Women bikers break the gender barrier

To go with 'Pakistan-unrest-gender-transport' FEATURE by Khurram SHAHZAD In this photograph taken on October 9, 2015, Pakistani student Tayyaba Tariq (L) shows a woman how to ride her motorcycle in Lahore. On the crowded roads of the teeming eastern Pakistani city of Lahore, Tayyaba Tariq zips through the rowdy traffic on her brand new 125cc motorcycle. In jeans and a bright multi-coloured jacket, and with a white helmet clasped over her hair, the 22-year-old Masters student is part of a new wave of female drivers in Pakistan who are pushing the boundaries set for them by men. AFP PHOTO / ARIF ALI / AFP / Arif Ali

To go with 'Pakistan-unrest-gender-transport' FEATURE by Khurram SHAHZAD In this photograph taken on October 9, 2015, Pakistani student Tayyaba Tariq (L) shows a woman how to ride her motorcycle in Lahore. On the crowded roads of the teeming eastern Pakistani city of Lahore, Tayyaba Tariq zips through the rowdy traffic on her brand new 125cc motorcycle. In jeans and a bright multi-coloured jacket, and with a white helmet clasped over her hair, the 22-year-old Masters student is part of a new wave of female drivers in Pakistan who are pushing the boundaries set for them by men. AFP PHOTO / ARIF ALI / AFP / Arif Ali

Published Jan 13, 2016

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Lahore, Pakistan - On the crowded roads of this teeming eastern Pakistani city, Tayyaba Tariq zips through the rowdy traffic on her brand new motorcycle.

In jeans and a bright jacket, with a white helmet clasped over her hair, the 22-year-old student is part of a new wave of woman riders in Pakistan who are pushing the boundaries set for them by men.

The idea of women straddling motorcycles, clambering into the cabs of Pakistan's iconic heavy trucks, or driving rickshaws for money is still taboo in the deeply conservative Muslim country of some 200 million, where gender discrimination is routine.

Women-only services challenge bike taxis 

There has been a slew of recent campaigns by women for greater access to public spaces to which they are often denied, such as roadside eateries - and the roads themselves.

The importance of the issue is underscored by the fact that three quarters of Pakistani women do not participate in the labour market, mainly due to a lack of safe transportation, according to a study by the International Labour Organisation.

Tariq rides 25km to the border with India and back each day for her job as a customs officer on her motorcycle, a far more affordable mode of transport than a car, said: “If girls learn to ride a motorcycle, they can move freely, come and go independently.”

Sajjad Mehdi, a traffic police official in Lahore, said he had trained nearly 150 women to ride a motorbike recently.

“But there are many women who learned to ride a bike on their own,” he added.

The provincial government of Punjab has also realised the importance of getting women on to motorcycles, launching an awareness campaign in November titled “Women on Wheels” that highlighted gender-based violence and street harassment.

The campaign saw 150 women, who had completed a police-run motorcycle rider training programme, ride through the streets of Lahore on Sunday in a rally attended by diplomats and human rights lawyers, as it was revealed that 1000 subsidised pink scooters would be given to working women and students under the scheme.

TRAPPED BY NECESSITY

Tariq may be able to avoid men harassing her by nipping through traffic, but women using Lahore's many rickshaw taxis are often not so fortunate: trapped by necessity in a tiny vehicle with a male driver, getting from A to B can often be a hassle.

For Zar Aslam, the solution was obvious: women-only rickshaws, driven by women for women, empowering both passengers and enterprising women who need a source of income.

Aslam launched her Pink Rickshaws scheme in 2014, beginning with just five rickshaws, and paraded them through the streets of Lahore in October 2015.

“We are trying to help women become entrepreneurs and operators and owners of their own rickshaws,” she said.

Actress Nadia Jameel, an ambassador for the scheme, added: “Anybody over 18 and under 102 from any class, from any background, can drive this rickshaw.

“Some women will come out and drive because they have to. They need the money.”

‘TRUCK ART’

Money was also the driving force behind Shamim Akhter's decision to become one of the first female drivers of Pakistan's famous heavy trucks, chaotically decorated from top to bottom in merry “truck art”.

Abandoned by her husband after the birth of their five children, Akhter struggled in odd jobs for years to feed her family before she clambered into the cab of a truck to make history.

Now the 53-year-old works night and day to transport bricks in the capital Islamabad.

“My husband doesn't live with me,” she said. “He lives with his second wife and I have to bear the expenses of my family alone.” .

She learned to drive a car first, then heavy vehicles, and passed a test for the newly launched metro bus service in the capital - but was denied a job by the government because it was not policy to have female drivers.

So, she contacted a local trucking company.

“I get 1000 rupees (R250) for a longer trip outside Islamabad,” she said, cleaning one of the cabs as she worked.

The amount of trips she gets varies, she says, and her income each month usually falls below average for a worker in Islamabad.

“It doesn't meet all my expenses but one can't sit idle,” she said. “If we need 10 000 rupees and get 7 000 rupees, it's better than having nothing.”

SOCIAL ATTITUDES

Learning to drive will hopefully give many women an economic boost but it will still take time for social attitudes to change - even in Lahore, arguably Pakistan's most cosmopolitan city.

“Many times boys follow us on their bikes,” Tariq the biker admits. “They think that a girl can't ride and will be frightened - but I have a message for them: they should not consider girls inferior.”

AFP

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