close_game
close_game

Pakistan’s Oscar winner Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy vows to tell untold stories

ByAFP, Karachi
Dec 16, 2016 03:32 PM IST

Pakistan’s double-Oscar winner Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy has hailed the new legislation outlawing the crime of “honour killings” as a turning point in the long-battle on violence against women, as she sets her sights on conquering her country’s silver screen.

Pakistan’s double-Oscar winner Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy has hailed the new legislation outlawing the crime of “honour killings” as a turning point in the long-battle on violence against women, as she sets her sights on conquering her country’s silver screen.

Pakistani film director Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy speaks during an interview with AFP at her office in Karachi.(AFP)
Pakistani film director Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy speaks during an interview with AFP at her office in Karachi.(AFP)

The filmmaker cast a spotlight on the issue with her documentary ‘A Girl In The River: The Price of Forgiveness’ -- which bagged an Academy Award earlier this year.

“It is very good in the case of honour killing we finally have a legislation that is stronger,” she says

In October, Pakistan’s government passed legislation aimed at closing loopholes that allowed the perpetrators of such killings, often relatives of the victim, to walk free after they are pardoned by another member of their family. Now a pardon can only save a killer from the death penalty, but not from life imprisonment.

Pakistan's double-Oscar winner Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy has hailed new legislation outlawing the crime of "honour killings" as a turning point in the long-battle on violence against women, as she sets her sights on conquering her country's silver screen. (AFP)
Pakistan's double-Oscar winner Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy has hailed new legislation outlawing the crime of "honour killings" as a turning point in the long-battle on violence against women, as she sets her sights on conquering her country's silver screen. (AFP)

Critics contend that loopholes in the new law remain. For instance, if a killer claims a motive other than ‘honour’ to justify their act, the blood money pardon law may still apply.

There are around 1000 ‘honour’ killings per year in Pakistan, but Chinoy remains hopeful the tide is shifting, especially in the wake of widespread revulsion over the murder of a social-media starlet by her brother.

“It is not going to end tomorrow, but at least the process has started to send the men into jail who kill under the pretext of honour,” she tells AFP ahead of the premiere of her new animated film 3 Bahadur part two (Three brave warriors), which follows three children superheroes.

If her pride is evident, it is unsurprising -- Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif originally announced the bill following a screening in the capital of Chinoy’s Oscar-winning film.

Primarily known for her award-winning documentaries, Chinoy is now branching out into fiction to help revive Pakistan’s long-moribund film industry. (AFP)
Primarily known for her award-winning documentaries, Chinoy is now branching out into fiction to help revive Pakistan’s long-moribund film industry. (AFP)

Many observers believe the weight of international pressure was a catalyst in the government’s decision to move a bill that was initially tabled three years ago.

Another turning point for Chinoy was the murder of social media starlet Qandeel Baloch -- who shot to fame for her provocative selfies and videos that were praised by fans for daring to challenge the country’s strict social norms on how women should conduct themselves.

In July, Baloch was strangled by her brother who later said he had found her “intolerable” -- but the police took the rare step of making themselves “complainants” in the case so the family could not invoke the law of pardon even if they were pressured into doing so.

Chinoy explained: “That sent a very strong message to the people of the country.”

Primarily known for her award-winning documentaries, Chinoy is now branching out into fiction to help revive Pakistan’s long-moribund film industry. Pakistan’s cinemas are dominated by Bollywood imports, but her first foray into fiction -- which was also Pakistan’s first animated feature film, earned $650,000 when it was released last year.

Chinoy’s work is not to everyone’s liking -- much like teen activist Malala Yousafzai, she is routinely vilified in some quarters for daring to bare the country’s ‘dirty laundry’. (AFP)
Chinoy’s work is not to everyone’s liking -- much like teen activist Malala Yousafzai, she is routinely vilified in some quarters for daring to bare the country’s ‘dirty laundry’. (AFP)

“I believe first and foremost, I am a story teller so it doesn’t matter whether I am telling a story through making a documentary film or through animation,” she said.

The upcoming sequel also highlights social evils in Pakistani society, from corruption to the so-called “water mafia” which siphon off Karachi’s water to supply to sell to poor residents at exorbitant rates.

Chinoy’s work is not to everyone’s liking -- much like teen activist Malala Yousafzai, she is routinely vilified in some quarters for daring to bare the country’s “dirty laundry”. “Anybody who works at holding a mirror to the society or talking about the difficult issues that pushes the envelop, there is always blowback. I have stopped picking up my phone directly, and that’s the wiser thing to avoid threatening calls,” she said.

Follow @htshowbiz for more

Get more updates from Bollywood, Taylor Swift, Hollywood, Music, Web Series along with Latest Entertainment News at Hindustan Times.
See More
Get more updates from Bollywood, Taylor Swift, Hollywood, Music, Web Series along with Latest Entertainment News at Hindustan Times.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
SHARE
Story Saved
Live Score
Saved Articles
Following
My Reads
Sign out
New Delhi 0C
Saturday, January 18, 2025
Start 14 Days Free Trial Subscribe Now
Follow Us On