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Fiday Focus |Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail:
Three Pakistani Women Talking Politics|

Fiday Focus |Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail: Three Pakistani Women Talking Politics|

By Friday Focus

The first-ever podcast of three Pakistani women on political issues in the Urdu language. Welcome to FridayFocus, our weekly podcast in which we specifically spotlight those issues or angles of politics, democracy, society, or the economy that are deliberately ignored by the mainstream. We aim to add women's voices to the political discussions in the non-traditional media. You will find us mostly discussing Pakistani issues, but we remain aware of regional and international issues, and will continue to occasionally include these in our podcast.
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Criminalisation of Criticism on Armed Forces, Imran Khan comments about Rape, and Blasphemy Campaing against Amar Jaleel

Fiday Focus |Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail: Three Pakistani Women Talking Politics|Apr 09, 2021

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01:01:07
Criminalisation of Criticism on Armed Forces, Imran Khan comments about Rape, and Blasphemy Campaing against Amar Jaleel

Criminalisation of Criticism on Armed Forces, Imran Khan comments about Rape, and Blasphemy Campaing against Amar Jaleel

In this Friday Focus episode, three Pakistani women Gul Bukhari, Gulalai Ismail and Annie Zaman discussed three issues. 

1. Criminalisation of Criticism on Armed Forces
ISLAMABAD: A new amendment bill passed Wednesday by the National  Assembly Standing Committee on Interior mandates that anyone who  criticises the Pakistani forces may now land in prison for two years,  along with a fine worth Rs500,000 — or both. The new criminal law amendment bill was proposed and submitted by PTI lawmaker Amjad Ali Khan. The final vote   was cast by Raja Khurram Shahzad Nawaz, who also belongs to the ruling party. Nawaz,  the chairperson of the National Assembly Standing Committee on  Interior, broke the 5-5 vote tie by voting in favour of the proposed  bill, which was consequently passed with a majority. During  deliberations on the proposed legislation, leaders of the PPP and PML-N  had argued against it. Syed Agha Rafiullah of the PPP, as well as the  PML-N's Marriyum Aurangzeb and Chaudhry Nadeem Abbas Rebaira, said it  would be used against freedom of expression in the country. They  further argued that the government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa had voted  against the bill even though the remaining three provinces were yet to  do so. "We stand strong with our institutions. However,  criticism in good faith should not be misunderstood. Why are they being  made sacred cows," they said. Pakistan's armed forces and their  personnel would be free from any deliberate ridicule, insult, and  defamation under the criminal law amendment bill. Those who do so  would be punishable under Section 500A of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC),  with punishment including jail time of two years, a fine of up to  Rs500,000 or both. Critics of the Pakistani armed forces would face trial in a civil court, according to the criminal law amendment bill. (The News)


2. Imran Khan comments about Rape
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — An outcry has  erupted in Pakistan after Prime Minister Imran Khan blamed a rise in  rape cases on how women dressed, remarks that activists denounced as  perpetuating a culture of victim blaming. Mr.  Khan made the comments on a live television show this week when asked  what the government was doing to curb an increase in sexual violence  against women and children. Mr. Khan acknowledged the seriousness of the  problem and pointed to the country’s strict laws against rape. But, he said, women had to do their part. “What is the concept of purdah?” he said,  using a term that refers to the practice of seclusion, veiling or  concealing dress for women in some South Asian communities. “It is to  stop temptation. Not every man has willpower. If you keep on increasing  vulgarity, it will have consequences.”

The uproar was swift. The  Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, an independent group, demanded  that Mr. Khan apologize for his remarks, which it called “unacceptable  behavior on the part of a public leader.” “Not only does this betray a baffling ignorance of where, why, and how  rape occurs, but it also lays the blame on rape survivors,” the group said.


3. Blasphemy Campaing against Amar Jaleel

Apr 09, 202101:01:07
Disappearance of Sarmad Sultan, UN Letter to Pakistan over Concerning Press Freedom, and IHC orders Govt to Appoint Chairperson of NHCRH and NSCW

Disappearance of Sarmad Sultan, UN Letter to Pakistan over Concerning Press Freedom, and IHC orders Govt to Appoint Chairperson of NHCRH and NSCW

Sarmad Sultan is a historian and a social media activist, he has been missing for the past 24 hours, and his Twitter Account has been deactivated. His family says that he has gone out of town, however, the speculations are that he has been picked up by security/intelligence agencies.

