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 Amn-o-Nisa coalition member Dr. Tahira Baloch receiving a Human Rights Defender award from Pakistani Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf in December 2012.

Amn-o-Nisa coalition member Dr. Tahira Baloch receiving a Human Rights Defender award from Pakistani Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf in December 2012. (Photo by Prime Minister Secretariat)

To commemorate International Human Rights Day, Pakistani Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf presented Human Rights Defender awards in December 2012 to Dr. Tahira Baloch and 12 other activists who courageously promote human rights awareness and practices in their country. Foreign diplomats, parliamentarians, and civil society representatives attended the ceremony.

Currently an Operations Officer with the World Health Organization, Dr. Baloch coordinates public health programs and oversees health emergency and disaster management projects in Balochistan.  She also directs the provision of free maternal healthcare at the district and provincial level—no easy feat considering her province has the highest maternal mortality ratio in Pakistan. (At 785 deaths reported per 100,000 live births, it is also on par with the sixth worst ranked country in the world.)

Dr. Baloch has worked for numerous UN Missions and been a council member on the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan since 1997. A tireless advocate for women’s rights, she served on Pakistan’s National Commission on the Status of Women from 2006 to 2008 to push forward a bill against honor killings. Additionally, she is the Balochistan Provincial Coordinator of Amn-o-Nisa, an Institute-supported coalition of Pakistani women leaders working to address instability and violent extremism in their country.

Given Balochistan’s alarming rise in disappearances, kidnappings, and targeted executions in recent years—especially of journalists and human rights defenders—the province is particularly dangerous [PDF] for those exposing and protecting human rights. Between June 2010 and May 2011 alone, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reported 30 targeted killings and found the bodies of 140 missing persons there.

Compounding this, women health workers are increasingly at risk of violence from militants, as evidenced by the recent spate of killings of female aid workers delivering polio vaccines. Dr. Baloch works in perilous situations and risks her life daily to make her country safer and healthier for all, especially women.

Having known Dr. Baloch since Amn-o-Nisa formed in April 2011, I’ve continually been inspired by her tenacity, courage, and the calm with which she accepts the dangers and challenges her work presents. It is fearless women leaders like Dr. Baloch that shed hope on an otherwise grim scenario and provide inspiration for all those striving to make the world a more secure, peaceful place.

Congratulations to Dr. Baloch and her fellow human rights defender awardees!

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Girls at a makeshift outdoor school

A woman leads a class in a makeshift girls school in Mingora, Swat. In areas hard-hit by extremist violence, women are on the front lines of reconstruction and rehabilitation efforts, helping their communities recover from disaster and rebuild their lives. (Sara Farid)

As a researcher at Inclusive Security, I’ve had the privilege of traveling to Pakistan four times since 2011 to support Amn-o-Nisa, a coalition of Pakistani women leaders who are mobilizing against extremism.

During my time in-country over the past two years, I sat down with many of these courageous women who shared their personal, and, at times, heart-wrenching stories. Their experiences illustrate just how much extremism has devastated their communities and their country—a viewpoint rarely portrayed in US media.

While these interactions opened my eyes to the destruction being inflicted by extremists on everyday Pakistanis, it became glaringly obvious that Pakistani women are not solely victims of their increasingly violent intolerance. They are creative, courageous leaders who are striving to alter their country’s dangerous trajectory and rebuild lives shattered in extremism’s wake.

Unfortunately, policymakers have yet to fully realize or capitalize on the knowledge, experience, and collective power of Pakistani women peacebuilders.

At Inclusive Security, we published three papers to shed light on the impact of extremist violence in Pakistan—particularly on women. More important, however, they demonstrate the unique strategies women are employing to curb radicalization, respond to crises, and rebuild communities. The publications also provide policymakers with strategic solutions for how to better address extremism and promote peace.

More about the publications:

Sarah Chatellier is a program associate and researcher at The Institute for Inclusive Security. She helps coordinate Amn-o-Nisa, a coalition of women leaders working to moderate extremism in Pakistan.

