forget that some of the most opposition they face is from within their own parties -- male chauvinists who'd prefer to see women behind closed doors, who would block legislation in parliament rather than allow women their rights, or would announce women being buried alive as part of their "tradition."
Despite this, Khar's election is not the time to wave the banner for a moderate Pakistan, or for the PPP to boast about its liberal credentials. When Khar gets elected on a general seat on her own merit, is allowed to publicly campaign without threats to her life, and is given a ministerial portfolio on merit, you can hand me a banner. Until then, let us reserve the optimism for another day.
Huma Imtiaz works as a correspondent for Express News in Washington DC, and can be reached at huma.imtiaz@gmail.com
Just as Benazir Bhutto served as a model Pakistani leader in 1987 after General Zia’s rule, Hina Khar is a good model to represent Pakistan at this juncture after the discovery of Osama bin Laden in a safe compound in Abbottabad, close to Pakistani military base and a short distance from Islamabad.
She won’t be more than titular figure anyway as Mr. Imtiaz rightly points out in this façade of democracy that Pakistan calls itself and the world led by U. S. accepts as such, knowing fully well that Pakistani Army owns and operates Pakistani State and allows the mirage of democracy to continue only as long as it wishes to do so.
U r such an idiot
Why r u so negative
that you cant see light where there is some
malicious
shame on you
Even Presidents and Prime Ministers Are Puppets of Army
The much awaited appointment of a green horn Foreign Minister is only cosmetic exercise as the foreign policy is made and guided by the Generals of Pakistani army.
Even in past, the hawkish foreign minister of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had taken over control but he too acted not differently than an Insular Jihadi General.
After the "Operation Gibraltar" Fiasco which developed in to 1965 war, humiliating defeat, Taskand Agreement, along with denial, suppression, massacre of millions in former East Pakistan, war of 1971, the Pakistani Army has total and complete control of important decision the country.
The new minister has already babbled the Pakistani Army point of views about the region and any thing Indian, which is same age old cast iron narrative, so important and necessary for Pakistan.
The megalomaniac bad boys never accept any one else in the region, nor subscribe to any idea of balanced behavior or concept of good neighborly relations.
For these schizophrenic souls, Such lofty ideals and actions are pure signs of hated weakness and shameful defeat.
In Pakistani politics, it's still a man's world
Washington, 15 Nov: 'Sexism probably does affect some voters' ability to imagine a woman running the country. It doesn't help that female MPs' clothes still get more media coverage than their ideas - nor, as Ruth Kelly found, that statesmanship doesn't suit a family life. Like Angela tera patrick
in this picture or Margaret Thatcher nearly three decades ago, women do defy the odds. But their weakness is,, as Nancy Astor, the first British female MP put it, that pioneers are 'often rather lonely' figures in a career which demands strong strategic alliances. Women have reached critical mass in the middle ranks of British politics but only when more are clustered in the top jobs will we see another Thatcher. There are so few women making films simply because it's impossible to combine directing with looking after kids. If you are directing, your life goes completely down the toilet for months and there's not much point having children if you're never going to see them. The women who are around, and there are very, very few of us, are either childess or had children early and started their careers later. It may also be the case that a middle-aged woman director is less appealing from a PR perspective; young men are lionised in a different way.But I'm not saying it's men's fault because I think that's a bit crass.
(4)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE