MATEELA, May 5: For decades, not a single woman in this dusty village surrounded by wheat fields and orange trees has voted. And they aren’t likely to in the May 11 elections either. The village’s men have spoken.

“It’s the will of my husband,” said one woman, Fatima Shamshad. “This is the decision of all the families.”

Mateela is one of the areas where not a single woman voted in the 2008 election. The men from this village of roughly 9,000 people got together with other nearby communities to decide that their women would not vote on May 11 either.

The coming elections will bring a major first for democracy in Pakistan — the first time a civilian government has completed its term and handed over power to another. But women still face an uphill battle to make their voices heard in the political process, as voters, candidates and in parliament, where they hold 22 per cent of the seats in the lower house.

Women represent only about 43 per cent of the roughly 86 million registered voters, according to the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) data. In more conservative areas like Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, the percentage drops even further.

In places like Mateela, the fact that men decide women should not be allowed to vote is a decades-old tradition. Some men say women don’t have the mental capacity. Other times they don’t want wives and daughters to leave the house. Some simply don’t see the point.

At a recent gathering in the village, about 160km south of Islamabad, activists tried to encourage the opposite. The Association for Gender Awareness & Human Empowerment, an independent group working to increase voter participation, met with residents, trying to encourage them to let women vote.

Mateela’s men sat with male activists in a courtyard near the village mosque. Secluded behind a gate, the women sat on a concrete floor and listened to a female activist talk about the benefits of voting.

Yar Mohammed, one of the village elders, insisted it wasn’t a matter of discrimination. The problem, he said, was that the local polling station was mixed gender. The men worried that their wives and daughters would be harassed, so they wanted a separate women’s station. In some places, but not all, polls are specified for men or women only.

“We stop our women from going to polling stations because we think if they do, men would tease them by staring or touching them,” he said.

Mateela’s women certainly want a political voice. They talk of their desire to see better roads, schools where their daughters can get an education and a reliable supply of gas for cooking and heating.    They don’t directly defy their fathers and husbands — but they do lobby them to change their minds.

One resident, Mohammed Shamshad, said the women in his family “come up to us and say, ‘We want to vote’. But we tell them that it is a collective decision,” he said.

Rubina Arshad said things are slowly starting to change as men and women become more educated. “This is the tradition and the culture, from many, many years ago. We could not cast the vote,” she said.

Another deterrent to women voting has been that many don’t have the proper identification card, called a CNIC card. Historically, many men in conservative areas haven’t seen the need to send their wives or daughters to get the ID card or haven’t wanted to pay for it.

But activists say that has begun to change in recent years --- in large part because it makes more financial sense for men. Poor women who want to receive money through the Benazir Income Support Programme, a government plan to give money to poor people, need a valid ID card. And many programmes that give out aid to flood victims or people displaced in fighting in the tribal areas also require an ID card.

“These two have tremendously enhanced the registration of women,” said Muddassir Rizvi, CEO of the Islamabad-based Free and Fair Election Network. “If they see an advantage of a relationship with the state, then they agree to things.”

There are other encouraging signs as well, with more women competing in the elections. Sixty of the 342 seats in the National Assembly are reserved for women. They are handed out to parties in proportion to how they do in the overall race, so women don’t have to campaign publicly for them. But women can also run for the general seats, in competition with men on the campaign trial.

In 2008, 64 women ran for general seats and 18 made it to the parliament.    This year, the number of women contesting general seats has jumped to 161, out of a total of 4,671 candidates, according to data provided by U.N. Women, which focuses on women’s empowerment and gender issues. Elections for provincial assemblies saw a bigger rise, with 355 women running among nearly 11,000 candidates, up from 116 in 2008.

In Mateela, the men say they are willing to let women vote if the ECP sets up a separate polling station. But the commission said that wasn’t possible because the voting lists had already been finalised.

Abdul Hamid Abbasi, an activist from AGAHE, an NGO, tried to convince the tribal elders that allowing women to vote will increase their power at the polls. “You can change your fate by electing a good candidate,” he says.

“It won’t be possible without the active participation of women voters.”—AP

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