Of hopes and honour killings
by Rafia Zakaria
Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif recently watched ‘A Girl in the
River: The Price of Forgiveness,’ Sharmeen Obald Chinoy`s
Oscar-nominated documentary about `honour` killings. In a statement
following the screening, he told Chinoy and his audience that there is
no `honour` in murder.
In the days since it has been announced that the government will move
to plug holes in laws that currently allow killers, (often family
members), to go unpunished. Chinoy has expressed the hope that her film
would help put an end to ‘honour killings’ in Pakistan.
It would be wonderful if her wish came true. The reasons it will not
are the ones that the government needs to address. Here are two sets of
statistics by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP).
The first covers the period spanning February 1, 2004 - February 1,
2006. During this time, there were 988 incidents of honour killings in
Pakistan. Nearly, but not exactly half, did not even have FIRs
registered for the crime. Firearms were the weapon of choice for doing
away with the victims, followed by blunt force injury with a heavy
weapon.
Fast-forward a decade: Another set of HRCP statistics is from between
February 2014-February 2016. The number of honour killings in this
period was 1,276, nearly 400 did not have FIRs registered and most of
the victims were killed by guns.
Emerging patterns
The decade in the middle has not been one without legislative
initiatives or civil society campaigns to end honour killings. I chose
the period immediately following 2004 because that marked the passage of
a bill against honour crimes. As political machinations go, the bill was
a diluted version of the one first introduced by Senator Sherry Rehman.
The whole thing repeated itself in March 2015 with the passage
through the Senate of the Anti-Honour Killings Laws (Criminal Laws
Amendment) Bill, 2014. Meanwhile, international human rights
organisations have devoted budgets and campaigns to ending honour
killings in Pakistan. As the numbers show in both cases, honour killings
have continued and even increased.
Here is why. First, legislative initiatives have focused on the legal
dimensions of the issue, the latest a much needed amendment to the gisas
and diyat laws that would prevent the pardoning of honour killers. Like
legislative initiatives of the past, it has no teeth at all against the
root of the problem: that women (and men) are considered social capital
in a family, marrying them a form of adding sociological assets,
creating relationships that families, increasingly torn by migration and
demographic change, require. When a woman rebels against this mechanism,
not only does the family lose the possibility of capital accrued from
arranging her marriage, her decision jeopardises the futures of
remaining brothers and sisters, their possibilities of making good
matches that sustain them in a web of relationships where individual
choice defeats collective security.
In a cultural and sociological system where the family and tribe are
still the only and often unitary form of social insurance against
catastrophe, the death of a breadwinner, illness and job losses,
collective control over the individual is the glue that holds everything
together.
Failed advocacy
The second reason lies in the broken mechanisms of international
advocacy, particularly as they exist in countries such as Pakistan,
which have faced the brunt of international aggression. Simply put,
since `saving brown women` became the reason to go to war, stories of
hapless victims of honour killings in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq and
Syria, have served to fuel a moral reason as to why such imperial
overtures are justified. Some brown women, those at risk of honour
killings, are to be saved; others, who happen to be near target zones
for drones, do not.
The hypocrisy of this is not lost on local populations but it
manifests in a particularly grotesque way in the towns and villages of
Pakistan that have borne direct hits from American aggression;
maintaining honour, which translates roughly to controlling women, has
become a nationalistic goal, a stand for local sovereignty.
Women are paying with their lives; simply telling their stories has
not saved them and will not save them. This last point is important, for
it represents a very troubling moral bifurcation in the aid and advocacy
economy via which campaigns against honour killings are funded and the
communities in which moral change must take place.
The words of the Prime Minister are heartening. Like most women, I
would rather have a leader willing and sincere in recognising the horror
of honour crimes than one who capitulates as so many others have done.
A Pakistani woman honoured at the Oscars is also a good thing, an
inspiring individual victory and a hopeful honouring, even if it is one
that cannot stop future dis-honourings of less lucky Pakistani women.
For that, a deeper effort is required, a local and grass-roots
conversation, directed at those for whom family, honour and survival are
intertwined.
The writer is an attorney teaching constitutional law and political
philosophy
- IPS
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