Welcome to ANAA NY Rally 2006
Page
NY Rally 2006 Pictures
[photogallery/photo10960/real.htm]
Click on Pictures to Enlarge
For more pictures
Click Here
Asian-American
and Other Human Rights Groups Joined Forces to Protest
Pakistan’s Human Rights Violations, September 18th ,
5-7 pm, outside Roosevelt Hotel , New York City
Today the Asian-American Network Against
the Abuse of Human Rights
(ANAA) held a rally to protest human
rights abuses in Pakistan. Other rally participants included
organizations such as Amnesty International NYC Women’s Action
Team, Breakthrough, Equality Now, Human Rights Watch, The Sindhi
Association of North America (SANA), the Voices of Pakistan, the
World Sindhi Congress, World Sindhi Institute, and local New
York university student organizations. 200 people attended this
rally. The rally took place Monday, September 18th,
2006, in New York City outside Roosevelt hotel where General
Musharraf was staying while in the USA to address UN General
Assembly.
The rally was a fusion of human rights
groups representing a variety of segments of the
Pakistani-American population. When the organizers reached the
hotel, they were told they could only hold their rally by 44th
and Madison, even when they had the permit for 45th
and Madison. Lieutenant Mendez said the permit did not mean
anything and could be changed anytime, and if he wanted he could
even tear the permit. Despite multiple tries, ANAA and Amnesty
coordinators were forced to move to 44th and Madison.
Pakistani Government tried to counter the rally by holding their
own. Many said it was obvious that this was a reaction to ANAA
rally.
Dr Muhammed Taqi of Michigan said “ANAA has
put military regime on the
defensive, and their farce of pro-Musharraf
shows the desperation of beleaguered despot.” Jeanne Bergman of
Amnesty international said “one must pay attention to human
rights at all cost”
Overall, it was a successful rally as it
brings attention to human rights oppression in Pakistan and
focused on women rights being human rights.
Stop Human rights violations in Pakistan!
Demand Change!
Monday,
September 18, 2006
5 p.m. to 7p.m.
44th Street, Madison Avenue, New
York, NY, Opposite Roosevelt Hotel
Pakistani President
General Musharraf will be in New York in September. During his
visit, Asian-American Network Against the Abuse of Human Rights
(ANAA) and other human rights organizations are joining forces
for a rally on September 18, 2006.
The rally will
mobilize organizations and individuals to speak out against
human rights violations in Pakistan and to demand changes that
will ensure the welfare of ALL Pakistanis.
Demand an end to:
-
Violation of
Pakistani women’s rights
-
Blasphemy
Laws
-
Violence
against human rights defenders
-
Discrimination of minorities
Join us on September
18th. Make sure to sign up to receive regular
updates.
Contact Information:
Syed Ehtisham,
syedmae@yahoo.com, 1-607-330-0950
Bazah Roohi,
bazah_roohi@yahoo.com,
1-347-865-2769
Student Contacts:
Hassan
Siddiqi (NYU),
siddiqi.hassan@gmail.com,
Aaron Ali Shaikh (New School), ali@newlanguages.org,
1-646-644-2766
Bushra Husain (Columbia University),
bsh2108@columbia.edu, 1-516-507-2569
Naveed Hasan (Columbia University),
naveed@cs.columbia.edu, 1-917-447-0648
Co-Sponsor:
Amnesty
International NYC Women Action Team
Collaborators:
Coney
Island Avenue Project
Equality Now
Human Rights Watch
Pakistani Christian Coalition
Sindhi Association of North America
Voices of Pakistan
World Sindh Congress
Click here to download NY rally 2006 flier
Click Here to
download video of NY rally of 2005
Show support, participate in ANAA NY-Rally 2006
Sign Up
Now
If you are not an Anaa Honorary Member please
Sign up first.
Veils and jails
BY RAFIA ZAKARIA
| The Hudood Ordinances expose how
Generals past and present have used the regulation of female
sexuality to their strategic advantage. |
RIZWAN TABASSUM/AFP
A WOMAN AND her child as they wait for
her release order at a jail in Karachi on July 13.
