The Free Press Journal

Pak rights activist Asma Jahangir no more

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Pakistani human rights advocate Asma Jahangir has died, a family member said on Sunday, in a blow to the country's embattled rights community. She was 66. The lawyer and former United Nations special rapporteur died of cardiac arrest, according to her sister. "Unfortunat­ely we have lost her," Hina Jilani, also a prominent rights activist, told AFP.

Jahangir's supporters and former opponents alike took to social media to offer their condolence­s and expressed shock at the news of her death. "Asma Jahangir was the bravest human being I ever knew. Without her the world is less," wrote prominent Pakistani lawyer Salman Akram Raja.

"I and many others didn't agree with some of her views. But she was a titan. And one of the brightest and bravest ever produced by this country," wrote journalist Wajahat Khan on Twitter.

Ms Jahangir received France's highest civilian award in 2014 and Sweden's alternativ­e to the Nobel Prize for her decades of rights work.

Few Pakistani rights activists have achieved the credibilit­y of Jahangir.

She braved death threats, beatings and imprisonme­nt to win landmark human rights cases and stand up to dictators. There is still terrible violence against women, discrimina­tion against minorities and near-slavery for bonded labourers, but Jahangir told AFP during an

interview in 2014 that human rights causes have made greater strides in Pakistan than it may appear.

"There was a time that human rights was not even an issue in this country. Then prisoners' rights became an issue," she said.

"Women's rights was thought of as a Western concept. Now people do talk about women's rights, political parties talk about it, even religious parties talk about it."

Jahangir secured a number of victories during her life, from winning freedom for bonded labourers from their "owners" through pioneering litigation to a landmark court case that allowed women to marry of their own volition.

She has also been an outspoken critic of the Pakistan's military establishm­ent, including during her stint as the firstever female leader of Pakistan's top bar associatio­n.

The 62-year-old was arrested in 2007 by the government of then military ruler Pervez Musharraf, and in 2012 claimed her life was in danger from the country's Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI) spy agency.

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