Pakistani twitterati blasts ‘Jhooti’ for trivializing domestic violence

Pakistani twitterati blasts ‘Jhooti’ for trivializing domestic violence. (Photo Credits: Social Media)
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Updated 07 January 2020
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Pakistani twitterati blasts ‘Jhooti’ for trivializing domestic violence

  • ARY’s Instagram and Twitter accounts released the trailer for the drama serial starring Iqra Aziz and Ahmed Ali Butt
  • Pakistanis were swift to call out the channel and its actors on the choice to make a drama centered around lying about domestic abuse

Islamabad, January 5th, 2019 — On January 4, ARY’s social media accounts covering their drama serial content posted a trailer for their upcoming drama ‘Jhooti’ featuring star Iqra Aziz playing a character lying about facing domestic violence, the backlash was swift.


Twitter and Instagram commenters demanded an explanation from the channel and the stars of the drama, Aziz and Ahmed Ali Butt, as to why a drama would perpetuate the myth that women in domestic violence situations would be lying about it.

Journalist and author Laaleen Sukhera responded directly under the tweet saying, “How could you trivialize real pain that women endure & barely/rarely survive? Extremely irresponsible & dangerous depiction. Domestic violence is real & crime & social cancer. It is not a joke. Trauma survivors are heroes.”

 

Professor and activist Nida Kermani wrote under the original post, “This is nothing less than sick. Such dramas reinforce the idea that women are liars & that domestic violence isn’t a problem.”

 

Twitter user Aliza Sukhera wrote to ARY, “my only question after watching this trailer: why does ARY hate Pakistani women so much and always portray them as evil?“

 

An environmental activist whose Twitter name is Moomal also took to calling out actor Iqra Aziz in her response to the tweet, “No one lies about abuse! As if #domesticviolence has not already been difficult for hundreds of women! This gives those who abuse a justification! Shame! @IqraAzizHussain couldn’t you understand?“

 

Activist Tooba Syed quote tweeted ARY’s post saying, “Absolutely disgusted. Women are a victim of abuse and violence every single day in this country & our mainstream dramas are only trying to portray them as liars.”

 

Activist Daanika Kamal called for the show like many to be canceled from airing, writing “Stop dismissing real issues experienced by millions of women daily.”

Domestic violence in Pakistan is an epidemic and an ugly reality of many women in the country, with Pakistan routinely topping in lists of the worst countries for women. With laws being challenged and introduced to curb abuse, politicians have attempted to tackle it year after year. In the age of #MeToo where people are being encouraged and supported in coming forward with their stories of abuse, the drama’s timing and plot seem to go against the turning tide of the discussion around domestic abuse.

ARY, Iqra Aziz nor Ahmed Ali Butt have yet responded to the backlash.

The trailer features Aziz looking in a mirror and surveying her efforts to appear as if she had been battered. She is sneering and then smearing her lipstick to look as though she had been hit in the mouth. 

In Pakistan, the drama industry is the leading entertainment source and arguably the most influential. There has been repeated criticism from entertainers, critics and audiences alike on the often problematic portrayals of women, where the abused and crying and helpless are deemed good women, and the independent ones to be weary of. 


Pakistani students stuck in Afghanistan permitted to go home

Updated 12 January 2026
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Pakistani students stuck in Afghanistan permitted to go home

  • The border between the countries has been shut since Oct. 12
  • Worries remain for students about return after the winter break

JALALABAD: After three months, some Pakistani university students who were stuck in Afghanistan due to deadly clashes between the neighboring countries were “permitted to go back home,” Afghan border police said Monday.

“The students from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (northwest Pakistan) who were stuck on this side of the border, only they were permitted to cross and go to their homes,” said Abdullah Farooqi, Afghan border police spokesman.

The border has “not reopened” for other people, he said.

The land border has been shut since October 12, leaving many people with no affordable option of making it home.

“I am happy with the steps the Afghan government has taken to open the road for us, so that my friends and I will be able to return to our homes” during the winter break, Anees Afridi, a Pakistani medical student in eastern Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province, told AFP.

However, worries remain for the hundreds of students about returning to Afghanistan after the break ends.

“If the road is still closed from that side (Pakistan), we will be forced to return to Afghanistan for our studies by air.”

Flights are prohibitively expensive for most, and smuggling routes also come at great risk.

Anees hopes that by the time they return for their studies “the road will be open on both sides through talks between the two governments.”