ON February 22, 1979 the then
President of Pakistan General Zia-ul-Haq began his infamous "Islamisation"
campaign and promulgated four separate ordinances collectively
known as the Hudood Ordinances. The Hudood Ordinances (plural
for the singular Hadd, meaning limits), which cover theft,
adultery, rape, and bearing false witness, amended Pakistan's
laws to make sexual offences crimes against the state. The
number of women in Pakistan's prisons swelled from 79 on the
date of the promulgation to several thousand in the months and
years that followed.
In the decades since, the
Hudood Ordinances have become convenient tools for law
enforcement bodies to intrude in the lives of citizens and
intimidate and harass those they want to target. In a
patriarchal society rife with misogynistic feudal and tribal
practices, the laws have become convenient ways to subjugate an
already oppressed female population. Scores of charges have been
filed and thousands of women imprisoned on concocted charges of
illicit sexual relations. Their lives and reputations are
destroyed by the resulting ostracism and stigma.
On July 7 this year, nearly 27
years after that fateful day which so drastically changed the
lives of Pakistani women, President Pervez Musharraf, another
General, promulgated the "Law Reforms Ordinance 2006" under
which women prisoners on trial under the Hudood Ordinances
became immediately eligible for bail. In the puffery and
promises accompanying the announcement, General Musharraf's
Minister for Women and Youth Affairs declared that the Hudood
Ordinances were "going to be done away with".
Newspapers across the world
lauded the General's move, which promised the release of as many
as 1,300 women from Pakistan's jails. The Los Angeles Times
celebrated Musharraf's moderation in a laudatory piece entitled
"Moderate Islam on the March" penned by none other than the
otherwise unerringly critical Irshad Manji. The Christian
Science Monitor called the General's move "a progressive
step" towards the "enlightened moderation" philosophy the
General is so fond of touting as his guiding principle.
Nearly giddy in their attempt
to report on a good news story from the Muslim world otherwise
so grotesquely rid with wars, destruction and terrorist attacks,
few Western reporters questioned the value of a temporary bail
provision that left intact the source of the problem; the law
itself was almost pristinely untouched. Even fewer questioned
the viability of the proposed changes, which require DNA tests
of all rape victims and suspects in a country that boasts only
one DNA lab for a population of 162 million. Amid the heady talk
of reform, it seemed that one General had finally mustered the
courage to undo what another had so despotically stuffed down
the throats of a subjugated polity. If one believed these
optimistic appraisals by the international media, it seemed that
the Damocles sword hanging over the heads of Pakistani women was
on the verge of being lifted.
The celebrations, however,
were premature. On July 17, a mere ten days after the initial
announcement of the Law Reforms Act 2006, General Musharraf
backtracked and declared that the Hudood Ordinances would be
"amended" and not "repealed". In an uncharacteristically
deferential move designed to maintain the political mileage
derived from the initial announcement of the release, the
General asked the Council of Islamic Ideology to recommend
changes that would "Islamise" the Hudood laws. The crafty
terminology disguised the reality that a virtual bevy of
commissions (Islamic and otherwise) had already declared the
Hudood laws un-Islamic and contrary to Article 23 of Pakistan's
Constitution which guarantees each citizen equal rights
regardless of gender. Indeed, the Council of Islamic Ideology
itself has already recommended complete repeal of the Hudood
Ordinances. A recent report issued by the council unequivocally
declared that "the Hudood Ordinance does not derive itself from
the Koran and Hadith" and that "partial amendments cannot bring
it in accord of the Koran and Sunna." Ultimately, Musharraf's
artful rhetoric and evasive deference aimed to disguise the fact
that he who commands enough power unilaterally to add bail
provisions to a law without consultation with either the
judiciary or the legislature is hardly at the mercy of such
councils and commissions if truly motivated to make
groundbreaking changes.
FAROOQ NAEEM/AFP
At the Adiala Jail in Rawalpindi, a
child with her mother (right), who is a prisoner, and another
woman.
Weighed on the scales of
political gain, the Hudood Ordinances expose how Generals past
and present have managed to use the regulation of female
sexuality in the name of Islam to their strategic advantage.
