Madam Chairperson,
Mr Secretary General,
Distinguished Delegates,
Sisters !
Pakistan is grateful to the Government and the
people of China for hosting this Conference. We have been deeply touched
by the warm welcome and gracious hospitality.
1 pay a special tribute to the Secretary
General of the United Nations and Mrs. Gertrude Mongella, the Secretary
General of€ the Conference for their tireless efforts in organizing this
meeting.
My dear sisters, ladies and gentlemen!
There is a moral crisis engulfing the world as
we speak, a crisis of injustice and inaction, a crisis of silence and
acquiescence.
The crisis is caused by centuries and
generations of oppression and repression.
This conference, therefore, transcends
politics and economics. We are dealing with a fundamental moral issue.
This is a truly historic occasion. Some 40,000
women have assembled here to demand their rights; to secure a better
future for their daughters; to put an end to the prejudices which still
deny so many of us our rightful place in society.
On this solemn. occasion 1 stand before you
not only as a Prime Minister but as a woman and a mother-A woman proud of
her cultural and religious heritage, a woman sensitive to the obstacles to
justice and full participation that still stand before women in almost
every society on earth.
As the first woman ever elected to head an
Islamic nation, I feel a special responsibility towards women's issues and
towards all women.
And as a Muslim woman, 1 feel a special
responsibility to counter the propaganda of a handful that Islam gives
women a second class status.
This is not true. Today the Muslim world
boasts three women Prime Ministers, elected by male and female voters on
our abilities as people, as persons, not as women.
Our election has destroyed the myth built by
social taboo that a woman's place is in the house, that it is shameful or
dishonourable or socially unacceptable for a Muslim woman to work.
Our election has given women all over tire
Muslim world moral strength to declare that it is socially correct for a
woman to work and to follow in our footsteps as working women and working
mothers.
Muslim women have a special responsibility to
help distinguish between Islamic teachings and social taboos spun by the
traditions of a patriarchal society.
This is a distinction that obscurantist would
not like to see. For obscurantist believe in discrimination.
Discrimination is the first step to dictatorship and the usurpation of
power.
A month ago, Pakistan hosted the first ever
conference of Women Parliamentarians of Muslim world.
Never in the history of Islam had so many
working women and elected representatives gathered together at one place
to speak in one voice.
As over a 100 delegates from 35 Muslim
countries gathered together, I felt an enormous sense of pride that we
women had each other for strength and support, across the globe and across
the continents to face and oppose those who would not allow the
empowerment of women.
And, today, I feel that same sense of pride,
that we women have gathered together at Beijing, at this ancient capital
of an ancient civilization to declare; we are not alone in our search
for the empowerment, that women across continents are together in the
search for self-esteem, self-worth, self-respect and respect in society
itself. In distinguishing between Islamic teachings and social taboos, we
must remember that Islam forbids injustice ;
Injustice against people, against nations,
against women.
It shuns race, colour, and gender as a basis
of distinction amongst fellowmen.
It enshrines piety as the sole criteria for
judging humankind.
It treats women as human beings in their own
right, not as chattel. A woman can inherit, divorce, receive alimony and
child custody. Women were intellectuals, poets, jurists and even took
part in war.
The Holy Book of the Muslims refers to the
rule of a woman, the Queen of Sabah. The Holy Book alludes to her wisdom
and to her country being a land of plenty.
The Holy Prophet (peace be upon him) himself
married a working woman. And the first convert to Islam was a woman, Bibi
Khadija.
Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him)
emphatically condemned and put an end to the practice of female
infanticide in pre-Islamic Arabia. The Holy Quran reads :
When news is brought to one of them, of the
birth of a female (child),
his face darkens and he is filled with inward
grief what shame does he hide himself from his people because of the bad
news he has had.
Shall he retain it on sufferance and contempt,
or bury it in the dust.
Ah! what an evil choice they decide on. (Surah
Al-Nahl, Ayat-57, 58, 59)
Ladies and gentlemen!
How true these words ring even today.
How many women are still "retained" in their
families "on sufferance and contempt" growing up with emotional scars and
burdens.
How tragic it is that the pre-Islamic practice
of female infanticide still haunts a world we regard as modern and
civilized.
Girl children are often abandoned or aborted.
Statistics show that men now increasingly
outnumber women in more than 15 Asian nations.
Boys are wanted. Boys are wanted because their
worth is considered more than that of the girls.
Boys are wanted to satisfy the ego: they carry
on the father's name in this world.
Yet too often we forget that for Muslims on
the Day of Judgment, each person will be called not by their father's name
but by the mother's name.
To please her husband, a woman wants a son. To
keep her husband from abandoning her, a woman wants a son.
