ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court has ordered to reinstate a married woman as primary school teacher, who was denied employment in place of her deceased father.
The top court's two-member bench including Justice Mansoor Ali Shah and Justice Athar Minallah issued a written verdict on an appeal of a woman whose appointment was withdrawn by an education officer in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's Karak district without issuing a show cause notice.
The nine-page verdict authored by Justice Shah stated that the petitioner’s services were terminated based on a clarification letter that "stipulates that the benefit of appointment under the deceased son/daughter quota is not available to a female who has contracted marriage."
Nullifying the education officer's decision by terming it "discriminatory", Justice Shah ruled: "A woman's legal rights, her personhood, and her autonomy are not erased by marriage, not should they be made contingent upon it."
"We have noticed that the impugned clarification introduces a discriminatory classification by excluding married daughters from eligibility, despite Rule 10(4) containing no such restriction, while allowing married sons to benefit under the same provision."
Furthermore, the jurist also observed that the Establishment Department lacked the authority under Section 26 of the Act to issue any clarification that effectively amends Rule 10(4) ––a power vested exclusively in the governor.
"The Constitution guarantees rights to individuals, not to marital units or prescribed social roles. Women are autonomous, rights-bearing citizens in their own right, not by virtue of their relationship to a man, be it father, husband, or son."
He also stated in the judgment that a woman retains full ownership and control over her property, earnings, and financial affairs, irrespective of her marital status under Islamic jurisprudence.
"Excluding married daughters from compassionate appointment under Rule 10(4) not only violates Pakistan’s constitutional framework but also breaches its international legal obligations under various instruments16, most notably those under the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)."
The top court also stated that it was imperative to reaffirm that all judicial and administrative authorities bear a constitutional responsibility to adopt gender-sensitive and gender-neutral language.
It also directed the department concerned to reinstate the petitioner with all previous benefits.
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