UN has sent a letter to Pakistan about the concerning press freedom situation in Pakistan and the persecution of journalists including Gul Bukhari, Asad Ali Toor, Absar Alam, Bilal Farooqi, Ajeeb Ali Lakho, Rana Arshad Sulehri, Mian Dawood, Amir Mir, Fakhur Durrani, and Ahmed Noorani.

The Islamabad High Court (IHC) Monday directed the government to fill the vacant posts of the heads of the National Commission on the Status of Women and the National Commission for Human Rights. According to the activsts, the government has paralyzed National Commission on Human Rights because it has published reports about torture, abuse, and human rights violation by the Pakistan military.

Apr 02, 202159:36
Protest in Jani Khel, Bannu against brutal murder of four boys and NAB postponement of Maryam's appearance of 26th March

Protest in Jani Khel, Bannu against brutal murder of four boys and NAB postponement of Maryam's appearance of 26th March

Friday Focus is a weekly podcast of three Pakistani women in which talk about politics and human rights. In today's podcast Gulalai Ismail and Gul Bukhari talked about the ongoing protest in Jani Khel, Bannu against the murder of four boys and about the NAB postponement of Maryam's appearance of 26th March.

LAKKI MARWAT: The residents of Janikhel area of Bannu on Monday  placed the bodies of four teenage boys in front of the local police  station to protest their brutal murder.Locals had recovered the bullet-riddled bodies of the teenagers from a  field the other day and shifted them to the district headquarters  hospital. The deceased had been missing for last three weeks. “The boys aged between 13 to 17 years had gone on hunting birds about  three weeks ago, but they did not return to their homes,” a relative of  the victims told Dawn. He said the relatives had launched a search for  them but failed to find their whereabouts. On Sunday, a shepherd was grazing cattle in the fields when his dogs  started scratching a place with their paws. He got suspicious and  informed the locals, including the victim boys’ relatives, who later dug  out the bodies. he victims were identified as Ahmadullah, Mohammad Rahim, Razamullah and Atifullah. According to the residents of Janikhel, the four boys were fond of hunting birds and wild hare in the area. A relative of the deceased said they received the bodies from the  hospital and then along with tribesmen took the coffins to the Janikhel  police station to stage a sit-in there. He said the families of the  deceased had no enmity with anyone.The police said they had registered a case against unknown killers and were investigating the murders. Speaking at the protest demonstration, the tribal elders said the  brutal killing of four boys had proved that miscreants and anti-state  elements were free to sabotage peace and harmony in the area.They asked the authorities to trace the perpetrators behind the  incident. They also asked the government to take measures for  restoration of peace in Janikhel and announce Shuhada Package for the  victims’ families. (DAWN News, 23rd March 2021)

he National Accountability Bureau (NAB) on Thursday postponed the
appearance of PML-N Vice President Maryam Nawaz before the watchdog on March 26  (tomorrow), citing the threat of Covid-19 and "public interest". NAB had summoned Maryam on Friday as part of two probes — a money  laundering investigation in connection with the Chaudhry Sugar Mills  case, and another related to 148 kanals of land that she allegedly  purchased in Lahore illegally. A day before her appearance that was expected to turn into a political power show for the PML-N, a high-level NAB meeting was held to review the  situation and the recent instructions issued by the  National Command  and Operation Centre (NCOC) in view of the ongoing third coronavirus  wave in the country."The meeting was informed that the NCOC has placed a complete ban on  the gathering of all sorts of crowds," a press release issued by NAB  Lahore said. It recalled that at Maryam's last appearance before the bureau, the  NAB Lahore building had been subjected to "deliberate intense  stone-pelting", which was akin to "creating an obstacle" in the NAB  investigation. Persons involved in such acts could be jailed for up to 10 years  under accountability laws but "despite these legal powers, NAB has so  far shown extreme patience and restraint so far", the statement said. It noted that Maryam had been issued notices to appear before NAB investigation teams for a second time on March 26. 

Mar 26, 202150:01
Friday Focus || Gen Bajwa's statement and cracks in PDM || Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

Friday Focus || Gen Bajwa's statement and cracks in PDM || Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

General Bajwa's statement about peace with India and cracks in PDM (Pakistan Democratic Movement)

Army Chief Gen Qamar Bajwa on Thursday made a strong pitch for peace with India and sought the world’s help in ending the conflict between the two South Asian nuclear armed rivals.

