Karachi exhibit denouncing police raids forcibly closed
Karachi: Pakistani authorities have closed a prominent art exhibition in Karachi that sought to denounce police raids led by an infamous officer that had killed hundreds of people in the southern port city, the artists, exhibit organisers and rights activists said Tuesday.
The artist, Adeela Suleman, said her work at the Frere Hall for the Karachi Biennale consisted of an installation of 444 small concrete tombstones symbolically marking the number of “extrajudicial killings” in raids led by police officer Rao Anwar, an infamous figure in Karachi.
One of the stones honours the memory of Naqeeb Ullah, a 27-yearold aspiring model killed by Anwar’s unit in a 2018 shootout in Karachi. Anwar’s trial in the case is ongoing. Karachi police say the raids were justified operations against militants. The closing of Suleman’s exhibition on Sunday drew nationwide
condemnation from fellow artists and human rights activists who say it was yet another attempt to censor criticism in Pakistan. Suleman, a fine arts professor at the city’s Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture, said she was “disappointed and sad by the way two men in plainclothes” arrived on Sunday, and forced the organisers to close the exhibition, “right there in the presence of art lovers in the city.”
The plainclothes men
never spoke to her, she said.
Her art was an attempt to tell the story of what many see as extrajudicial killings by an unrestrained police force.
“Artists are gravely concerned if we cannot express ourselves,” she said. Jibran Nasir, a prominent human rights, said he himself witnessed how the plainclothes men — apparently officers from the intelligence agency — forced the exhibit shut.