Pakistan’s top lawyer and human rights activist Asma Jehangir passed away due to a cardiac arrest in Lahore at the age of 66.
- Known for her bold stance, Asma was the country’s symbol of resistance and a human rights activist who spoke against military dictators and abusers of law for the past five decades.
- She headed the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and remained the Supreme Court Bar Association chairperson.
- She was also appointed as UN Reporter in the region during the 1990s.
- She remained in jail during the dictatorial rule of General Zia-ul Haq in 1983 for raising her voice for the democrats.
- She has always raised her voice against missing persons often picked up by the intelligence agencies and never produced before the courts.
- She took up cases of dozens of missing persons and fought in the courts for their recovery free of cost.
- She won numerous national and international awards for her struggle for the oppressed.
- Asma was often criticized by right wingers for her stance towards freedom of speech and against the use of religion to curb progressive voices.
- Asma also criticized the judiciary for not giving justice to the oppressed and not taking notice of extra judicial killings and abductions.