logo
In a Pakistan valley, a small revolution among women

In a Pakistan valley, a small revolution among women

Straits Times13-06-2025
A woman shopkeeper selling traditional handmade items works at her shop in Karimabad, in the Hunza district of Pakistan's Gilgit-Baltistan region. PHOTO: AFP
Karimabad - In a sawdust-filled workshop nestled in the Karakoram Mountains, a team of women carpenters chisel away at cabinets – and forge an unlikely career for themselves in Pakistan.
Women make up just a fraction of Pakistan's formal workforce. But in a collection of villages sprinkled along the old Silk Road between China and Afghanistan, a group of women-led businesses is defying expectations.
'We have 22 employees and have trained around 100 women,' said Ms Bibi Amina, who launched her carpentry workshop in 2008 at the age of 30.
Hunza Valley's population of around 50,000, spread across mountains abounding with apricot, cherry, walnut and mulberry orchards, follow the Ismaili branch of Shiite Islam.
Ismailis are led by the Aga Khan, a hereditary position held by a family with Pakistani roots now living in Europe.
The family opened a girls' school in Hunza in 1946, kickstarting an educational investment that pushed the valley's literacy rate to 97 per cent for both men and women. That rate far outstrips the country average of around 68 per cent for men and 52.8 per cent for women.
As a result, attitudes have shifted, and women like Ms Amina are taking expanded roles.
'People thought women were there to wash dishes and do laundry,' Ms Amina said of the generation before her.
Trained by the Aga Khan Foundation to help renovate the ancient Altit Fort, Ms Amina later used her skills to start her own business. Her carpenters are currently at work on a commission from a luxury hotel.
Pioneers
Only 23 per cent of the women in Pakistan were officially part of the labour force as of 2024, according to data from the World Bank.
In rural areas, women rarely take on formal employment but often toil in the fields to support the family's farming income.
In a Gallup poll published in 2024, a third of women respondents said their father or husband forbade them from taking a job, while 43.5 per cent said they had given up work to devote themselves to domestic tasks.
Cafe owner Lal Shehzadi spearheaded women's restaurant entrepreneurship in Hunza.
She opened her cafe at the top of a winding high street to supplement her husband's small army pension.
Sixteen years later, her simple set-up overlooking the valley has become a popular night-time tourist attraction. She serves visitors traditional cuisine, including yak meat, apricot oil and rich mountain cheese.
'At the start, I used to work alone,' she said. 'Now, 11 people work here and most of them are women. And my children are also working here.'
Following in Shehzadi's footsteps, Ms Safina quit her job to start her own restaurant around a decade ago.
'No one wanted to help me,' she said. Eventually, she convinced family members to sell two cows and a few goats for the money she needed to launch her business.
Now, she earns the equivalent of around US$170 (S$192) a month, more than 15 times her previous income.
Farming to football
The socio-economic progress of women in Hunza compared to other rural areas of Pakistan has been driven by three factors, according to Sultan Madan, the head of the Karakoram Area Development Organisation and a local historian.
'The main reason is the very high literacy rate,' he told AFP, largely crediting the Aga Khan Foundation for funding training programmes for women.
'Secondly, agriculture was the backbone of the economy in the region, but in Hunza the landholding was meagre and that was why women had to work in other sectors.'
Women's increased economic participation has spilled into other areas of life, like sports fields.
'Every village in the valley has a women's soccer team: Gojal, Gulmit, Passu, Khyber, Shimsal,' said Ms Nadia Shams, 17.
On a synthetic pitch, she trains with her teammates in jogging pants or shorts, forbidden elsewhere by Pakistan's dress code.
Here, one name is on everyone's lips: Malika-e-Noor, the former vice-captain of the national team who scored the winning penalty against the Maldives in the 2010 South Asian Women's Football Championship.
Ms Fahima Qayyum was six years old when she witnessed the killer kick.
Today, after several international matches, she is recruiting the next generation.
'As a girl, I stress to others the importance of playing, as sport is very good for health,' she told AFP.
'If they play well, they can also get scholarships.' AFP
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zuckerberg says Meta will invest hundreds of billions in superintelligence
Zuckerberg says Meta will invest hundreds of billions in superintelligence

Business Times

time2 hours ago

  • Business Times

Zuckerberg says Meta will invest hundreds of billions in superintelligence

[SAN FRANCISCO] Mark Zuckerberg said on Monday (Jul 14) that Meta Platforms would spend hundreds of billions of US dollars on computing power to build superintelligence, intensifying his pursuit of a technology he has chased with a talent war for top AI engineers. The announcement comes as tech giants such as Meta aggressively chase high-profile acquisitions and offer multi-million-US dollar pay packages to attract top talent in the race to lead the next wave of artificial intelligence. 'We have the capital from our business to do this,' Zuckerberg said in a post on Threads. The Facebook and Instagram parent has recently unveiled its new division, Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL), to unify the company's AI efforts, following setbacks with its Llama four model and key staff departures. The MSL will be led by former Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang and ex-GitHub chief Nat Friedman, after Meta invested US$14.3 billion in Scale and ramped up efforts to recruit top AI talent. REUTERS