And, too often, when a woman expects a girl,
she abets her husband in abandoning or aborting that innocent, perfectly
formed child.
As we gather here today, the cries of' the
girl child reach out to us.
This conference need to chart a course that
can create a climate where the girl child is as welcomed and valued as a
boy child, that the girl child is considered as worthy as a boy child.
When I was chairperson of the South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation, SAARC declared 19$9 as the Year of
the Girl Child.
Six years later, the girl child's
vulnerability continues.
And it continues, not because of religion in
the case of Pakistan, but because of social prejudice.
The rights Islam gave Muslim women have too
often been denied.
And women are denied rights all over the
world, whether developed or developing.
All over (he world women are subjected to
domestic violence.
Often a woman does not walk out for she has
nowhere to go. Or she stays and puts up with the domestic violence for
the sake of her children.
We in Pakistan have started a public awareness
campaign against domestic violence through the mass media to inform
women that domestic violence is a crime and to alert men that they can be
punished for it.
Often women, in many a society are tortured,
not only by men, but by women in-laws too, for financial benefits from
the woman's family.
Sometime a wife is killed by her husband or
in-laws so that they can gain another wife and more dowry.
Dowry system is a social ill against which we
must raise our voices and create greater awareness.
Women are not only victims of physical abuse,
they are victims of verbal abuse also.
Often men, in anger and frustration, indulge
in the uncivilized behaviour of rude and vulgar language against women.
Unfortunately, women at limes also use vulgar
language to denigrate another woman.
So we have to work together to change not only
the attitudes of men but the attitudes of men and women.
Women have become the victims of a culture of
exclusion poverty, deprivation, and discrimination. Half a billion women
are illiterate. Seventy per cent of the children who are denied elementary
education are girls.
In Pakistan we are concentrating on primary
education for girls to rectify this imbalance.
We are concentrating on training women
teachers and opening up employment avenues for women.
It is my firm conviction that a woman cannot
ultimately control her own life and make her own choices unless she has
financial independence.
A woman cannot have financial independence if
she cannot work.. The discrimination against women can only begin to erode
when women are educated and employed.
If my Father had not educated me or left me
with independent financial means, I would not have been able to-sustain
myself or to struggle against tyranny or to stand here before you today as
a special guest speaker.
If the girl child is to be valued, if the wife
is to say "No" to domestic violence then we owe a special obligation to
creating jobs for women.
That is why we in Pakistan, set up in 1989 the
Women's Bank.
A Bank run by women for women to aid and
assist women in setting up their own enterprises to gain financial
independence and with it the freedom to make one's own choices.
Today 23 branches of the Women's Bank in
Pakistan help working women.
Our major cities are marked by enterprises set
up by women : bakeries, restaurants, boutiques, interior decoration.
We have lifted the ban on Pakistani women
taking part in international sporting events.
In 1997 we host the Second Muslim Women's
Olympics. Special sporting facilities are being set up to encourage
participation by Pakistani women in sports.
And Pakistani women are playing a significant
role in defusing the population bomb in Pakistan.
One hundred thousand women are to be trained
to reduce Pakistan's population on growth levels and its infant mortality
levels.
When I visit poverty stricken villages with no
access to lean drinking water, it gladdens my heart to see a lady health
visitor, to see a working woman amidst the unfortunate surroundings.
For it is my conviction that we can only
conquer poverty, squalor, illiteracy and superstition when we invest in
our women and when our women begin working. Begin working in our far flung
villages where time seems to have stood still and where the bullock not
the tractor is still used for cultivation;
Where women are too weak from bearing too many
children.
Where the daughters are more malnourished than
the sons for the daughters get to eat the left over.
Where villagers work night and day with their
women and children, to eke out an existence;
Where floods and rain wash out crops and
destroy homes;
Where poverty stalks the land with an appetite
that cannot be controlled until we wake up to the twin realities of
population control and women's empowerment.
And it is here that the United Nations and its
Secretary General have played a critical role.
Distinguished Delegates!
Some cynics argue about the utility of holding
this conference.
Let me disagree with them.
The holding of this conference demonstrates
that women not forgotten, that the world cares.
The holding of this conference demonstrates
solidarity with women.
The holding of this conference makes us
determined to contribute each in our own way, in any manner we can, to
lessen the oppression, repression and discrimination against women.
And while much needs to be done, each decade
has brought with it its own small improvement.
When I was growing up, women in my extended
family remained behind closed walls in village homes. Now we all travel to
cities or abroad.
When I was growing up, women in my extended
family all covered ourselves with the Burqa, or veil from head to foot
when we visited each other for weddings or funerals-the only two items for
which we were allowed out. Now most women restrict themselves to the
Duppatta or Chadar and are free to leave the house.
