Friday, May 26, 2006

Fighting Forced Marriages

Humaira Awais Shahid

A Pakistani legislator fights unspeakable women’s rights abuses—with surprising success.

The acid burns the hair off their heads, fuses lips, melts breasts, and leaves the victims blind, in agony, unrecognizable, and scarred for life. According to the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), at least 211 women were killed in 2002 and countless others maimed when their husbands threw acid in their faces to punish them for disobedience. In Urdu, the acid is called tez ab—sharp water. Some victims say that it is worse than dying.

Humaira Awais Shahid, 32, a former investigative journalist turned legislator at the Punjab Assembly, is lobbying to treat this “ruthless tribal custom” as attempted murder. On Aug. 5, 2003, the Assembly passed her resolution to treat it as a crime and prosecute the men who commit it.

Complete article here >>


Tags: Forced Marriages, Legislator
An IFAD-supported project in Mexico helps a women’s group set up a sheep farm. One participant tells her story.

Watch video: QuickTime RealPlayer Windows Media Player

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Pakistani woman is 'Funniest Mom in America'

Post / Cyrus McCrimmon
As a comedian, Rubi Nicholas - in her Castle Rock home with daughter Yasmin, 3 - draws from growing up a Pakistani-American in a white Pennsylvania neighborhood. Last week, she won Nick at Nite's "Search for the Funniest Mom in America."

Read the story here.