Singapore stock market sees biggest IPO in years with NTT DC REIT's debut
Singapore stock market sees biggest IPO in years with NTT DC REIT's debut

CNA

time2 hours ago

  • CNA

Singapore stock market sees biggest IPO in years with NTT DC REIT's debut

The Singapore Exchange has seen its biggest real estate investment trust (REIT) listing in more than 10 years, raising more than US$770 million. But Japan's NTT DC REIT's debut was met with a lukewarm response. Its unit price rose just three cents, or 3% higher above its unit offer price of U$1, before ending the day flat. NTT's portfolio includes high-spec facilities in Singapore, Austria and the US — all benefiting from the explosion of demand driven by artificial intelligence and cloud computing. Roland Lim reports.

NTT DC Reit, SGX's largest Reit listing in 10 years, closes flat on debut
NTT DC Reit, SGX's largest Reit listing in 10 years, closes flat on debut

Business Times

time3 hours ago

  • Business Times

NTT DC Reit, SGX's largest Reit listing in 10 years, closes flat on debut

[SINGAPORE] Units of NTT DC Real Estate Investment Trust (Reit) ended flat on its debut on Monday (Jul 14). Units of the Reit inched up 3 per cent or US$0.03 to US$1.03 at 2pm, before falling back to their offer price of US$1 by the trading day's end. The mega listing is the largest Reit IPO on the Singapore Exchange (SGX) in a decade. NTT DC Reit has an IPO market capitalisation of US$1 billion and is the third pure-play data centre Reit listed in Singapore. The listing also marks one of Asia's largest data centre Reit IPOs, expanding opportunities for investors to gain exposure to assets driving the boom in artificial intelligence. Speaking at the listing ceremony, Loh Boon Chye, the chief executive officer of SGX Group, said NTT DC Reit's listing reinforces Singapore's role as Asia's Reit 'launchpad'. He noted that following the move, other issuers are 'picking up the pace' for their own listings. 'Conversations are building, pipelines are forming, and confidence is gaining ground, driven by listings like this,' he added. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Doug Adams, CEO of NTT Global Data Centres, said that while NTT DC Reit had considered listing in US and Japan, it eventually decided on Singapore due to its 'vibrant economic economic community' and support for Reit structures. 'We are looking to continue to feed this Reit with strong global assets from the right markets that we believe will give a significant return to our investors… to get a dependable return from their investment.' NTT Global Data Centres is the data centre business arm of NTT Group, which the Reit sponsor is part of. NTT DC Reit's portfolio comprises six data centres – four in the US, one in Austria and one in Singapore – with an aggregate appraised value of US$1.6 billion. About 600 million units are on offer, comprising US$1 per unit for 569.9 million units in its international placement, and 30 million units at S$1.276 per unit for the Singapore public offer. According to a bourse filing on Friday, the public tranche of its Singapore IPO was around 9.8 times oversubscribed, where there were 14,166 valid applications for an aggregate of 294.8 million units, based on the 30 million units available for subscription. A group of cornerstone investors will subscribe to over 172 million units in total, representing 16.8 per cent of all units. This runs concurrently, but separately, from the public offering. One of these anchor investors is GIC, which is subscribing to more than 100 million units making up 9.8 per cent of the total units in issue after the offering. With the Reit's listing, GIC is now a substantial unit holder as well as the second-largest investor in NTT DC Reit after its sponsor. The other cornerstone investors are AM Squared, Ghisallo Master Fund, Hazelview Securities, Pinpoint Asset Management (Singapore), Viridian Asset Management and UBS acting through its Singapore branch, on behalf of wealth management customers. In its prospectus, NTT DC Reit noted that the global data centre market has demonstrated high growth, with commissioned power growing from 18.2 gigawatts (GW) in 2020 to 49.1GW in 2024. This represents a compound annual growth rate of 28.1 per cent, and estimates are for it to continue growing at double-digit pace until 2027. NTT DC Reit joins Digital Core Reit , which listed in December 2021, and Keppel DC Reit , which rejoined the Straits Times Index last month. In total, the pure-play data centre S-Reits listed on SGX provide investors with exposure to around S$9 billion of global data centre assets. There are now 41 Reits and property trusts listed on the SGX, with a collective market capitalisation of about S$94 billion. 'The listing taps into the immense growth potential of data centres, an asset class gaining strong investor interest globally,' said Pol de Win, head of global sales and origination at SGX Group. 'This move underscores Singapore's position as Asia's leading Reit hub. Not only does this reflect the strength of our market, but also expands investment opportunities in digital infrastructure for investors worldwide.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store