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MPA Hina Parvez Butt wants people like Falak Shabir to stop policing women and mind their own business

MPA Hina Parvez Butt wants people like Falak Shabir to stop policing women and mind their own business

The lawmaker asked when the minds of some men will stop fixating on women's clothing after the singer's appeal to outlaw 'short dresses'.
Updated 08 Jun, 2026

Singer Falak Shabir called on Saturday for action against people who wear “short dresses in the bazaars and streets” of Punjab. While the singer later insisted that he was making a very general statement, his request to Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz drew the ire of many people, including some of the CM’s own party members.

Hina Parvez Butt, a lawmaker from Maryam’s PML-N and the chairperson of the Punjab Women Protection Authority, asked when “the minds of people like Falak Shabir will stop fixating on women’s clothing” in a post on X.

She drew a comparison between Pakistan and Turkiye, saying nobody in Istanbul comments on women’s clothes, “but here in Pakistan, anyone who feels like it jumps on social media and starts mouthing off.”

The lawmaker said this mentality was exactly what was keeping Pakistan from progressing. She asked people to do society a “great service” and “mind their own business”.

Shabir made his strange demand in a story posted on Instagram asking “as a father of two daughters” for the CM to make a law against people wearing short dresses. He seemed convinced that not doing so would lead to “cultural ruin”.

Reactions were mixed, with some celebrating the story as the rallying call for a cultural crusade, others felt he wasn’t being misogynistic because he never specifically mentioned women. Many — us included — were left questioning what he was talking about; who was roaming the streets of Punjab in short dresses anyway?

He later clarified with a picture of women in… crop tops. “This pick (sic) should be enough to explain and I am sure everyone in Pakistan has seen this clip,” the singer said.

He also posted screenshots of people agreeing with his original story, probably in an attempt to counter all the backlash he had been getting publicly.

“It’s not just me, hundreds of thousands of people are worried for their children’s future,” he said with his eight messages of support.

Addressing the misogyny allegations, Shabir said his statement wasn’t about any one gender but meant for “all kind of genders that are available in the market” — we really didn’t think this could get worse but we were wrong.

The singer said if someone interpreted it differently, that was their perspective, but the “intent was clear” from his side. He asked for people to “keep the context intact”.

Shabir isn’t the first man to try to police clothing — women’s or otherwise — in Pakistan and he unfortunately will not be the last. But in the face of so many other problems — including a sharp uptick in violence against women — are there really no bigger issues for him to talk about?

Comments

Reality Jun 08, 2026 04:24pm
Isn't about policing one gender alone....but what happened to him suddenly after his second baby that he felt this serious abt women dressing Agreed that dressing shd always be appropriate with the local environment
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Tahmad Jun 08, 2026 04:59pm
We should respect to all our women’s and men’s at the same time and level. Remember think before you speak out.
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Ahmed Jun 08, 2026 06:54pm
This is his business. He lives in this society. Everyone should speak against normalization of this. There are tribes in Pakistan that say the same when forcing women to marry someone. They have the same reasoning as you. "Mind your own business"
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Ehsan Jun 08, 2026 07:41pm
Please stop judging others, this is the result of states policy of getting into the business of morality and religion
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chengez k Jun 08, 2026 09:19pm
Men in our country have gone sick......
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Ten Jee Jun 09, 2026 01:43am
why people give turkiye as a paragon of eastbwest harmony.whwn in fact turkiye is ruled by fiercely Islamophobic secular Kemalists. Those who align progress with abandoning of religious values demonstrate their own shallowness and latent Islamophobia conditioned by an inferiority complex of the the west. I am fed up of our so called educated elites preaching liberalism to us yet baulking at anyone who stands for religious values. It confirms everything we also suspected about secular mindset.
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Haider Jun 09, 2026 02:01am
This guy should first button up his shirt and then speak
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Nazir A Sheikh Jun 09, 2026 02:02am
Young and adult women must dress so that their private parts such as their chest/breast, belly button, butts are nota source of attention to on lookers. Islamic dress Code must be adhered in public places. woman shall clad a CHADOR like in IRAN. I admire Brother Falak Shabbir for his courage to raise this issue.
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