Pakistan minister proposes International Hijab Day, denies calling for ban on Aurat March

Activists of the Aurat March carry placards as they march during a rally to mark International Women's Day in Islamabad on March 8, 2021. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 18 February 2022
Follow

Pakistan minister proposes International Hijab Day, denies calling for ban on Aurat March

  • Aurat March takes place across Pakistan on March 8 each year to coincide with International Women's Day
  • Religion minister writes letter to PM to declare March 8 “International Hijab Day,” unleashes Twitter outrage

ISLAMABAD: Minister for Religious Affairs and Interfaith Harmony, Noor Ul Haq Qadri, has refuted reports that he has called for a ban on Aurat March, the country’s largest women’s rights event, saying he had no problem if women marched for rights granted to them under Islam.
The country-wide event known as Aurat March, using the Urdu word for women, has been attended by tens of thousands over the last three years to mark International Women’s Day on March 8.
In the past, the march has been threatened by the Pakistani Taliban and there has been an uproar in conservative circles over slogans used at the past three events, including “My body, my choice”, “My body is not your battleground” and “Stop being menstrual phobic”. Opponents say the event has an agenda to spread “vulgarity” and is anti-Islam.
Organizers have said they have faced a backlash including murder and rape threats.
On Thursday, a letter dated February 9 went viral on Twitter in which Qadri called on Prime Minister Imran Khan to declare March 8 ‘International Hijab Day’ in Pakistan. 
“There is no mention in my letter of a ban,” Qadri said in a local TV interview on Thursday, saying he had only highlighted the “vulgarity” that was spread during the march, which he claimed “made fun of” social and Islamic values.
He added that he did not believe there was any harm in women marching peacefully and “in a decent manner” for rights granted to them by Islam.
In his letter to the PM, Qadri said Aurat March organizers should “highlight issues such as non-availability of education for women, forced marriages, lack of protection for widows and orphans, women’s sexual exploitation, lack of provision of food for women and to provide suggestions and views to the government on these issues.”
“Nobody should be allowed to slander or ridicule Islamic rites, social values, modesty and chastity, the hijab, under Aurat March or any other title,” the letter read. “Doing so causes pain and suffering to Pakistani Muslims.”
The minister’s demand to celebrate International Hijab Day on the same day as Aurat March was widely interpreted as a call to ban the event. The issue remained a top trend on Twitter on Thursday and Friday morning.
Opposition senator Sherry Rehman called the letter “astonishing,” and asked Qadri: “What will you prove by banning the march of women?”

Rights activist Usama Khilji called the minister’s letter “an attack on right to freedom of association, speech and equality.”

Lawyer and digital rights activist Nighat Dad wondered whether the minister had ever penned a letter to the prime minister to condemn the killing of police officers by the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), a far-right religion political party in Pakistan known for violent protests.

Women’s rights activist Zoya Shabbir urged the federal minister to  “see Article 16 of Constitution i.e. Freedom of Assembly.”

Prominent politician and former senator Farhatullah Babar asked the minister to withdraw his letter. 

Sociologist Nida Kirmani observed that the “anxiety surrounding Aurat March grows every year among the gatekeepers of patriarchy.”


Pakistan’s finance chief says country shifting from aid to trade, investment with Gulf nations

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan’s finance chief says country shifting from aid to trade, investment with Gulf nations

  • Aurangzeb says remittances from the GCC topped $38 billion last fiscal year, projected at $42 billion this time
  • He tells an international media outlet discussions on a free trade agreement with the GCC are at an advanced stage

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is no longer seeking aid-based support and is instead pivoting toward trade- and investment-led partnerships, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said in an interview with an international media outlet circulated by the finance division on Monday, acknowledging longstanding economic backing from Gulf countries.

Aurangzeb spoke to CNN Business Arabia at a time when Pakistan seeks to consolidate macroeconomic stability after a prolonged crisis marked by soaring inflation, currency pressure and external financing gaps.

Aurangzeb said the government’s economic direction, articulated by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, aims to replace reliance on external assistance with sustainable growth driven by investment and exports, particularly from partners in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which includes Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain.

“We are not looking for aid flows anymore,” he said. “For us, we are very clear ... that going forward is really trade and investment, which is going to bring sustainability and be win-win for our longstanding bilateral partners in GCC and for Pakistan.”

“This FDI [foreign direct investment] is going to help us in terms of GDP growth [and] more employment opportunities as we go forward,” he continued. “So, you know, all hands are on deck at this point in time to make this materialize.”

Aurangzeb said Pakistan’s shift was underpinned by improving macroeconomic indicators following an 18-month stabilization program.

He noted that inflation, which peaked at 38 percent in 2023, has fallen to single-digit levels, while the country has posted primary fiscal surpluses and kept the current account deficit within targeted limits, adding that foreign exchange reserves now cover about 2.5 months of imports.

The finance chief described recent international assessments as external validation of the government’s reform path.

“All three international credit rating agencies are now aligned in terms of their upgrades and outlook for Pakistan this year,” he said, adding that the successful completion of the second review under the International Monetary Fund’s loan program, approved by the lending agency’s executive board, reinforced confidence in Pakistan’s economic management.

The finance minister said reforms across taxation, energy, state-owned enterprises, public finance and privatization were central to consolidating stability and supporting growth.

He pointed out Pakistan’s tax-to-GDP ratio had risen to about 10.3 percent from 8.8 percent at the start of the reform program and is on track to reach 11 percent, driven by efforts to widen the tax base to include under-taxed sectors such as real estate, agriculture and wholesale and retail trade, while tightening compliance through technology-based monitoring.

Aurangzeb also highlighted the role of the GCC in supporting Pakistan’s external position, particularly through remittances.

He said inflows reached about $38 billion last fiscal year and are projected to rise to nearly $42 billion this time, with more than half originating from GCC states, reflecting the contribution of Pakistani nationals working in the region.

The finance chief said Pakistan was actively engaging Gulf partners to attract investment in sectors including energy, oil and gas, mining, artificial intelligence, digital infrastructure, pharmaceuticals and agriculture, while discussions on a free trade agreement with the GCC were at an advanced stage.