Abstract:
Purpose: In the new millennium, Women’s Rights have been the focus of vision
worldwide. The Charter of United Nations Endorsement of the equal rights of men
and women and the subsequent International Treaties and Declarations, the Vienna
Declaration in 1993 (Khan, 2001) and Declaration of Beijing in 1995 (Khan, 2001),
stands in 2002 as a sharp contrast to the reality of the life for millions of women
worldwide (Khan, 2001). Women’s economic, social, and cultural rights continue to
be neglected.
Design/methodology/approach: There are several changes which are necessary to
combat violence against women. Changes are required at the level of specific
countries, the United Nations, and the international community.
Findings: Many traditional social attitudes towards women persist amongst the
people across these countries. Even increased access to education and information has
often failed to wipe out deeply engrained concepts about women. One such idea is
that a girlchild is only a “visitor” in the house where she is born and that, eventually
she must go to her “real” or married home.
Practical implications: Pakistan is supposedly bound by its ratification of the
International Treaties to ensure respect for women’s human rights and fundamental
freedom. As a party to the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW, 1992; Burney and McArthur, 1999),
Pakistan is obliged to pursue “by appropriate means and without delay” a policy of
eliminating discrimination against women, including any distinction made on the
basis of sex, which has the purpose of impairing or nullifying the recognition of
women as being equal to men in regard to human rights and fundamental freedoms.
Originality value: Despite the awareness of the widespread prevalence of all types
of violence against women in South Asian countries, governments appear to be unable
or unwilling to put a stop to it. The HRCP reports and the government’s own
Commission of Inquiry for Women reported that domestic violence in Pakistan has
been described as the most pervasive violation of human rights.