Pakistan Rights Body Slams Arrest of Aurat March Activists at Press Club

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan condemned the detention of Aurat March organizers outside the Karachi Press Club. Police briefly arrested several leaders, including activist Sheema Kermani, who had gathered for a press conference. The rights body stated the incident reflects a repressive approach where dissent is treated as a threat. Media organizations also voiced concerns over increasing curbs on press freedom and risks to journalists in Pakistan.

Key Points: Aurat March Leaders Arrested: Pakistan Rights Body Condemns Detention

  • Police briefly arrested Aurat March leaders outside Karachi Press Club
  • HRCP condemns detention as part of a pattern of suppressing dissent
  • Detained include activist Sheema Kermani and transgender activist Shehzadi Rai
  • Media bodies also raise alarm over rising press freedom curbs in Pakistan
3 min read

Rights body condemns detention of 'Aurat March' leaders in Pakistan

HRCP condemns police detention of Aurat March organizers, including Sheema Kermani, outside Karachi Press Club, calling it a repressive attack on dissent.

"Preventing citizens, particularly women and marginalised groups, from even convening a press conference reflects an increasingly repressive approach to governance - HRCP"

Islamabad, May 6

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan on Wednesday has condemned the detention of Aurat March organisers and volunteers outside the Karachi Press Club, where they had gathered to hold a press conference.

The rights body stated that preventing people from holding press conference showcases an "increasingly repressive approach to governance", where dissent is considered a threat instead of a democratic necessity, leading Pakistani news network Geo News reported.

The HRCP's statement comes after police on Tuesday briefly arrested several Aurat March leaders, including activist and artist artist Sheema Kermani, outside the Karachi Press Club.

"HRCP strongly condemns the arrest of several organisers and volunteers of Aurat March from outside the Karachi Press Club, where they were scheduled to address a press conference. This incident is not isolated overreach but rather part of a broader and deeply troubling pattern: the systematic denial of public space to citizens seeking to articulate their rights," HRCP posted on X.

"The rights to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression are constitutionally guaranteed. Preventing citizens, particularly women and marginalised groups, from even convening a press conference reflects an increasingly repressive approach to governance, where dissent is treated as a threat rather than a democratic necessity," it added.

The organisers of the press conference said that the detained people included Kermani, transgender activist Shehzadi Rai, Muniza, and others. South Superintendent of Police (SSP) Manzoor Ali stated that several women leaders were taken to a police station before being released shortly after. After the incident, police deployment around the Karachi Press Club was increased. Aurat March organisers stated that the leaders had gathered for a press conference when the police detained them, Geo News reported.

On May 2, media bodies and civil society organisations voiced concerns over increasing curbs on press freedom and growing risks to journalists in Pakistan.

In a joint statement released to mark the World Press Freedom Day, the Joint Action Committee - comprising the Pakistan Broadcasters Association (PBA), the All Pakistan Newspapers Society (APNS), the Council of Pakistan Newspaper Editors (CPNE), the Association of Electronic Media Editors and News Directors (AMEND), and the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) termed the past year challenging for journalism, with growing restrictions around the world, the daily Dawn reported.

It stated that the state of freedom of expression has not been satisfactory in Pakistan. According to the statement, journalists in Pakistan face harassment, arrests, violence and increasing pressure from state institutions, while media outlets face editorial interference, demonstrating how outlets are being controlled at various levels and tactics being used, like government advertisements to get editorial control, limiting the right to information through censorship, and taking dissenting voices off air.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
\u0938\u093e\u0939\u093f\u092c, yeh kya ho raha hai? Arresting women for wanting to speak about their rights? Our sisters across the border deserve better. \ud83d\ude22 While we debate women's safety here, at least we can hold protests and press conferences without fear of being bundled into a police van. Stay strong, Aurat March.
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James A
It's sad to see this pattern repeat across South Asia. The HRCP is right - this is about silencing dissent, not just a single incident. Free press and assembly are the bedrock of democracy. Pakistan needs to respect its own constitution.
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Vikram M
While we rightly condemn Pakistan, let's also look within. Do Indian women really have full freedom in public spaces? The safety issue is real. But yes, arresting activists before a press conference is a whole different level of state overreach. HRCP has done well to call this out.
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Siddharth J
\ud83d\ude22 So heartbroken! Sheema Kermani is a legendary artist and activist. To see her dragged away like a criminal is shameful. Pakistani authorities - let women speak! This is 2025, not the dark ages. HRCP has rightly highlighted the broader pattern of silencing dissent.
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Michael C
The pattern is clear: from journalists to activists, anyone who speaks truth to power in Pakistan faces consequences. The HRCP statement about "systematic denial of public space" is spot on. This isn't just about one march - it's about the erosion of democratic space.

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