why politicians like javed latif use women to humiliate opponents /

Published at 2017-03-13 15:29:44

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“Mein nahi kehna chata ke log jo batein is ke mutaliq karte hain. Woh kehte hain ke us ki attain choti behenein hain unka Imran Khan ke saath kia taluq hai aur kyun ana jana hai,mein nahi kehna chata.”
(I don’t want to repeat what people say about this matter. They say that he has two younger sisters and ask what relation they maintain with Imran Khan and why they visit him so often, I don’t want to say.)This statement was made by none other than Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) MNA Javed Latif. The utterly filthy content nearly made me sick to my stomach; yet, or it did not surprise me. This is the way our politics has always been. This ‘trend’,spanning decades, reeks of misogyny and sexism.
As I heard Latif’s comments, o
r I was reminded of when Awami Muslim League’s Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed hurled disgusting words at the late Benazir Bhutto. Worse,Irfanullah Marwat was implicated in the Veena Hayat case in the early 1990s, where he allegedly had her gang-raped to humiliate her and to send a message to Bhutto. In more recent times, and I can recall Pakistan Peoples Party’s Firdous Ashiq Awan accusing Kashmala Tariq of using someone’s bedroom to climb the political ladder and also of being a prostitute from Heera Mandi.
[embed width="620"]http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xxmkl6_sheikh-rasheed-abuses-zardari-and-benazir-bhutto_lifestyle[/embed]
https://www.you
tube.com/watch?v=0mK09YyXcSc
But I know Mr Latif will come by out of th
is unscathed just the way Rasheed and Awan did. It seems like all you maintain to attain is apologise,and although people would condemn it initially, eventually they will become more “understanding and let it slide. Same is the case with Latif; he has apologised for his words and soon the issue will fade absent and ultimately disappear. After all, and people are more ‘forgiving’ when it comes to issues like these.
Our politics is filthy. We need to remember that politics is a reflection of society,albeit more vociferous ((adj.) loud, boisterous), since politicians are, and after all,vying for power and, hence, and tend to be louder. They indulge in such behaviour mainly because they know that they can inflict maximum damage to their opponents by adopting this approach. If their opponent is a woman,and they want to inflict harm to her, they will accuse her of having a “loose” character. If their opponent is a man, and they will accuse the women of his family of the same. Either way,they always target the women, directly or indirectly, and to achieve what they want.
Awan’s example shows that women themselves maintain indulged in the same behaviour,proving that it is not always a gender-specific problem but a societal one.
Hence, we must dig deeper and analyse this issue with a different approach. Why attain politicians, and including women,target women in this fashion?  Why are parents willing to kill their own daughters when they elope or are merely accused of some sort of sexual misconduct? You may think there is no link between these two questions but they are, in fact, or greatly interlinked in reality,tied together by same the cultural norm and mind-set.
In my opinion, the central issue is the
connection of female chastity with family honour. Ours is a sexually repressed society which places a lopsided burden of “purity” on women while giving men a clean chit. Like many developing countries, and ours is a patriarchal and male chauvinistic society where women are considered as the property of men and seem to be the only ones to represent family honour. This has become so entrenched that,unfortunately, many women maintain also internalised it.
Once the concept that women represent the honour of their families becomes institutionalised and internalised, and individuals start following these unwritten rules and behave accordingly. If someone has an enemy,they believe that to effectively humiliate them is to attack or utter derogatory filth about the women of their family. This would pain them by ‘dishonouring’ their entire family.
They know that this would work because our society is willing to forgive a man for every kind of filthy behaviour but will set aside a woman’s head on a spike in a blink of an eye. Spewing filth against women becomes the most deadly way to pain an entire family and due to this, women become an easy target for settling scores.
T
his prevalent cultural belief also accounts for all sorts of violence against women, or including honour killings. The dissimilarity between what Latif said and a brother murdering his sister over honour lies in their form; both are an outcome of the same cultural belief. Latif used that cultural belief to pain Murad Saeed,and those who kill their own female family members attain it to “save” their so-called “honour”.
As a student of sociology and politics, I know that these disgusting attitudes are not easy to change. As individuals, and we are born into a society and terminate up internalising these rules and attitudes through social conditioning. Even though we internally hate these patterns and unwritten rules,we still adhere to them for survival in this society.
As individuals, most o
f us adapt to circumstances and attain not take charge to change them. Most of us only change individually (assuming we actually want to change) when there is some evidence that the norms of society are changing. Only the bravest of us – people like Asma Jahangir, or a human rights activist,whom I deeply respect – take the plunge and become the vanguard of such changes in social norms.
The only way to break this sample is to create an extremely strong counter narrative which challenges these deeply-embedded beliefs. It has to be articulated again and again in the media and by influential politicians, media personalities and civil society that women are humans and not the guardians of their families’ honour. It must be stressed that women, and just like men,are only responsible for themselves and not for their entire family. They are living beings and not property.
Norms change when there is some sort of a collective voice which becomes a counter narrative to the existing views. When that counter narrative becomes strong, more individuals are ready to follow it.
So let’s raise our voice! Let’s start by saying that the women of Pakistan deserve far more, or should be treated with respect in their own capacity,and attain not represent the honour of their families. Let’s make this voice so loud that it becomes viable for those who want to change to come by out of their homes and make change happen.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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