Pakistan rights advocates seen as ‘vulnerable targets’

{Activists feel under attack after murder of Khurram Zaki, who spread “liberal religious views and condemned extremism”.}

The murder of Khurram Zaki by armed men in Karachi has underscored the vulnerability of human-rights and civil-liberties activists in Pakistan.

Khurram Zaki, 40, was killed on Saturday in the southern Pakistani city by unknown assailants in an attack that also left a journalist dead and a bystander critically injured.

Zaki, whose funeral took place on Sunday, was known for his outspoken stance against the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Sunni sectarian group; the Pakistani Taliban; and Abdul Aziz, a controversial religious leader.

In December 2015, Zaki led street protests demanding that Aziz be arrested and charged with hate speech for allegedly justifying attacks such as the Peshawar school massacre in 2014 where at least 132 school children were killed.

A faction of the Pakistani Taliban, the Hakeemullah group, claimed responsibility for Zaki’s killing, but the police was unable to verify those claims and said the group had previously taken responsibility for attacks it did not carry out in Karachi.

Speaking to Al Jazeera, Jibran Nasir, a Pakistan lawyer and activist, said he had no doubt that Zaki paid with his life for his advocacy of liberal causes.

“The primary reason behind Zaki being shot dead was his constant activism in a bold manner,” Nasir said.

“Zaki had an idea of what he was getting into. He received various threats. We’ve registered an FIR [First Information Report] in Karachi after his murder and given the names of people who should be held responsible. Aziz has been named as the prime suspect in the FIR.”

{{‘Vulnerable targets’}}

A former journalist and an active campaigner for human rights, Zaki was the editor of Let Us Build Pakistan, a website and Facebook page which professed to “spread liberal religious views and condemned extremism in all forms”.

“Activists are vulnerable targets,” Nasir said. “Terror outfits continue to spread reign of terror by shooting them and achieving their purpose. But as activists, we knew what we were getting into and we signed up for this.

“We’re talking about certain aspects of the law and core issues, and when you talk about this loudly, you make a lot of enemies. But we expected all this. It hasn’t changed my life in any way and it didn’t change Zaki’s life either.

“Unlike politicians, or VIPs as they are called in Pakistan, we don’t get armed protocol and guards.”

The killing of Zaki comes at a time when Pakistani rights advocates feel they are increasingly under attack.

Saturday marked two years since Rashid Rahman, a human-rights lawyer, was shot dead.

On April 25, Pakistan marked one year since Sabeen Mahmud, another prominent liberal activist, was murdered in Karachi.

Mahmud was shot shortly after hosting a discussion on Balochistan’s “disappeared people”.

She was the director of The Second Floor (T2F), a cafe and arts space that has been a mainstay of Karachi’s activists since it opened its doors in 2007.

Alleged culprit’s confession

Mahmud had been present at the opening of the discussion where Mama Qadeer, Farzana Majeed and Muhammad Ali Talpur – three prominent Baloch rights activists – had been speaking.

The alleged culprit, who also confessed to being involved in the killing of 45 members of the Shia Ismaili community in Karachi, told police that Mahmud had been targeted for her campaign against Aziz.

“We’ve pursued charges of different kinds against Aziz, including him having allegiance with ISIL [the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant group, also known as ISIS] and him claiming a Shia lobby is working against him,” Nasir, the Pakistani lawyer and activist, said.

“He knows who we are. I’ve seen videos of him naming me and Zaki. And a lot of social-media campaigns have taken place against us, creating rumours and endangering our lives. I’ve suffered from that and Zaki suffered from that.

“But our actions and activism of the people landed him in hot water and we were able to break this insurmountable reign of terror that Aziz had over Islamabad.”

It is widely believed that Aziz enjoys support in many parts of Pakistan, including that of his students at Jamia Hafsa, a madrassa in the heart of Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad.

“What is the harm in trying the Islamic system?” Ayesha, a 26-year-old graduate of one of Aziz’s seminaries, told Al Jazeera earlier this year.

“The media raise all kinds of propaganda against us, but they never ask us for our or the maulana’s [Aziz’s] point of view.”

Zaki was outspoken in his stand against Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and Pakistani Taliban

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