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Ayesha Omar says she doesn't feel safe in her own country

Ayesha Omar says she doesn't feel safe in her own country

The motorway rape incident has sparked a conversation on women's safety and celebrities are also asking some important questions.
Updated 11 Sep, 2020

The motorway rape incident has sparked a conversation on women's safety and celebrities are also asking some important questions.

In a post on the micro-blogging platform Twitter, Bulbulay star Ayesha Omar posed the question as to what a woman was to do in case she didn't have a choice but to step out of her house when it was late?

"What if she or someone in her family needed medical help?" Omar asks.

And goes on to add: "I can walk on the streets at 1 am in other parts of the world and feel completely safe but just not in my own country, even inside a car."

The tweet was in reference to the motorway rape case and came hours after CCPO Lahore Umer Shaikh came under fire for his comments, where the latter said that the woman should not have been travelling on her own late at night. The officer had also made assertions that our societies did not allow women to travel alone at night and that this was to ensure women's own safety.

The officer, who is leading the investigation of the case, is being criticised for using language that tantamounts to victim-blaming.

Comments

Brownflower Sep 11, 2020 01:33am
Pakistan is not safe for women and children.
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Ameen Sep 11, 2020 01:36am
She is absolutely right. My daughters travel outside Pakistan because they feel safer there. They are terrified of travelling by themselves in Pakistan because the men are horrible here and there is no law and order.
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Basit Sep 11, 2020 01:40am
This is absolutely true. We migrated to Australia after we had our daughter. There was no way she was going to live a caged life.
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