HRCP marks ‘Day of the Endangered Lawyer’
LAHORE: The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) held a roundtable consultation Friday to mark the 10th annual ‘Day of the Endangered Lawyer’, the focus of which is Pakistan this year.
It was attended by members of bar councils and associations, and civil society organisations. Lawyer Asad Jamal, who moderated the session, explained why it was critical to discuss the threats faced by lawyers who defend human rights. HRCP honorary spokesperson IA Rehman underscored the need to document all such incidents of threats to lawyers. Participants shared a range of experiences, from lawyers who said they had been threatened openly by their own colleagues for representing clients from the Ahmadiya community, to those who had faced intimidation from state agency officials in cases related to torture or death in custody.
Politically sensitive cases, such as those pertaining to enforced disappearances, also put lawyers at risk. Lawyer and digital rights activist Nighat Dad pointed out that ensuring lawyers’ security extended to their digital security: if this became compromised, it would immediately put clients at risk.
An important consensus was that woman lawyers and lawyers from religious minorities were subjected to greater harassment, not only from male colleagues, but also from judges. Advocates Jalila Haider and Alia Malik recounted number of incidents in which they had been harassed in court or threatened with physical violence.
Pakistan Bar Council’s Vice Chairman Abid Saqi pointed to the structural discrimination existing in the Constitution and laws. He recommended that a permanent body be constituted to develop strategies for countering threats to lawyers handling sensitive cases, such as those related to blasphemy and forced conversion.
He also agreed, among other things, to a proposal for establishing committees to counter harassment of women in the legal profession. HRCP Council member and senior lawyer Hina Jilani said lawyers must engage with the state, and especially the judiciary, to sensitise them to such threats and the need to perform their due role. The participants agreed holding a conference to follow up on the issues raised at the meeting to make the legal profession safer.
-
Nick Jonas Gets Candid About His Type 1 Diabetes Diagnosis -
King Charles Sees Environmental Documentary As Defining Project Of His Reign -
James Van Der Beek Asked Fans To Pay Attention To THIS Symptom Before His Death -
Portugal Joins European Wave Of Social Media Bans For Under-16s -
Margaret Qualley Recalls Early Days Of Acting Career: 'I Was Scared' -
Sir Jackie Stewart’s Son Advocates For Dementia Patients -
Google Docs Rolls Out Gemini Powered Audio Summaries -
Breaking: 2 Dead Several Injured In South Carolina State University Shooting -
China Debuts World’s First AI-powered Earth Observation Satellite For Smart Cities -
Royal Family Desperate To Push Andrew As Far Away As Possible: Expert -
Cruz Beckham Releases New Romantic Track 'For Your Love' -
5 Celebrities You Didn't Know Have Experienced Depression -
Trump Considers Scaling Back Trade Levies On Steel, Aluminium In Response To Rising Costs -
Claude AI Shutdown Simulation Sparks Fresh AI Safety Concerns -
King Charles Vows Not To Let Andrew Scandal Overshadow His Special Project -
Spotify Says Its Best Engineers No Longer Write Code As AI Takes Over