General Zia-ul-Haq employed his Islamisation measures to pander
to the nation's Islamists and please Saudi Arabian benefactors
who filled the country's coffers. Similarly, General Musharraf,
by adding a bail provision to the Hudood Ordinances,
calculatedly brought Western attention to his status as the
moderate stalwart bravely battling Pakistan's Islamists. When
The New York Times reported the story under the headline
"Pakistan's Islamists oppose Musharraf's move to relax Hudood
Laws", it was obvious that President Musharraf's political
spinners had scored a bulls-eye. It was, of course, no accident
that General Musharraf's machinations emerged at a time when the
United States Congress was considering a $5.1 billion arms
package for Pakistan.
In a testament to the
meaninglessness of the bail provision introduced by Musharraf,
several women granted bail through the Law Reforms Act 2006
refused to leave the prisons on bail because they feared being
killed. As Anis Haroon of the Aurat Foundation, who has been
battling the Hudood Ordinances since their inception, aptly
summarised, "such half-hearted measures to change the law are
not going to benefit anyone, 1,300 more women will go in the
prisons unless the laws are changed. Women being released will
go out to worse circumstances or to families who put them there
in the first place. This law has been amended before and those
changes have been useless, this ordinance has to be repealed."
The plight of these women who
refuse freedom rather than risk death exposes the wide and
intricate web of discriminatory laws that hold Pakistani women
firmly within their suffocating grasp. The most controversial
zina (adultery and fornication) laws under the Hudood
Ordinances are the zina bil jabr or rape laws which
require the testimony of four adult male Muslim witnesses to the
act of penetration, and which punish the rape victim for zina
if the witnesses cannot be produced. At the same time, equally
problematic is the fact that the same zina laws under Hudood
also criminalise thousands of women who are merely accused of
illicit sexual relations by irate family members, abusive
husbands or even intrusive neighbours. Although wrongful
accusations of zina are punishable by the qazf
provision, human rights lawyers in Pakistan report that this is
rarely used and cases are easily registered against women at the
behest of family members or other enemies. According to Amna
Buttar, president of the Asian American Network Against Abuse,
research in Pakistan's prisons shows that many of the women
imprisoned under zina laws are single or widowed women
living alone, young brides who invoke the anger of greedy
in-laws for not bringing enough dowry or even elderly women
whose husbands wish to get rid of them. In several cases, pimps
also file zina charges against women who refuse to work
for them after being sold into sexual slavery.
ADAM BERRY/BLOOMBERG NEWS
PRESIDENT PERVEZ MUSHARRAF, who, in
July, amended the Hudood Ordinances that President Zia-ul-Haq
promulgated in 1979.
In addition to the Hudood laws
themselves, the Qanun-e-Shahadat or law of testimony
makes a woman's testimony equal to half of a man and completely
excludes female testimony in Hudood cases. Furthermore, the law
of Qisas and Diyat privatises violent crimes and
allows families to settle even murder cases by paying blood
money. In eliminating the possibility of state prosecution, this
law allows family members to kill women in the name of honour
without any fear of criminal penalty against the fathers,
brothers, sons or husbands who no longer want them alive. In the
light of such institutionalised discrimination it is hardly
surprising that women accused of zina choose to languish
in prison rather than risk death.
Stubbornly ignoring the
legitimisation of women's subjugation through this collusion of
discriminatory laws, crafty politicians like Musharraf adeptly
spew tasty morsels of reformist rhetoric that do little to
effect actual change. Beneath the overt political opportunism
surrounding both the promulgation and the superficial amendment
of the Hudood Ordinances lie unresolved questions regarding
Pakistan's relationship with Islam and Islamic law.
Duped by the artificial
comfort of political stability built on oppression, most
Pakistanis today remain content to relegate such ideological
wrangling to the occasional television show or newspaper
article. In a political system where judicial and legislative
institutions have been rendered effectively powerless, the
intellectual spaces where citizens can wrangle with such
questions and use the potency of their vote to invoke change
have been obliterated.
In the meantime, Pakistan's
women remain legally condemned to being half humans, their
safety predicated on colluding with a system that
institutionalises their oppression and their bodies reduced to
political pawns in a game played by military generals.