Extracts from Lords debate on International Women's Day - Mar 10
Lord Bilimoria (CB): My Lords, this is the 25th anniversary of the
Beijing declaration. Right up front I pay tribute to my noble
friend Lord Loomba, who founded the Loomba Foundation for poor
widows, initially in India and then around the world. I have been
proud to be chair of the advisory council since its inception in
1997. He should also be given credit for securing UN recognition
for International Widows Day on 23 June each year. This has done so
much to change attitudes...Request free
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Lord Bilimoria (CB): My Lords, this is the
25th anniversary of the Beijing declaration. Right up front I pay
tribute to my noble friend Lord
Loomba, who founded the Loomba Foundation for poor widows,
initially in India and then around the world. I have been proud
to be chair of the advisory council since its inception in 1997.
He should also be given credit for securing UN recognition for
International Widows Day on 23 June each year. This has done so
much to change attitudes and raise awareness for the plight of
widows around the world, including educating widows’ children. I
am so looking forward to the maiden speech of my friend, the
noble Lord, Lord Ranger... Sadly, our father was assassinated at the young age of 42 when trying to save students of a local school who had taken part in a procession opposing the division of India but got caught in communal riots. Our father managed to save the students but lost his life for Hindu-Muslim unity in India. I am a posthumous child; I was born 20 days after the death of our illustrious father. My life began in a refugee camp in India without a father but with a remarkable mother. Our mother was widowed at the young age of just 35, with seven children. I was born 20 days later, taking our number to eight, with the oldest being 14. She had lost her country, ancestral home and husband, and whatever could go wrong for her, did. She was told by her family to put us all in an orphanage, as it would be challenging to manage eight of us on her own in a new country without a husband or family wealth. She refused to give up her children and accepted what fate had thrown at her. Luckily, she was educated at a time when many did not teach their girls, and was thus able to gain employment at a local primary school.
Our future would have been very different if our mother had not
been educated. She brought us up through immense difficulties.
Her words to us were, “You may starve, but you will study”. The
result: five of her sons became commissioned officers in the
Indian Army, and she received the title of the “Proudest Indian
Mother” for having her sons serve in the defence of India... To add to their dreadful conditions, those women are often gang-raped by the country’s army with complete impunity. There are many cases in Kashmir of rape carried out by the Indian Armed Forces. Some of these cases are well documented and have received worldwide press coverage, but to my knowledge no prosecution has ever taken place. For example, if you google “Kunan Poshpora rape case” you will find reports from Amnesty International, the UN Commission on Human Rights, Human Rights Watch and Indian human rights organisations, reported by the BBC, CNN, Al Jazeera, the Indian Express, the Diplomat, the Hindustan Times, Greater Kashmir, the Asian Age and many other media groups. This case is 30 years’ old: an entire army unit moved into two adjoining villages, took the men and boys out to the nearby army camp and gang-raped women from eight years of age to 80. Despite the worldwide uproar, no prosecution has ever taken place, as the army is protected under the Indian Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act. I understand that the Indian Army is continuously using rape as a weapon of war in Kashmir; there are many more cases of this nature, taking the number of victims into the thousands.
Just for a moment, put yourselves in the place of the Kashmiri
women and think what you would ask of parliamentarians from
countries such as the United Kingdom? I have raised the plight of
Kashmiri women many times from the Floor of this House,
unfortunately without getting a satisfactory answer from
Ministers. Will noble Lords join me in asking the Minister what
the Government are prepared to do to get justice for these
Kashmiri victims of state-led brutalities? Will she ask the
Foreign Secretary to raise this with his Indian counterpart
before we sign more trade deals with India to bring an end to the
impunity provided by the Indian Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act
and bring those responsible for these horrendous crimes to
justice?
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