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Watch For Pakistanis, Violence Has ‘Profound Impact’ on Life on PBS. See more from PBS NewsHour.

In a time when media often portray Pakistan through the lens of terrorism, a delegation of 12 Pakistani women peacebuilders brought forth a new narrative to the US. They showed the world what women are doing to promote peace and address the root causes of extremism in Pakistan.

While the media rarely recognizes them and their stories, these leaders received unprecedented attention during their visit to DC. These stories are a testament to the courageous work they do every day to prevent violence and promote social cohesion in their country.

Pakistan Delegation Media Roundup

PBS NewsHour: For Pakistanis, Violence Has ‘Profound Impact’ on Everyday Life (see the video embedded above)

NPR: Pakistani Moms Keep Sons From Being Radicalized

Foreign Policy’s The AfPak Channel: Conversations with Suicide Bombers

GlobalPost: Soft Power, Woman Power: Forging a New Security Paradigm in Pakistan

GlobalPost: Pakistani Women Waging Peace the World Over

The Huffington Post: Pakistani Women Unite to Battle Religious Extremism

News International: Pakistani Women Peace Delegation in USA

Jaime Horn is a communications specialist at The Institute for Inclusive Security, where she is responsible for media outreach. Jaime has over 12 years of experience in communications, politics, and international development.

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A group of Pakistani women sitting around a table

Sarah Chatellier (sitting in the back right-hand corner) observing the delegation’s meeting with Sen. Barbara Boxer. (Inclusive Security / Swanee Hunt)

During the weeks I spent preparing to bring a delegation of 12 women from Pakistan to the US to talk about one of Washington’s hottest issues—extremism—I couldn’t help but be filled with a slight sense of dread.

Let’s be frank; relations between the US and Pakistan are far from ideal.

Gallup survey done last year shows America’s perception of Pakistan has sunk to a new low. Bellicose Congressional rhetoric has called for the cutting off of all aid to a country still very much in need of development assistance over concerns about its willingness and ability to combat terrorism.

While the US has provided some $13.3 billion in security assistance and $6.5 billion in economic aid to Pakistan [PDF] over the past decade, recent developments in our relations have many Americans—especially those in Washington with control of the purse strings—wondering where and how this money is being spent, and to what end.

However, because US media coverage of Pakistan overwhelmingly focuses on the country’s links to terrorists, most Western audiences have little understanding of and empathy for the majority of Pakistan’s vastly moderate populace whose lives, homes, and communities have been disrupted or destroyed by extremist violence.

Rarely do stories highlight how deeply most Pakistanis want peace for themselves and others and how much they are striving to secure it. So why not bring women on the front lines of Pakistan’s conflicts to Washington, DC, to share their stories, bridge divides, and begin to rebuild our fragile relationship? With support from the US Embassy in Islamabad and Meridian International Center, we did.

But, how would US officials engage with Pakistanis around an issue that has caused the near collapse of our increasingly fraught alliance? Given the current state of affairs, I envisioned confrontation and hostility rather than constructive dialogue.

[See also: 12 Influential Pakistani Women Leaders You Should Know]

Rep. Schakowsky meets with Pakistani Women

Behind the scenes at a meeting with Rep. Jan Schakowsky and women from the Pakistan delegation. This was one of 15 meetings we arranged between the women and US policymakers. (Inclusive Security / Travis Wheeler)

In April, I had the privilege of spending a whirlwind week with 12 members of Amn-o-Nisa, a coalition of women leaders who are mobilizing against extremism in Pakistan, as they painted the town red. Over the course of five days, the group of journalists, educators, lawyers, and civil society activists had 15 meetings at the State Dept., USAID, and Congress (including with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Leader Nancy Pelosi) and two large-scale events, where they sat face to face with prominent DC policymakers to talk about efforts they’re undertaking to moderate extremism in their communities and propose solutions for how the US can better support and implement initiatives to counter radicalization in Pakistan.