“We feel that it is time to bury the past and move forward,” the army chief said on the second day of the Islamabad Security Dialogue.

Gen Bajwa, while proposing peace with India, echoed Prime Minister Imran Khan, who had at the inaugural session called for resolving the outstanding disputes through dialogue and establishing ‘civilised neighbours’ like relations.

Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, who spoke after Gen Bajwa, too said that Pakistan was desirous of “co-existence and win-win cooperation”. He called for shedding zero-sum perspectives and preferring cooperation over confrontation.

Army chief says it is time to bury the past and move forward

The emphasis on peaceful ties with India by the civil and military leadership is part of what is being described by the government as a shift towards exploiting the economic potential of the country and reshaping its international image battered by the conflict and violence in the region.

Gen Bajwa explained that the policy decision taken by Pakistan in this regard was a “deliberate” one based on “rationality”. He made it clear that Islamabad had chosen this path not because of “pressure”, but out of “sincere desire” to reframe Pakistan’s image as a “peace-loving nation” and a “useful member” of the international community.

Emphasising the need for peace in the highly tense South Asian environment, the army chief said conflicts because of unsettled disputes were causing huge expenditure on security at the cost of human development, impeding regional connectivity and ultimately preventing the unlocking of the potential of the region.

He underscored that the disputes between the neighbours had to be resolved through “dialogue in a dignified and peaceful manner”. He said Pakistan’s offer of marching towards a “new future” needed to be reciprocated by India.

FM Qureshi too struck a similar tone saying that Pakistan needed a willing partner “that is ready to engage in good faith, that is prepared to eschew belligerence, and that is committed to meaningfully address the factors that have bedeviled peace and security in South Asia for decades.”

The army chief sought the world’s support in making peace with India and said that “a major contribution is to be made by the global players through their cooperation”. He expressed the hope that the Biden administration too would play a role in transforming “the traditional contestation into a gainful economic win-win for the world in general and the region in particular”.

He also dwelt at length on the broader contours of Pakistan’s external policy, especially with regards to China, the United States and Afghanistan.

Both Gen Bajwa and FM Qureshi recalled Pakistan’s contributions to peace in Afghanistan and reaffirmed commitment to support the peace process.

The army chief said Pakistan would continue to emphasise a sustained and inclusive peace process for the betterment of the people of Afghanistan and regional peace.

He mentioned the steps taken by Pakistan for enhancing Afghanistan’s trade and connectivity, including re-energising the Afghan-Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement, improving economic and trade environment along the Pak-Afghan border by establishing border markets and development of infrastructure, making Afghanistan part of energy and trade corridors binding Central, South and West Asia through land routes and inviting Afghanistan to be part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

Published in Dawn, March 19th, 2021


Mar 20, 202159:32
Aurat March and the backlash against it

Aurat March and the backlash against it

In this episode of #FridayFocus, Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, and Gulalai Ismail discuss the importance of Aurat March in Pakistan, the change it is bringing, and the resistance and backlash it is facing from the conservative sections of the society. Every year on 8th March, women organise in different parts of Pakistan and march for their rights. This year's March was focused on women's right to health, the burden of care-related work, patriarchal violence against women, and economic opportunities for women. 

Aurat March 2021 has faced immense backlash with some viewing the slogans raised as an attempt to impose “western debauchery” in Pakistan with the religious clergy also deeming it to be un-Islamic. A plethora of videos and posts, which have gone viral, aim to smear the organinc women rights movement.

Images purportedly showing the French flag brandished at the Aurat March in Islamabad with social media users accusing them of subscribing to a "foreign agenda" also went viral. However, the claim is false as the French flag  has blue, white and red stripes. Whereas, participants held a flag with red, white and purple stripes, the banner of the Women Democratic Front, which is the main organisers of the marches in various cities.

Mar 12, 202126:26
PM Imran Khan's Vote of Confidence and the future political Landscape of Pakistan

PM Imran Khan's Vote of Confidence and the future political Landscape of Pakistan

In the weekly podcast, Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman and Gulalai Ismail speculates about what will happen in the vote of confidence of Imran Khan, why Imran Khan felt the need to take vote of confidence and what's next in the political landscape of Pakistan.

