Shehrbano Rehman

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Shehrbano "Sherry" Rehman or Shahrbano Rahman (Urdu: شہر بانو رحمان )(b. December 21, 1960), spelled Sherry Rehman in the Pakistan Government website, Sherbano on the Pakistan Election Commission website, and Sheherbano or Sheher Bano or Shahr Bano elsewhere, is a senior Pakistani politician, journalist, parliamentarian and the member of the Pakistan Peoples Party. She was appointed Minister for Information & Broadcasting by Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Gilani and sworn in by President Pervez Musharraf on March 31, 2008.

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[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life and education

Shahrbano Rehman was born in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan on December 21, 1960. Rehman's father, the late Hassanally A. Rahman worked for years in public education and law, and her mother was the first woman vice president of the State Bank of Pakistan. “I was exposed early on to the idea of women working and public life,” she says. “There was always an expectation to go out and earn your own living.”

She has studied art history and politics at Smith College and the University of Sussex.

[edit] Career

[edit] Journalism

Sherry Rehman has been a senior journalist for twenty years. She served as the editor of Pakistan’s prestigious newsmagazine, Herald, for ten years. She has wide experience in both print and broadcast media. Rehman’s bold and creative journalistic style earned her the reputation of the top journalist of the country. She was hounded by the Jam Sadiq Sindh government for publishing a cover story on the plunder of his Home Minister. She also anchored a television show on current affairs in 1999. Rehman regularly writes for national and international newspapers and newsmagazines.

[edit] Legislator

Sherry Rehman was, on March 6, 2008, declared re-elected as the top PPP candidate from Sindh on the list for reserved seats for women. She has been a Member of Parliament in the National Assembly of Pakistan (2002-2007) and Central Information Secretary as well as President of Policy Planning for the Pakistan Peoples Party. Her interests in the National Assembly include foreign and security policy, women's status and rights legislation, and media policies. In the National Assembly, Rehman has served as Convener of the Parliamentary Sub-Committee on Media and Public Diplomacy for Kashmir and member of the Special Parliamentary Committee on Kashmir, and Foreign Relations Committee in the PPP. She was leader of the Pakistan delegation at the Asian Parliamentarians Conference in December 2004 for the Islamabad Declaration Committee.

During her five years in the parliament, Sherry Rehman moved a number of bills related to media freedom, women’s empowerment and human rights. She is the architect of all five of the PPP bills tabled in the National Assembly, related to women's empowerment and human rights. These include The Women Empowerment Bill, The Anti-Honor Killings Bill, The Domestic Violence Prevention Bill, The Affirmative Action Bill and The Hudood Repeal Bill. She moved two Bills for the Media: one, the Freedom of Information Bill and the other, the Press Act, which prevents working journalists from being arrested under the 1999 Press Ordinance. She also vigorously opposed the Defamation Bill of the Musharraf-PML-Q regime as well as the Black PEMRA laws that have largely been described as the regime’s blatant attempt to muzzle the electronic media. Rehman has always been at the forefront of campaigns for better wages for journalists. She served as a member of the CPNE [Council of Pakistan Newspaper Editors] from 1988-1998.

[edit] Politician

Sherry Rehman is considered to be a leading woman politician in Pakistan, one of only two women among the 24 cabinet ministers appointed March 31, 2008. Member of the Pakistan Peoples Party, she holds the coveted post of the Central Information Secretary of the Party. She is also the President of Policy Planning for the Party, apart from being a member of the Central Executive Committee of the PPP.

As President of Policy Planning for the PPP, Rehman has been responsible for co-coordinating and drafting talking points for the party, for formulating formal party strategy papers on diverse subjects and for shorter current position papers for the leadership. She also headed the team that prepared the PPP Manifesto for the 2008 elections.

During her over half-a-decade association with the Pakistan Peoples Party, Rehman has braved arrests as well as illegal confinement by security agencies on several occasions. She faced arrest on April 16, 2005 when the party was under fire in Lahore as it was preparing for the arrival of Senator Asif Zardari. She was also kept under illegal confinement, along with Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto, in Lahore at the residence of Senator Latif Khosa, in November 2007. The house arrest came after the PPP launched countrywide protests against the imposition of November 3 Martial Law by the then General Musharraf.