As Bushra Hyder, a peace educator who founded her own school in the conflict-riddled region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa explained: “Most Pakistanis are like you and me. We want our children to be able to walk to school and go to the market without fear of bomb blasts…The extremists are a very small group of people; most Pakistanis want peace. But, we need to change how we are doing things to stop the growing trend of extremism. If nothing changes, it will only get worse.”

To my pleasant surprise, the exchanges were anything but confrontational. The delegation was resoundingly met with enthusiasm and even awe. (Their jam-packed schedule was an indication in and of itself of how thirsty US policymakers are for new solutions to countering violent extremism.) Not once did Osama bin Laden come up; on the few occasions when delegates mentioned drones, I saw officials nod empathetically. Better yet, virtually every official acknowledged the women’s courage and touted the importance of supporting their efforts and policy recommendations. Not only were they seen, they were heard.

Qamar-ul Huda, senior program officer in the Religion and Peacemaking Center at USIP, hailed them as “powerful women doing powerful stuff,” noting their unique ability to “creatively rethink relationships” in order to pave a new path for Pakistan’s future. Secretary Clinton noted that Pakistani women are key to building a safe future for their country.

[See also: Pakistani Women Leaders Propose Solutions for US Foreign Policy to Help End Extremist Violence]

In the upcoming weeks and months, Inclusive Security will continue to work with Amn-o-Nisa and the offices they met with to ensure the delegation’s recommendations are implemented. In the meantime, I hope those they encountered will remember the human side of Pakistan’s conflicts.

Despite what we see in the news, Pakistani women and men are daily risking their lives to promote peace and make their country a safer place for their children and generations to come. But, they can only do so with our continued support, encouragement, and allegiance.

Sarah Chatellier is a program associate and researcher at The Institute for Inclusive Security. She helps coordinate Amn-o-Nisa, a coalition of women leaders working to moderate extremism in Pakistan.

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Pakistan delegation stand with Sec. Clinton

Women from the Amn-o-Nisa coalition of Pakistan meet with Secretary Clinton in Washington, DC. The women traveled to DC to meet with Sen. Boxer, Leader Pelosi, and officials at the State Dept. and US Agency for International Development. (Inclusive Security / Swanee Hunt)

The following is a letter I sent to the US Embassy in Islamabad this morning to thank them for sponsoring a US visit of 12 Pakistani women.

Salaam from Kabul! I hope you all are well.

I wanted to thank you for supporting the delegation of 12 Pakistani women for their exchange visit. Of course, they are still in the US, but we hosted them in DC a couple of weeks ago now, and they are thrilled to report that it was a great success.

I am sure that Mossarat Qadeem and colleagues will brief you upon their return in much greater detail, but in short, they left a big mark on Washington that week. [click to continue…]

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Pakistan delegation stand with Sec. Clinton

Women from the Amn-o-Nisa coalition of Pakistan meet with Secretary Clinton in Washington, DC. The women traveled to DC to meet with Sen. Boxer, Leader Pelosi, and officials at the State Dept. and US Agency for International Development to deliver recommendations for how the US can help moderate extremism in Pakistan. (Inclusive Security / Swanee Hunt)

Three weeks ago our founder and president, Ambassador Swanee Hunt, travelled to South Sudan and Sudan to meet with coalitions of women peacebuilders, most of whom we’ve known more than six years. Many, in fact, met Ambassador Hunt in 1999 when she gathered 110 women leaders from conflict zones around the world for our first annual colloquium.

Her simple act of traveling to meet them several weeks ago, when others were fleeing as the drumbeat of war grew louder, gave new energy to their peace initiatives.

[click to continue…]

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Pakistani women leaders pose with Amb. Daniel Benjamin at the State Dept. in Washington, DC

Pakistani women leaders meet with Amb. Daniel Benjamin at the State Dept. to propose solutions for how US foreign policy can help support Pakistan’s civil society in ending extremist violence. The delegation of women are a part of Amn-O-Nisa, a coalition supported by The Institute for Inclusive Security. (Inclusive Security / Allison Shean)

Why

The United States provides more foreign aid to Pakistan than to any other country, with the exception of Afghanistan. A significant portion of those funds is intended to reduce violent extremism through the provision of aid to civilians.