Mar 05, 202159:58
Senate Elections of Pakistan 2021, the Presidential Reference and Daska Bi-Elections

Senate Elections of Pakistan 2021, the Presidential Reference and Daska Bi-Elections

In this episode, Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, and Gulalai Ismail discussed the Senate Elections of Pakistan 2021, explored the question of the military establishment has become neutral in the Senate Elections, discussed the ECP decision for re-polling and suspension of senior officers allegedly responsible for the mismanagement on the Bi-Election Day. We talked about the Senate Elections, the progress of Punjab Assembly in electing Senators, and the Presidential reference in the Supreme Court. 

Feb 27, 202151:56
Friday Focus| The Mala-fide NAB Ordinance, Corruption and Political Victimisation| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

Friday Focus| The Mala-fide NAB Ordinance, Corruption and Political Victimisation| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

In this episode, we talked about the NAB ordinance of Pakistan introduced by General Parvez Musharaf for the victimization of politicians, assessed the Ordinance and unconstitutional components of the ordinance, shed light on the angle of human rights violations by the NAB, and shared names of people who have died in the custody of NAB.

The show was originally posted on January 30th, 2021 on our YouTube Channel.

Feb 22, 202151:26
Friday Focus| Court Martials of Civilians and Enforced Disappearances in Pakistan| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

Friday Focus| Court Martials of Civilians and Enforced Disappearances in Pakistan| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

In this podcast, we talked about the new trend of court-martials of civilians in the military courts of Pakistan and the issue of enforced disappearanes. 

On 13 November 2019, human rights defender Idris Khattak was forcibly  disappeared in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa by an unidentified group. For nearly  seven months there was no information regarding his fate or whereabouts,  until 16 June 2020, when it was revealed that the defender was in the  custody of the Pakistan military. A year since his enforced  disappearance, the defender continues to be detained incommunicado in an  unknown location and is the subject of a military trial under the  Official Secrets Act. To date, there is no information shared on the  place of detention, and he is denied access to independent legal counsel  for the ongoing trial. The treatment of Idris Khattak, is in direct  violation of fundamental human rights norms and due process rights, recognized nationally and espoused internationally by the State of  Pakistan.


Idris Khattak is a human rights defender whose work includes documenting and  advocating against human rights violations in the province of Khyber  Pakhtunkhwa. He has been at the forefront of the human rights movement  in the region and has been particularly outspoken on issues minority  rights and freedoms.


In the second segment of the Episode we talked about the persecution of the parents of PTM leader Gulalai Ismail for human rights activism, which is unprecedented example of transnational repression of a Pakistani citizen in exile. 

Feb 22, 202147:22
Friday Focus| Senate Elections of Pakistan and Presidential Reference; What's the Real Goal?| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

Friday Focus| Senate Elections of Pakistan and Presidential Reference; What's the Real Goal?| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

In this episode, we have talked about the upcoming Senate Elections of Pakistan, the Presidential Reference in the Supreme Court and the PTI-led govt's attempts to subvert the Constitution of Pakistan.

The purpose behind filing of the reference is to bypass the procedure of legislation, provided in Articles 70, 72, 238 and 239 of the  Constitution and the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business of  Parliament, framed under Article 67 of the Constitution because the ruling party does not have a two-thirds majority in the parliament,  particularly the Senate, argues Mr Rabbani in a synopsis he has filed before the Supreme Court.

Feb 22, 202144:52
Friday Focus| Me Too Movement in Pakistan, Meesha Shafi vs Ali Zafar| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

Friday Focus| Me Too Movement in Pakistan, Meesha Shafi vs Ali Zafar| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

In this Episode of Friday Focus, Gul Bukhar, Annie Zaman, and Gulalai Ismail talk about the challenges to the Me Too Movement in Pakistan, the achievements of the movement, and the sexual harassment case of Meesha Shafi against Ali Zafar. 

Feb 21, 202131:28
Friday Focus| TransNational Repression; Threats that Exiled Activists Face| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

Friday Focus| TransNational Repression; Threats that Exiled Activists Face| Gul Bukhari, Annie Zaman, Gulalai Ismail

In this episode of Friday Spoke we discussed the Freedom House Report about TransNational Repression, "Out of Sight, Not out of Reach" with a special focus on similar risks faced by the exiled Pakistani activists.  Transnational Repression is governments reaching across borders to silence dissent among diasporas and exiles, including through assassinations, illegal deportations, abductions, digital threats, Interpol abuse, and family intimidation. It is a daily assault on civilians everywhere — including in democracies like the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, and Australia.

Feb 21, 202156:04