When I was growing up, no girl in my extended
family was allowed to marry if a boy cousin was not available for fear of
the property leaving the family.
Now girls do marry outside the family.
When I was growing up, the boy cousin
inevitably took second wife. Now girls do not expect their husbands to
marry again. From the norm, it has become the exception to the norm.
When I was growing up, women were not
educated. I the first girl in my family to go to university and to go
abroad for my studies. Now it has become the norm for girls to educated
at university and abroad when the families can afford it.
I have seer, a lot of changes in my lifetime.
But I hope see many more changes.
And some of these changes I hope will flow
from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights calling for the
elimination of discrimination against women.
I hope some of these changes will flow from
Convention for the Elimination of all forms of discrimination which
Pakistan signed last month.
Of course there was resistance from many
quarters.
But are determined to move forward in
fulfilling our dream of a Pakistan where women contribute their full
potential.
Distinguished Delegates!
As women, we draw satisfaction from Beijing Platform of Action which
encompasses a comprehensive approach towards the empowerment of women.
But women cannot be expected to struggle alone against the forces of
discrimination and exploitation. I recall the words of Dante who reminded
us that :
"The hottest place in Hell is reserved for those who remain neutral in
times of moral crisis."
Today in this world, in the fight for the
liberation of women, there can be no neutrality.
But my dear sisters, we have learned that
democracy alone is not enough.
Freedom of choice alone does not guarantee
justice.
Equal rights are not defined only by political
value. Social justice is a triad of freedom, of equality, of liberty.
- Justice is political liberty.
- Justice is economic independence.
- Justice is social equality.
Delegates, sisters!
Empowerment is not only a right to have
political freedom. Empowerment is the right to be independent ; to be
educated ; to have choices in life.
Empowerment is the right to have the
opportunity to select a productive career ; to own property ; to
participate in business ; to flourish in the market place.
Pakistan is satisfied that the draft Platform
for Action of the Fourth World Conference on Women negotiated so far
focuses on the critical areas of concern for women and outlines an
action-oriented strategy for the solution of their problems.
However, we believe that the Platform needs to
address the questions of new and additional resources, external debt,
structural adjustment programmes, human rights of women, protection of
women entrapped in armed conflicts and the realization of the right to
self-determination of the territories still under foreign occupation and
alien domination.
It must also seek to strengthen the role of
the traditional family as the bedrock of the society. Disintegration of
the family generates moral decay. This must be arrested.
The Platform is disturbingly weak on the role
of the traditional family. This weakness can lead to misinterpretation,
and even distortion by opponents of the women's agenda.
We have seen much progress. The very fact that
we convene in Beijing today is a giant step forward.
But new clouds darken the horizon.
The end of the cold war should have ushered in
peace and an era of progress of women. Regrettably, the proliferation of
regional tensions and conflicts have belied our aspirations. As in the
past, women and girls have again been the most direct victims of these
conflicts-the most helpless, and thus the most abused.
The use of rape as a weapon of war and an
instrument of "ethnic cleansing" is as depraved as it is reprehensible.
The unfolding of this saga in different parts of the world, including
Jammu and Kashmir and Bosnia Herzegovina has shaken the conscience of the
entire international community.
The enormity of the tragedy dwarfs our other
issues urgent though they are. This conference must, therefore, express
its complete solidarity with our sisters and daughters who are victims of
armed conflict, oppression, and brutality. Their misfortunes must be our
first priority.
Madam chairperson, ladies and gentlemen!
1 come before' you to speak of the forces that
must shape the new decade, the new century, the new millennium.
We must shape a world free from exploitation
and maltreatment of women.
A world in which women have opportunities-to
rise to the highest level in politics, business, diplomacy, and other
spheres of life.
Where there are no battered women. Where
honour and dignity is protected in war and conflict.
Where we have economic freedom and
independence.
Where we are equal partners in peace. and
development.
A world equally committed to economic
development and political development.
A world as committed. to free markets to fn's-
emancipation.
And even as we catalogue, organize, and reach
our goals, step by step, let us be ever vigilant. Repressive forces always
will stand ready to exploit the moment and push us back into the past. .
Let us remember the words of the German
writer, Goethe :
"Freedom has to be rye-made and re-earned in
every generation."
We must do much more than decry the past. We
must change the future.
Remembering the words of a sister
parliamentarian Senator, Barbara Mikulski, that "demography is destiny", I
believe time, justice and the forces of history are on our side. We are
here in Beijing to proclaim anew vision of equality and partnership.
Let us translate this vision into reality in
the shortest possible time.
Thank you Madam Chairperson.