Call for more female politicians in Pakistan

Pakistani opposition candidate Krishna Kumari Kohli walks out from the Sindh province assembly building after the Senate election in Karachi on March 3, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 12 March 2018
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Call for more female politicians in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Sherry Rehman, Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) vice president, urged more women to stand as politicians, in an interview with Arab News on International Women’s Day on Thursday.
Rehman worked as a journalist before Benazir Bhutto, the country’s twice-elected former prime minister assassinated by terrorists in 2007, brought her into public office.
“Benazir Bhutto, the first female prime minister of the Muslim world, was a truly inspiring figure,” said Rehman who witnessed the death of her mentor.
Bhutto guided her through the complexities of Pakistan’s political system, helping her to step up to the challenges involved. The PPP, she added, has always welcomed women.
Rehman added that women could bring about change from the corridors of power, saying that politics in Pakistan was “very much a testosterone-dominated field.” She argued that politics around the world desperately needed women to “genuinely shake things up and produce legislation that reflects the experience of being a woman.”
Farah Azeem Shah, a member of Balochistan National Party Awami (BNP-A), who wants to become her region’s first female Chief Minister, concurred with Rehman.
She said: “It’s time for a woman to step in where men have failed to resolve matters.”
Shah decided to step back in 2017 and took an indefinite leave of absence from politics, disheartened by “corruption and self-serving bureaucracy.”
Outside of politics, she embraced causes such as poverty alleviation targets, increasing access to education and health care, fighting for women’s rights, before concluding that it was all “futile without political assistance.”
Shah is now preparing to run for the 2018 general elections from her constituency, Kalat.
According to the UN 2017 global survey of women in politics, women’s voices are still missing from the executive branches of governments and parliaments worldwide, slowing achievement on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly gender equality.
Pakistan ranks 174th globally, according to the women in ministerial positions along with 12 more countries, and 89th, according to the percentage of women in the lower house of parliament.
However, Krishna Kumari, a female senator-elect who comes from the minority Hindu community, has emerged as a symbol in Pakistan’s conservative and male-dominated society.
“What seemed to be unthinkable in the past decades has happened,” said Rehman. “For me, this truly is a historic moment for Pakistan and an empowering one for all women and minorities.”


Bangladesh court orders authorities to request Interpol red notice for arrest of British MP

Updated 8 sec ago
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Bangladesh court orders authorities to request Interpol red notice for arrest of British MP

  • ulip Siddiq faces charges of corruption in Bangladesh for using her connection with her aunt, former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, to influence a process to illegally award land to a private company
DHAKA: A court in Bangladesh’s capital on Thursday ordered authorities to request that Interpol issue a red notice for the arrest of a British lawmaker on charges of corruption in a private real estate project.
Tulip Siddiq, a former British minister and an MP from Hampstead and Highgate in London, faces charges of corruption in Bangladesh as the country’s Anti-corruption Commission pursues a case against her.
Siddiq has already been sentenced to six years in jail in Bangladesh in three other corruption cases all involving her powerful aunt, the country’s former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. Hasina was ousted in 2024 in a student-led mass uprising that ended her 15-year rule, and has been in exile in India since Aug. 5, 2024.
Siddiq earlier rejected all allegations against her, termed the verdicts as a “complete farce,” and said she is a British citizen, not a Bangladeshi national.
The commission said that Siddiq, using her connection with Hasina, influenced a process to award land to a private company in Dhaka’s upscale Gulshan area. Siddiq is the daughter of Hasina’s younger sister Sheikh Rehana.
Dhaka Metropolitan Senior Special Judge Mohammed Sabbir Faiz issued the order Thursday upon a petition by the corruption watchdog.
The order came after the commission’s Assistant Director A.K.M. Mortuza Ali Sagar sought the order for a red notice through Interpol to facilitate her arrest.
There was no immediate reaction from Siddiq on Thursday.
In January last year, Siddiq resigned as a British government minister in the Cabinet of Prime Minister Keir Starmer under pressure because of her ties to Hasina. Siddiq had said she had been cleared of wrongdoing but was quitting as economic secretary to the Treasury because the issue was becoming “a distraction from the work of the government.”
Three days after Hasina’s ouster, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus took over as interim leader and eventually oversaw an election on Feb. 12. The new government of Prime Minister Tarique Rahman, the son of Hasina’s main political rival and former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, has taken over.