Still, thousands of Pakistanis die each year due to ethnic, sectarian, and political clashes motivated by extremist ideology. Efforts to create a more secure Pakistan often fail precisely because they don’t address the root causes of extremism—including political grievances, socio-economic injustices, and sources of intolerance.

While recent events have led many outside of the country to call into question Pakistan’s dedication to combating terrorism, a thriving civil society with an active media, prominent think tanks, and a vast array of actors, is working to stabilize the country.

The delegates are in the US to share examples and innovative ideas needed to curb the tide of violent extremism. By meeting with key representatives from the US Departments of State and Defense, USAID, Congress, think tanks, and civil society organizations, the delegation will profile their work as a positive force and propose solutions for US engagement with a critical ally in Pakistan—women peacebuilders.

What

A dozen Pakistani civil society leaders will meet with US officials in Washington, DC, this week to profile the work they are doing to combat violent extremism in their nation, including:

  • Deradicalization of youth trained as suicide bombers
  • Engagement with religious leaders
  • Reform of curriculum
  • The use of media to highlight the deadly effects of extremism

The delegation will identify ways in which the US Government can support these efforts through shifts in US policy towards Pakistan. View their recommendations here.

The delegates are representatives of Amn- O-Nisa, the Pakistan Women’s Coalition Against Extremism, launched in October 2011, to address instability and violence in Pakistan. The Institute for Inclusive Security and the Meridian International Center are hosting the delegation with support from the US Embassy in Islamabad.

Who

The delegation includes established civil society leaders from across Pakistan, including:

  • Journalists
  • Educators
  • Lawyers
  • Heads of non-governmental organizations

>>Meet the 12 Pakistani Women Leaders You Should Know<<

The delegation is scheduled to meet with representatives of the National Counterterrorism Center, the Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications, and the Department of Defense, as well as:

Department of State

  • Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State
  • Daniel Benjamin, Ambassador-at-Large for Counterterrorism
  • Robin Raphel, Special Representative to Pakistan and Afghanistan
  • Melanne Verveer, Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues
  • Thomas O. Melia, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human 
Rights and Labor
  • Brian Nichols, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau of International 
Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs

USAID

  • J. Alexander Their, Assistant to the Administrator and Director of the Office of Afghanistan and Pakistan Affairs
  • Michele Schimpp, Deputy Director, Afghanistan-Pakistan Task Force
  • Elizabeth Shevock, Deputy Team Leader, Pakistan, Office of Transition Initiatives

United States Congress

  • Representative Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), House Democratic Leader
  • Representative James McGovern (D-MA), Co-Chair of the Tom Lantos Human Rights 
Commission
  • Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA), Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
  • Senator Kay Hagan (D-NC), Member of the Senate Armed Services Committee
  • Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL), Member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence

World Bank

  • Maria Correia, Social Development Sector Manager, South Asia Region

About Inclusive Security

The Institute for Inclusive Security uses research, training, and advocacy to promote the inclusion of all stakeholders, particularly women, in peace processes. We work with a global network of well over 1,000 women leaders from more than 40 conflict regions.

Our research gives policymakers new strategies to drive inclusion by examining tangible contributions of women peace builders. Our training provides leaders the specialized skills and knowledge to direct local, national, and international peacebuilding. Our advocacy to high-level policymakers promotes change that makes peace processes more broad-based, and thus sustainable.

