Top: Samina Bibi who succeeded in delaying her under age daughter’s marriage; Right:para-legal Sabiha going through her notes.—Photos provided by the writer
Thirty-five-year-old Samina Bibi of village Goth Lal in Bahawalpur district was married off at 12 after which she proceeded to have seven children. However, when her elder daughter Sawera, a 14-year-old student of grade 9, was being forced to leave school and marry her cousin the same age as hers, Samina took a stand. She approached the local paralegal, Muhammad Saleem, for help. He met with Samina’s husband and father-in-law, and explained to them the adverse health impacts of child marriage. He also told them that legal action could be taken against them since the legal age of marriage in Pakistan is 18 years for boys and 16 for girls. Saleem somehow managed to convince the family to postpone Sawera’s wedding to her cousin until they reached the legal age for marriage.
Saleem explained that he was empowered to help Samina because of the training he had received in different laws and skills to suggest a variety of options to community members to resolve legal issues. “It is a patriarchal society here but if you go and talk to the men they do end up agreeing that marrying off young girls is a wrong custom,” he says.
According to an estimate, out of the 40 million people living below the poverty line in Pakistan, around 10 million are in Southern Punjab. Most are small farmers living off the land in villages, growing wheat and cotton. With a low literacy rate and no access to basic needs, they know little about the laws of the country, let alone their legal rights. Incidents of violence against women are common, including domestic abuse and under-age marriage.
With training and awareness, communities in Bahawalpur district are finding legal solutions for their issues
In Bahawalpur district, however, local communities are empowering themselves by learning about their legal rights and ways to access justice through a project called Strengthening Legal Empowerment. It began in January 2016 when training was provided to community members as paralegals. Aside from serious women’s issues, the local communities also confront issues such as civil documentation (how to renew and make national ID cards), problems with Wapda (over-billing) and issues with the Benazir Income Support Programme (eligibility and wrong names on cards due to clerical mistakes).
“We provided the paralegals with a series of trainings on dealing with these issues,” says Mohammed Faseeh Jameel, an advocate of the High Court in Bahawalpur who has been helping with the training component of the project.
The Rural Support Programmes Network (RSPN), reaching out to over 43 million rural Pakistanis, is implementing the project with support from the National Rural Support Programme (NRSP) and community organisations in Bahawalpur district called Local Support Organisations (LSOs). An LSO is a cluster of smaller village organisations which are first formed. In a small village called Chak Number 24 near Bahawalpur town is an office where one LSO, called Kehkashan, meets on a regular basis. It was set up in 2010, covers 14 villages in the area and has a community fund of over 2.6 million rupees from which community members can take loans to set up small businesses.