‘Aurat March’ organizers demand Pakistan play ‘active role’ to end Israel’s war in Gaza

Aurat March organizers address a media briefing in Islamabad, Pakistan on March 6, 2024. (AN Photo)
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Updated 06 March 2024
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‘Aurat March’ organizers demand Pakistan play ‘active role’ to end Israel’s war in Gaza

  • Pakistani feminist group advocates for rights of women, oppressed communities in the country 
  • Aurat March Islamabad organizers condemn West for supporting Israel during its war on Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Organizers of a leading women’s rights group in Pakistan on Wednesday demanded the Pakistani government play an “active role” in ending Israel’s war on Gaza, condemning the West for supporting the Jewish state as it continues its military offensives in Palestine.
Israel has killed over 30,000 Palestinian men, women, and children since October 2023, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Over 72,100 Palestinians have been injured in the war, which Israel refuses to call off despite growing calls from Muslim states, the United Nations and global peace activists.
The Aurat March — Urdu for “women’s march” — began in 2018 as a single march for International Women’s Day held in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi. However, it has become an annual event held in multiple cities. The marches face opposition from religious conservatives who allege the group receives Western funding as part of a plot to promote obscenity in Pakistan. The organizers deny this, saying the marches are locally funded, with grassroots participation.
Organizers of the Islamabad chapter of the Aurat March held a press conference at the National Press Club in Islamabad on Wednesday, with less than two days to go before the world marks International Women’s Day. 
“Given the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Palestine, we demand that the Pakistani government should play an active role in ending the genocidal war in Gaza and advocate for the liberation of Palestine,” Nishat Anjum, an organizer of the Aurat March Islamabad, told reporters.
Anjum said feminist politics was not limited to the rights of Pakistani women but that it transcended beyond borders. She denounced Washington and other Western countries for standing by Israel as it continues to bomb Palestine.
“We also condemn the support of the imperialist West to Israel’s war on innocent Palestinians and call for an end to wars, genocides, and crimes against humanity carried out for imperialist gains, which affect women, and children the most,” she added.
Organizers also presented their demands to the Pakistani government for local women, which covered a range of issues from human rights violations to economic justice, gender-based violence, political rights, and rights of religious minorities.
Syeda Bariya Shah, another march organizer, demanded the state declare gender-based violence a national emergency in Pakistan and take strategic measures to foster a zero-tolerance approach toward all forms of patriarchal violence.
“The march also calls for the end of underage marriages, rigorous enforcement of laws against gender-based violence, and the implementation of the Transgender Rights Protection Act,” Shah said.
Women in Pakistan are often deprived of their basic rights. According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), about 500 women are killed each year by their family members over accusations that their “honor” has been violated, which are often triggered when women marry by choice. 
Punjrush, a women’s rights activist, said the state should recognize and incorporate the economic contribution of women’s reproductive and domestic labor into the country’s gross domestic product.
“Formalization of the informal sector, action against child labor, regularizing daily wage workers, and granting the right to unionize are among the economic justice demands,” she said.


Pakistan police ‘water-cannoned’ Imran Khan’s sisters during sit-in outside prison — party 

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Pakistan police ‘water-cannoned’ Imran Khan’s sisters during sit-in outside prison — party 

  • Former senator on the scene says police fired water cannon three times at protesters outside Adiala Jail
  • Police have yet to issue an official response, declined immediate comment when contacted by Arab News

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani opposition party, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), on Wednesday accused police of using a water cannon in freezing temperatures to disperse supporters and the three sisters of former prime minister Imran Khan who were holding an overnight sit-in outside the Adiala high-security prison to demand a meeting with him.

Khan, a former cricket star who became prime minister in 2018, has been in jail since 2023 on multiple charges ranging from corruption to terrorism. He denies wrongdoing, saying the cases are politically motivated to keep him out of politics. 

Last week, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar announced a complete ban on all meetings with Khan at Adiala Jail, calling him an “extremist consumed by war hysteria.” Even before the ban, the PTI had repeatedly claimed Khan was being denied regular meetings with lawyers and family despite court rulings allowing visitation. 

Videos circulating widely on social media on Tuesday late night and Wednesday morning showed a small crowd, including Khan’s sisters Aleema and Uzma, running as jets of water were fired from a police vehicle outside the prison complex in the city of Rawalpindi, near Islamabad. Police have yet to issue an official response and declined immediate comment when contacted by Arab News.

“Pakistani authorities used water cannons to disperse Imran Khan’s sisters and peaceful PTI workers outside Adiala Jail, despite a court order allowing a meeting with the jailed former PM,” PTI wrote on X, calling the action a violation of “basic human rights and freedom of assembly in freezing weather!”

Former senator Mushtaq Ahmad, who is not a PTI member but says he went to support the protest, told Arab News he witnessed the water cannon deployed three times against roughly 100–150 demonstrators.

“The water cannon was directed at three sisters of Imran Khan who were there to demand their meeting with their incarcerated brother order of Islamabad high court. One sister fell down on slippery ground after that,” Ahmad said.

He added that he had been stopped repeatedly at checkpoints on the way to the prison and had to take alternative routes to reach the sit-in.

Khan has remained a dominant political figure even from behind bars, drawing large crowds and online support. His party insists he is being punished for challenging Pakistan’s military establishment, an accusation the army denies. Last week, military spokesperson Lt. Gen. Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said Khan’s narrative had become a “national security threat,” warning the party against dragging the armed forces into political disputes.

PTI has held repeated demonstrations demanding Khan’s release since his arrest in 2023, several of which have ended in confrontation with police and casualties on both sides. 

Last week, Information Minister Tarar, as he announced a ban on meetings with Khan in prison, said the government would take “swift and firm” action against anyone attempting to create unrest outside the prison:

“It is now time to restore the writ of the state. There will be no jail meetings, nor will gatherings be allowed.”