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Pakistani women leaders in the lobby of the State Dept. in Washington, DC

Pakistani women leaders gather at the State Dept. before meeting with US policymakers to propose solutions for how US foreign policy can help support Pakistan’s civil society in ending extremist violence. The delegation of women are a part of Amn-O-Nisa, a coalition supported by The Institute for Inclusive Security. (Inclusive Security / Allison Shean)


As the weather warms and tourists descend on the nation’s capital, 12 Pakistani women will be among the thousands of visitors in DC this week. But they aren’t here to see the cherry blossoms or tour the White House. They’re here to meet with US policymakers to propose solutions for how the US can help end extremist violence in Pakistan, a country that has lost 35,000 civilians to terrorism since 2001.

The delegation of women will be meeting with key policymakers from the State Dept., USAID, and Congress to recommend how US foreign policy can help support Pakistan’s very active civil society, which is mostly led by women.

The delegates are representatives of Amn- O-Nisa, the Pakistan Women’s Coalition Against Extremism, launched in October 2011, to address instability and violence in Pakistan.

We applaud these courageous women and thank the US Embassy in Islamabad and Meridian International Center for their support in making this delegation a reality.

Read more about the delegation: Pakistani Women Leaders Propose Solutions for US Foreign Policy to Help End Extremist Violence

View the recommendations: Recommendations for the US Government from Pakistani Women Leaders

Meet the Women Leaders

Mossarat Qadeem

Executive Director, PAIMAN Alumni Trust

With a mission of social change through innovative approaches, Mossarat Qadeem works directly with mothers to deradicalize extremist youth in Taliban strongholds and reintegrate male family members into communities. In moderating extremism in Pakistan, she chooses to “collaborate, not confront.”

She was a lecturer at Peshawar University in 1990, when just four of 180 professors were women, and has continued to break new ground. “Working with conservative religious clerics, we were successful often when we thought we would fail. Often, our own fears are the only thing stopping us from reaching out.”

Shehnaz Akbar

Regional Coordinator, PAIMAN Alumni Trust

Shehnaz Akbar delivers services to disenfranchised communities and trains youth, government officials, religious scholars, and civil society actors on women’s rights, gender-based violence, conflict resolution, peacebuilding, and democracy and governance.

As a self-appointed local “peacekeeper” in the district of Rajanpur, she mediates between Sunni and Shia sects by convening meetings with religious leaders to discuss peace and security. She has convinced both communities to form peacekeeping volunteer groups comprised of young men who safeguard religious precessions and ceremonies, successfully diffusing tensions and reducing violence in the district.

Naziha Syed Ali

Freelance Journalist

Naziha Syed Ali is a freelance journalist and documentary film producer who focuses on human rights abuses and the rise of religious extremism in Pakistan. She has written extensively about militant organizations and the victims of terrorist violence, and has researched education and madrassa culture in Pakistan.

Ali organizes seminars, festivals, and media campaigns that promote peace and freedom of expression. In early 2011, she helped organize a signature campaign and a cultural festival that drew over 30,000 people to Karachi to denounce hatred and intolerance.

Farhat Asif

Editor, The Diplomatic Insight

As a child in the war-torn region of Kashmir, Farhat Asif’s father told her “conflict cannot end by starting another conflict, but through peace and dialogue.” [pull quote] Motivated by his words and a desire to bring peace to her homeland, Asif later founded Pakistan’s first Arabic/English bilingual magazine. The theme of the magazine is peace through informed dialogue, and it strives to promote understanding and tolerance.

Prior to establishing the magazine, Asif worked at the Islamabad Policy Research Institute, conducting research on women, peace, conflict, and development in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Tahira Baloch

Operations Officer, World Health Organization

Dr. Tahira Baloch is an operations officer for the World Health Organization, where she coordinates public health programs and oversees health emergency and disaster management projects in Balochistan province. She also manages the provision of free maternal health care to women at the district and provincial level.

Baloch has worked for numerous UN Missions around the world and serves as a council member on the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. She conducts research and focus group discussions and convenes roundtable meetings with policymakers to convey the population’s grievances and to advocate for sustainable solutions.

Bushra Hyder

Director, Qadims Lumiere School and College
Living in Pakistan’s most remote and volatile region along the border of Afghanistan—Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK)—Bushra Hyder has experienced first-hand the effects of increasing extremist violence in her homeland. Yet she says, “when terror comes to your doorstep, you cannot fear it; you cannot tolerate it anymore.”

