The clean-shaven liberal militants
A few days ago, the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
government formed a committee, headed by a female legislator, to probe the
matter of university teachers “harassing
and physically abusing”their female students.
Abuse of female students by
teachers is not a
new phenomenon. At least those who study or teach on campuses know this fact.
It is somewhat an open secret. However, the scale
to which this crime has grown, no longer allows it to remain hushed up.
The issue has, in fact, become the talk of the town in Peshawar.
While there is no official confirmation as to who was involved
the campus is buzzing with rumours that at least eight teachers and some
officials in the administration of the University of Peshawar (UoP) are under
scrutiny.
Female members of the
Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Assembly claim that university officials exploited their
positions and used
various tactics to trap female students into fulfilling their desires. Examples
of such tactics include offering foreign scholarships to students, assuring
them high GPAs, and even offering them lecturer positions in colleges.
Interestingly, all of this is taking place in the so called
conservative semi-tribal society of Peshawar. Only residents can understand the
damage this issue has caused to the lives of female students here.
The safest place in the world
The University of Peshawar offers a friendly environment where
female students have the liberty to express themselves. In fact, it wouldn’t be
wrong to say that a student has more freedom at Peshawar University than at
other public universities like say, University of Karachi, where some female
students are not even allowed to celebrate their birthdays and couples cannot
sit together around the campus without the fear of being attacked by member of
a religious party.
Most students, especially females,
who study at Peshawar University, come from the conservative towns like Mardan,
Karak, Nowshera and Chitral, where they are generally bound to observe purdah.
However, once these girls enter the university campus, they
experience an environment free from all such restrictions. They are free to
wear whatever they want and interestingly even their parents, who would not let
them go anywhere without a veil otherwise, choose to not enforce such
requirements. This is because they feel their daughters are safe within the
boundaries of the educational institute. Parents of the majority of the
students at UoP are uneducated and look at the university as a sacred place where
they think the teachers would take better care of their children.
The irony of the liberals
The majority of the teachers under scrutiny are either feminists
or those who are vocal about women’s rights in seminars. None of them, at least
as far as I know, belong to the Jamaat-i-Islami or for that matter any other
religious group.
While at Karachi University, students of Islami Jamiat-i-Tulaba
are involved in curtailing the freedom of women, at University of Peshawar, a
group of “liberal teachers” are doing the same.
We regularly condemn the Taliban
and other religious parties but we do not realise the threat from the Taliban within our ranks who are causing much more damage.
We must realize that while
we continue to fight against militant groups, we also have to make sure we kick
out certain black sheep from within our society.



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