CONSCIENCE OFPAKISTAN
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CONSCIENCE OFPAKISTAN
Annotation
PII
S0321-50750000495-0-1
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Edition
Pages
69-72
Abstract
The article is dedicated to the memory of Asma Jilani Jahangir (1952 - 2018), a Pakistani human rights lawyer and social activist, who co-founded and chaired the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. She was known for playing a prominent role in the Lawyers' Movement and served as the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief. In 1987, she co-founded the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and became its Secretary General until 1993 when she was elevated as commission's chairperson. Serving as one of the leaders of the Lawyers' Movement, she became Pakistan's first woman to serve as the President of Supreme Court Bar Association. Asma fought tirelessly for anyone and everyone without a voice. She was a fierce and powerful voice for the disenfranchised, for religious minorities, women, democracy advocates. She took on the powerful military, the intelligence services. She stood her ground against Islamic militants. Over the years Jahangir undertook human-rights missions for the United Nations. In Pakistan she had been criticized and distrusted among some Pakistanis for being too supportive of good relations with India on one hand and, on the other hand, for or not keeping the focus on Pakistan. When the news of Jahangir's death on February 11 began to circulate, politicians from Pakistani President to leaders of political parties and personalities in the arts heaped praise on her. The media across the region commended her for her fearless campaigns against authoritarianism and discrimination.
Keywords
Pakistan, human rights, the United Nations special rapporteur on human rights, defence of most vulnerable groups of society, international recognition
Date of publication
01.06.2018
Number of purchasers
8
Views
1278
Readers community rating
0.0 (0 votes)
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References



Additional sources and materials

1. Sadiq Khan Foqia. Asma Jahangir - ‘an hour earlier’ // Daily Times, March 05, 2018.
2. Begum Sabiha Jilani passes away // Dawn, October 01, 2012.
3. Shamsi Muneeza. A ray of hope // Dawn, April 02, 1983.
4. Rehman I.A. How she became Asma // Dawn, February 15, 2018.
5. Afkhami M. and Friedl E. (eds.) Muslim Women and the Politic Participation. Syracuse University Press, 1997, p. 258.
6. Ijaz Saroop. Asma Jahangir: The street fighter // Herald Magazine, September, 2016.
7. Walsh Declan. Blood and guts // The Guardian, July 21, 2007.
8. Fourteen-year old Pakistani Christian escapes death penalty - http://www.domini.org/openbook/pakblasp.htm (accessed 6.03.2018)
9. Fisk Robert. Relatives with blood on their hands // Independent, September 2010.
10. UN Executions Envoy Threatened with Death - http://pantheon.hrw.org/legacy/english/docs/1999/04/14/pakist875.htm (accessed 6.03.2018)
11. “License to Kill” BBC - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/correspondent/909948.stm (accessed 6.03.2018)
12. Dalrymple William. Days of rage // The New Yorker, July 23, 2005.
13. Zaidi Hasan. The Contagion of Bravery // Dawn, February 18, 2018.

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