‘Pink Rickshaw’ campaigner’s office ransacked

LAHORE (Web Desk) – Days after a prominent rights campaigner, Sabeen Mahmud, was killed in Karachi, Zar Aslam who is famous for her ‘Pink Rickshaw’ has come under attack by unknown assailants.

Zar Aslam put up a status on Facebook which read as follows: “My home office got broken into. All computers gone. In a state of shock. Please allow me some space and time. All projects on hold. Please don’t ask for interviews. Thank you for your consideration.”

This has sent shockwaves through the country’s progressives, as those who speak out against alleged abuses by the state say they are under increasing threat.

An environmentalist, fed up with being groped and harassed by male auto-rickshaw drivers, Zar had launched her own service exclusively for women passengers and drivers in her home city of Lahore – with just the one rickshaw on the road so far.

Zar Aslam, president of Pakistan’s non-profit Environment Protection Fund, said she once narrowly escaped kidnapping by a rickshaw driver when she was a student, which triggered the idea of launching her “Pink Rickshaw” service.

Sabeen Mahmud, the 40-year-old director The Second Floor cafe in Karachi which regularly hosted debates and arts events, was killed when gunmen attacked her car as she left the venue minutes after hosting a seminar on abuses in the restive Balochistan province.

The same talk, featuring prominent Baloch activist Mama Qadeer who has campaigned for the “missing people” of Balochistan, had been cancelled by the prestigious Lahore University of Management Sciences weeks earlier after members of faculty reported pressure from intelligence agencies.

Police say they are examining whether she was targeted because of her work at the cafe, which held talks against religious extremism as well as state brutality. “She had no personal enmity so there is much possibility that she might have been targeted because of her intellectual activities. She was getting threatening calls from some unknown callers. We are working (out) who they might be,” senior police official Jamil Ahmed said Sunday.

Her death led to an outpouring of grief with hundreds of mourners attending her funeral Saturday, as the United States and the European Union joined Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in officially condemning the killing. But most analysts say there is little chance her murderers will ever be brought to justice given the recent history of impunity among those who target the country’s marginalised liberals.

Last year, prominent liberal TV host Raza Rumi narrowly escaped a gun attack on his car in Lahore that killed his driver, while another anchor, Hamid Mir, survived being shot in the stomach in Karachi shortly after hosting a TV programme about Balochistan. No perpetrators have been brought to justice in either case.

Mir, whose brother quickly pointed the finger at the country’s main spy agency for the attempt on his life, said he saw several parallels with the attack on Mahmud.

“The most common factor was Mama Qadeer Baloch because I received threats when I invited him on my show,” Mir told AFP. “I got six bullet injuries, she got maybe four. I was attacked by the people who were riding a motorcycle, she was too. My attackers were guided by some people who were sitting in a car and this was the same case in her incident.” Dissenting voices silenced: Hashim Bin Rashid, a leftwing columnist and activist, says that there is a growing atmosphere among the country’s urban middle classes that encourages the silencing of dissenting voices.

“The overall atmosphere of fascism… is much more worrying, where anyone is offering any dissent is going to be called a traitor,” he said.

Activists who write about the rights of Baloch people on social media, or condemn the killing of minorities, are often loudly berated and receive death threats that are never investigated, while on the other hand the government blocks pages belonging to progressive groups on Facebook, he added.

Resource-rich Balochistan is the largest of Pakistan’s four provinces and also most impoverished, and it has been racked by a separatist insurgency since 2004.

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