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Aurat March in Multan calls for equal opportunities

Aurat March in Multan calls for equal opportunities

The march particularly emphasised the rights of working women from southern Punjab.
25 Feb, 2025

A large number of women, men, gender minorities and human rights activists from south Punjab participated in the Aurat March (women’s march) in Multan.

The march held from Nawanshahr Chowk to Multan Press Club aimed to highlight the demands for women’s fundamental rights, equal opportunities, gender justice, climate justice and ensuring safety at workplaces. The participants raised slogans and showcased their demands through placards and banners.

The march particularly emphasised the rights of working women from southern Punjab, including domestic workers, farmers, teachers, nurses, journalists and other labour classes.

The demands included equal wages and financial rights, environmental justice, safe workplaces, education and health, rights of gender minorities, end to forced marriages and religious conversions, legal and political representation, and digital rights to protect women and gender minorities from online harassment and free access to the internet for all.

The march also demanded justice for the renowned human rights lawyer Rashid Rehman Shaheed, who was murdered in 2014 in Multan for defending freedom of expression and human rights.

The participants called upon state institutions and the judiciary to bring Rehman’s killers to justice and ensure the protection of human rights activists.

Advocate Lubna Nadeem stated, “The organisation of the women’s march is a welcome initiative for society. Our leader Rashid Rehman also fought against the barriers to justice for women, and we are continuing that mission.”

Organiser Laiba Zainab said the march emphasised the protection of the rights of all women and gender minorities. “Our goal is to create a society where every individual enjoys equality, justice, and freedom.”

The organisers stressed that every attempt to suppress the struggle for women’s and human rights will be resisted.

Originally published in Dawn, February 25th, 2025

Comments

Dr. Salaria, Aamir Ahmad Feb 25, 2025 11:43am
United we stand, divided we fall.
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Anonymouseee Feb 25, 2025 11:51am
Equal opportunities based on merit, and not just because you’re a woman.
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Ahmed Feb 25, 2025 12:31pm
What about forcing people to obey the laws that they don't agree with?
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rmnth2 Feb 25, 2025 02:51pm
Well done
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SyedHasni Feb 25, 2025 04:48pm
"Not everyone has equal abilities, but everyone should have equal opportunity for education." - John F. Kennedy
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Laila Feb 26, 2025 09:08am
@Anonymouseee Merit applies when you have access. No good telling women to apply for, let us say, a specific field of studies, when admissions is not open to females. So they are right in demanding equal access to social, economical and legal (etc) opportunities.
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Laila Feb 27, 2025 08:45am
People can whine, denigrate, attack (verbally and physically as demonstrated "beautifully" by the "peaceful" moalwis/JI and their females "haya" marchers using stones, shoes, vulgar slurs in past against AM as reported by media) but Aurat March is here to stay. No amount of deflection, denial, abuse and intimidation or stupid questions like, what have they done/changed, when our country's rulers have managed to do zero over 7 decades This country at some point will have to learn to treat women as equal and visible participants of society with voice, identity, agency and rights of their own. Society will have to actually give women their islamic rights instead of just claiming them. Islam gives. Pakistans jahil society deprives. On the one day women can publicly voice their issues and demand rights, males and society tells them they can't. You can't make this stuff up. Misogyny is centuries old. It will take centuries to eradicate it.
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