How Pakistani women are taking the internet back Nighat Dad

Imagine waking up to a stranger –

sometimes multiple strangers –

questioning your right to existence

for something that you wrote online,

waking up to an angry message,

scared and worried for your safety.

Welcome to the world of cyberharassment.

The kind of harassment that women
face in Pakistan is very serious

and leads to sometimes deadly outcomes.

This kind of harassment keeps women
from accessing the internet –

essentially, knowledge.

It’s a form of oppression.

Pakistan is the sixth most populous
country in the world,

with 140 million people having access
to mobile technologies,

and 15 percent internet penetration.

And this number doesn’t seem to go down
with the rise of new technologies.

Pakistan is also the birthplace
of the youngest Nobel Peace Prize winner,

Malala Yousafzai.

But that’s just one aspect of Pakistan.

Another aspect is where
the twisted concept of honor

is linked to women and their bodies;

where men are allowed to disrespect women

and even kill them sometimes

in the name of so-called “family honor”;

where women are left to die
right outside their houses

for speaking to a man on a mobile phone,

in the name of “family honor.”

Let me say this very clearly:

it’s not honor;

it’s a cold-blooded murder.

I come from a very small village
in Punjab, Pakistan,

where women are not allowed
to pursue their higher education.

The elders of my extended family
didn’t allow their women

to pursue their higher education
or their professional careers.

However, unlike the other
male guardians of my family,

my father was one who really
supported my ambitions.

To get my law degree,

of course, it was really difficult,

and [there were] frowns of disapproval.

But in the end, I knew
it’s either me or them,

and I chose myself.

(Applause)

My family’s traditions
and expectations for a woman

wouldn’t allow me to own a mobile
phone until I was married.

And even when I was married,

this tool became a tool
for my own surveillance.

When I resisted this idea
of being surveilled by my ex-husband,

he really didn’t approve of this

and threw me out of his house,

along with my six-month-old
son, Abdullah.

And that was the time
when I first asked myself, “Why?

Why are women not allowed
to enjoy the same equal rights

enshrined in our Constitution?

While the law states that a woman
has the same equal access

to the information,

why is it always men – brothers,
fathers and husbands –

who are granting these rights to us,

effectively making the law irrelevant?”

So I decided to take a step,

instead of keep questioning
these patriarchal structures

and societal norms.

And I founded the Digital Rights
Foundation in 2012

to address all the issues
and women’s experiences in online spaces

and cyberharassment.

From lobbying for free and safe internet

to convincing young women

that access to the safe internet
is their fundamental, basic, human right,

I’m trying to play my part
in igniting the spark

to address the questions
that have bothered me all these years.

With a hope in my heart,

and to offer a solution to this menace,

I started Pakistan’s and the region’s
first cyberharassment help line

in December 2016 –

(Applause)

to extend my support to the women
who do not know who to turn to

when they face serious threats online.

I think of the women who do not have
the necessary support

to deal with the mental trauma
when they feel unsafe in online spaces,

and they go about their daily activities,

thinking that there is
a rape threat in their in-box.

Safe access to the internet
is an access to knowledge,

and knowledge is freedom.

When I fight for women’s digital rights,

I’m fighting for equality.

Thank you.

(Applause)