Men gathered at a PML-Q camp in Dhurnal. The other picture shows a police official standing guard at the gate of a polling station. — Photos by the writer
Rubina Shahzad woke up early on July 25. It was the day of the general election, a day Rubina had been working towards in Dhurnal village. She phoned women she knew and told them to be at her house before 8am.
Thirty women came with the resolve to vote for the first time in 50 years.
Rubina is a midwife in her 40s.
She lives in Dhurnal village, which is 90 kilometres from Chakwal, in the Lawa tehsil. Alongside Mohammad Tariq, a preacher in his late 30s, with support from the Potohar Organisation for Development Advocacy (PODA), Rubina had spent the election season campaigning to bring women of her village out to vote with the rest of the country on July 25.
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Tariq had thought that it would be easy for him and Rubina to accompany women to polling stations, and it wasn’t until he gathered with the other women at Rubina’s small house that morning that he comprehended the risks.
There were charged young men on motorcycles who had taken over the winding streets of the village. Hundreds of men were gathered at five camps, belonging to five political groups, near polling stations.
“If women go to the polling stations on foot, anything bad can happen,” Tariq murmured to Rubina.
He then tried, unsuccessfully, to hire a vehicle to ferry the voters around. There were scores of public service vans in the village, but not a single vehicle owner was willing to take the risk.
Eventually two observers from PODA convinced their driver to take three women to the polling station in his car.
The driver was from Chakwal city, and unaware of the village atmosphere in which he had willingly offered his services. He took three women to the polling station but refused to take any more.
“When I dropped the women at the gate of the polling stations three men came and asked where I had picked up the women from. Because of their furious tone, I lied and told them I was hired by the women from Rawalpindi and they let me go,” the driver, Mehmood, told Dawn.
Another man, who was standing a few yards away, recognised the women as his neighbours. “He warned me of the consequences if I dared to bring more women,” Mehmood said.
After he refused to take any more women to vote, and Tariq began looking anew for a vehicle, the women at Rubina’s house started to leave.