LAHORE: The clashing and droning of machines at work is deafening. Along the line is an endless supply of cola bottles dashing along in high speed. Clothed smartly in her company’s red uniform, Zara who has been working here for the past six months now is checking to see how the machines are getting along.
“I work here for eight hours every day and then go for my evening course in MS Office,” she reveals proudly.
“I already have a diploma in electronics from the Punjab University but I am still planning to study further and get a bachelor’s degree.”
Zara is happy that she has a job in one of the biggest multinational firms, and at the same time has the chance to study too. And there are several other young women at the same company who feel the same. But more than that they believe that hiring of women has helped change the work environment drastically.
“It seems like a cliché saying this but when women are hired, men start to accept them eventually and then ultimately they treat them equally and not as inferiors,” says another woman who works at one of the four operating production lines.
Many companies in Pakistan do not favour recruitment of women, and company heads believe that after a woman gets married or has children she leaves, or that she will get harassed at work. But now within some multinational corporations (MNCs) there hiring of more and more women at top positions is encouraged.
However, Coca Cola has been over the years bringing in more women in all positions.
“We believe in breaking down stereotypes, and to bring in gender sensitivity simply by opening up all our fields to women,” says Ammara, the company’s human resource head.
“It is not a question of numbers, it is a question of whether women are there or not. And most of the women we recruit give a top-notch performance.” To help out the women at work, there are several training opportunities.
One of the four women who work on such a position that breaks down gender stereotypes is 40-year-old Aasma Shaheen Iqbal. It ends up surprising many that Aasma drives a truck and that too on intercity travel.