Schoolgirls in Pakistan to be given chickens to care for in initiative partly aimed at teaching them about the kitchen

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Schoolgirls in Pakistan will be given poultry to care for in an initiative aimed partly at teaching them about the kitchen, officials have said, raising concerns among women’s rights activists in the deeply patriarchal country.

Officials in Punjab said the government in Pakistan’s wealthiest province would initially be providing girls in 1,000 primary schools with four hens, one cock and a cage.

Naseem Sadiq, head of the Punjab government’s livestock department, told Agence France-Presse that the aim was to promote poultry and educate children about nutrition, citing World Bank figures showing Pakistan ranks among the top countries in the world for protein deficiency.

He also said the programme would “train these small girls about kitchen waste” as they would feed their charges leftover food from lunch. “We preferred girls’ schools for this project to boys because girls, mostly, have to deal with the kitchen and they are more responsible and caring than boys,” Sadiq said.

Women have fought for their rights for decades in a Pakistan, where so-called “honour” killings and other violence against women remains commonplace.

Women’s rights campaigner Farzana Bari criticised the project this week for reinforcing stereotypes by sending the message to girls that their role is “limited to the kitchen only”.

“It would be very good if the government focused on boys’ schools more to create ... responsibility and equality,” she told AFP. “The government should give [women] new confidence, not make them a typical woman by putting in their minds that they are for the kitchen only.

“By starting such projects in boys’ schools they would also learn about what to do in a kitchen and helping women,” she said.

The programme is due to begin next month.