Hyder established and directs her own high school that teaches students about other religions and cultures, promoting compassion and understanding. To help her community cope with frequent violence, she has created student “peace clubs” that visit a nearby hospital to meet with survivors of bomb attacks. Hyder also conducts trainings with young women on leadership, conflict transformation, peacebuilding, and microenterprise, and lobbies local government and religious officials to implement peace curricula in schools throughout the region.

Huma Chughtai

Freelance Consultant

Born in Rawalpindi, Huma Chughtai is a freelance consultant with over 25 years of experience working in the areas of governance, gender and development, parliamentary capacity, judicial reform, and human rights. Chughtai practiced law and then served as a legislative researcher for the National Assembly of Pakistan, focusing on Sharia law, constitutional, legal, and judicial issues, women’s rights, and parliamentary practices. At times, she serves as legal advisor to the Ministry of Women Development and the Women’s Parliamentary Caucus.

As a trainer for PAIMAN Alumni Trust, she teaches men, women, youth, and students about conflict resolution, peacebuilding, and human rights. Drawing on her expertise in Sharia law, she emphasizes the peaceful elements of Islam and links international conventions with Islamic tenets to counter the radical arguments that fuel extremism.

Sameena Imtiaz

Executive Director, Peace Education and Development (PEAD) Foundation

Sameena Imtiaz is an avid proponent of education to counter extremism. She leads training courses for youth groups, teachers, clergy, and community leaders to promote tolerance and nonviolence. She has authored school curricula and teacher training materials that promote cultural diversity and interfaith harmony, and she advocates for their implementation in religious and education institutions. She counseled the central government to include peace education in standard curricula and has pushed for the same goal at the provincial levels since decision-making on education was decentralized.

Zarmina Rafiq

District Coordinator, PAIMAN Alumni Trust

Zarmina Rafiq trains civil society actors, youth groups, and university students on peacebuilding and conflict transformation in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and Swat valley—two of Pakistan’s most remote, conflict-ridden regions. Drawing on her eight years as a district councilor, she also trains women councilors on advocacy, budgeting, gender-sensitivity, and legislative matters.

Despite limits on women’s mobility in FATA and Swat, Rafiq travels extensively to assess community needs. She has gained the trust of local leaders and has unusual access to the homes of families in these communities, even using kitchens as safe meeting spaces for groups of women to discuss how they are affected by extremism. Rafiq also meets with local government officials, parliamentarians, policymakers, and religious leaders to advocate around women’s issues, peace education, and conflict resolution.

Farida Sadiq

Master Trainer, PAIMAN Alumni Trust and UN Development Programme

Farida Sadiq is an independent consultant and master trainer with over 12 years of experience in the field of conflict resolution, democracy, and governance. Sadiq conducts trainings and advocacy sessions with youth and local communities on conflict transformation and peacebuilding. Through these sessions, she has formed groups of “peace practitioners” who advocate for non-violence and help diffuse tensions among neighbors, families, and communities.

She advocates to religious leaders in Punjab province for the inclusion of peace curricula in Pakistani schools. Sadiq also trains district councilors, government secretaries, and women seeking elected office on gender sensitization, voter education, women’s empowerment, and leadership skills. She has trained more than 9,000 women leaders, the majority of who were eventually elected to office as district councilors and parliamentarians.

Sonia Sahar

Executive Director, Balochistan Foundation for Development

Sonia Sahar has over 11 years of experience in the development sector with expertise on gender, women’s health, and women’s political rights. She has worked extensively with political parties, government officials, and elected representatives to combat violence against women, advocating for the implementation of measures to ensure women’s protection in conflict and disaster-affected areas. She provided technical support to Balochistan’s provincial assembly to pass the United Nations’ Safe Motherhood Resolution and assisted the province’s women’s parliamentary caucus in drafting their by-laws.

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