Rehman has had the privilege and distinction of representing Pakistan at the UN General Assembly session in 1994. She has also lectured at the School of Advanced International Studies at John Hopkins University in November 2004 where she authored a chapter on ‘Pakistan's Encounter with the US, Islamism and the Bomb’ for a Pakistan Conference and book of the same title. In 2003, she lectured on ‘Rights and Religion’ at a South Asia seminar at Harvard University. In December 2004, she chaired a session for the World Bank's Gender Assessment Strategy as well as the Media and Women Seminar at the SDPI. Rehman was also invited by the prestigious Carnegie Institute for International Peace in Washington to speak on ‘Pakistan Today: Policy Challenges and U.S. Engagement’, in April 2007.[1]

Rehman represented the PPP in the first parliamentary delegation to India in 2003. She addressed members of the Indian Lok Sabha earlier in 2004 for the South Asian Parliamentary Forum. Before that, she had represented her party at the parliamentary delegation to London organized by the UK and Commonwealth FO. She led the PPP delegation to the SAFMA Parliamentary Forum held in Simla, India, in June 2007[2]. Most recently, Rehman led the party's delegation to Washington to call for a UN investigation into the assassination of the PPP Chairperson Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto.

In the Supreme Court of Pakistan, Rehman moved the first public interest litigation on behalf of the citizens of Karachi against the Karachi Port Trust and Federal Environment Agency after the oil-spill from the tanker Tasman Spirit in 2003. In December 2004, she also moved the Supreme Court of Pakistan for directing government to reserve 10% job quota for women in the public sector.

[edit] Civil Society Profile

In civil society, Sherry Rehman has been an active proponent for the provision of better access to health and educational resources, particularly for women and children from the lower-income sections of Pakistani society. In this respect, Rehman is the Chairman of the Lady Dufferin Foundation Trust, the largest non-profit provider of women and children's subsidized health-care in the province of Sindh. In her seven-year term as Chair, Rehman assisted in the construction of a state-of the art seven-story hospital building at the 100-year old Dufferin Hospital. She has also served on the board of several educational institutions, namely the University of Sindh and The International School, Karachi as well as the Mohatta Palace Gallery Trust.[1] Rehman is also one of the founding members of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan.

Currently, Rehman lives between Islamabad, where apart from fulfilling her parliamentary and Party obligations, she heads the Jinnah Institute, and Karachi, where she is the director of a multi-media design firm and founder of a heritage trust, the Indus Foundation. The Jinnah Institute is a registered non-profit organization that seeks to strengthen democratic and secular values in the Pakistani community both at home and in the UK through the creation of public space for its objectives. As its Founding Chair, Sherry Rehman has held two-week-long parliamentary orientation workshops in Pakistan for women legislators in 2003, supported by the Westminster Foundation for Democracy.

[edit] Marriage

Sherry Rehman is married to renowned banker Nadeem Hussain. Mr Hussain is the President and Chief Executive Officer of Tameer Microfinance Bank[3]. He spent 27 years with Citigroup before initiating Tameer. The Microfinance Bank distinguishes itself from other similar institutions by being one of the first nation-wide, private sector, non-NGO transformed, commercially sustainable micro-finance institutions in Pakistan. Tameer serves low-income, salaried, self-employed and micro entrepreneurs with a range of financial products designed to allow them to grow their businesses and produce significant economic multiplier effects throughout the local economies. It is widely know that PPP-ZARDARI and PPP-AITHEN would be the two major factions of the old PPP-P.

[edit] Published Work

Rehman's latest book "The Kashmiri Shawl: From Jamawar to Paisley", that she co-authored with Ms Naheed Jafri, was published in 2006 by Mapin Publishing India and Antique Collectors Club UK. The book has been selected for The R.L Shep Ethnic Textiles Book Award for 2006[4], in the US. Ms Rehman will receive her award at the 11th Beinnial Symposium of the Textile Society of America, in Hawai, in September 2008.

[edit] Awards

  • 2002: Rehman was the first Pakistani to be recognized with an award for independent journalism by the UK House of Lords in its Muslim World Awards Ceremony in the year 2002.
  • 2006: R.L Shep Ethnic Textiles Book Award, The Kashmiri Shawl[2]

[edit] References

[edit] External links