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Ayesha Gulalai is paying the price for decrying harassment publicly

Yes, someone was very big for you..

Read your msg again and apni aqal pe matam karo.. :D

hence proved yourself PTI supporter.
I rest my case and certify you as a PTI Supporter

p.s. I know your heart was beating and hands start to shake when you saw an alert from me, thinking how would I reply now and in that confusion you brain stopped functioning normal so I give you a benefit of doubt for not reading my message properly
 
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Messages starts from 2013 and last received 2016, She alerted her parents but decided not to go further just for MNA seat but now I.K refuse her MNA seat because she refuses / ignore requests for wine parties at Ban Ghala she came to public.


Reserved seat means not much competition hence those who allotted reserve tickets to ladies wants some services in return like Pervez Musharaf did with Kashmala Tariq which now proud leader Ashiq Awan claimed it with bedroom remarks.
Haan haan marvi memon once said pmln ky ghundon nay aurton ki shalwarein utarwain kis moan aey ajkal usi party mein hy meri samajh sey bahar hy boss :D
 
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To phir uski in sab mein razamandi thi ye sab dosri party ki ticket key liya kiya daikho court mein jao sab clear ho jaye ga

She is victim and she can go court any time there is no restriction why not you report crime / harassment same time.

Now Ptians leader accepted he did talk with her about marriage.
 
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If she is so ghairatmand why is she not showing the messages and leaving her reserved seat?

Because I don’t think she cares about messages. Neither it affected her mentally like she claim. She continued to defend Imran khan on media at least till day before blaming him. Maybe she was hoping to get NA-1 ticket like she admitted on Abbasi show, kind of blackmail.

Generally in such cases victim can’t even see face of pervert, such is disgust and hatred. But Niazi did send dirty messages and if there is proof then he will have to answer. Or prove that the affair was consensual like it looks like from outside. Also her father went to meet IK for marriage proposal but Niazi refused. Maybe she was looking to marry but not playboy Niazi.

Then Niazi told Naeem you can marry her if she agrees.
 
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Haan haan marvi memon once said pmln ky ghundon nay aurton ki shalwarein utarwain kis moan aey ajkal usi party mein hy meri samajh sey bahar hy boss :D

This prove goons did it not leaders, I.K himself trying to do that but fails even Reham Khan claims he fails to perform some important task lolss
 
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We are asking for justice i demand forensic investigation doodh ka doodh pani ka pani

no you (Potians) are saying she is lying, asking why didnt she come out the first time she received a message...as if speaking out for a woman and that too from Pushtoon family is so simple.
 
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She is victim and she can go court any time there is no restriction why not you report crime / harassment same time.

Now Ptians leader accepted he did talk with her about marriage.
She should go she has a case of defemation on her head she can easily prove all her accusitions in court lets hope she doesnot hire Sheikh Akram as her lawyer :D
 
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Ayesha Gulalai is paying the price for decrying harassment publicly

Zoya Rehman | Hija Kamran
Updated August 04, 2017

A woman’s conscious struggle to break free from the dehumanisation and shame she has experienced in the past should ideally be lauded, and yet yields completely the opposite results the minute she speaks out publicly. It happens the world over, and the situation in Pakistan is no different.

On August 1, Ayesha Gulalai - an MNA and now former member of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) - came forward with allegations of harassment against Imran Khan - Chairman PTI - and claimed that she had been receiving lewd messages and overtures from him since October 2013.

She also openly condemned the overall problem of misogyny, as well as corruption within the party, particularly among party members at the leadership level. Gulalai’s allegations were largely rejected by the public, leading to a backlash.

The inevitability of the backlash stems from the fact that in the majority of cases involving harassment, women are, more often than not, castigated whenever they speak up and hold a public figure accountable for his actions.
Fans of Khan have also lauded Fawad Chaudhry’s uncalled-for attacks on Gulalai which targeted her sister Maria Toorpakai’s squash career and the fact that she wears shorts, i.e. her official sports uniform, during tournaments.

Ayesha Gulalai and her sister are not the same person, and attacking her to defend an alleged harasser points at the very core of the problem. Such comments ultimately speak volumes of the pervasive internal culture of misogyny in Pakistan's political parties and how easy it is for male party members and supporters alike to disrespect women.

A lot of the criticism stemmed from the fact that Gulalai decided to address the issue after years of silence. Even some women - party members, celebrities, and unfortunately a prominent feminist activist- went out of their way to partake in victim blaming, and berate Gulalai for not speaking up sooner, even going so far as to say that she should be dealt with by a jirga, as per the tribal customs of South Waziristan, the region she hails from.

Female party workers from PTI decided to use their own experiences as a benchmark to dismiss Gulalai’s experience.

Treating someone’s harassment as a non-issue on the basis of dissimilar experiences and just because it has not happened to oneself is akin to trivialising everyday misogyny and gender-based vitriol.

It also wrongly portrays sexism and harassment as issues that exist outside of political spaces, as if such spaces were somehow exempt from the requirement of providing a dignified and safe workplace for women.

It is important to mull over the fact that in most cases of harassment, women are privately encouraged to stay silent, and are chastised if they, one day, decide to break that silence by openly speaking about their experiences. It is no wonder that Gulalai’s account - true or false - has been attacked and dismissed by many people.

It takes years for victims of sexual harassment to move past their fear of social repercussions, guilt, perpetual consternation, and ultimately, their loss of agency, while being at the receiving end of such harrowing experiences.

A woman’s first reaction, after experiencing harassment or abuse of any kind, is not always of anger, or of the determination to report the crime to state authorities. Their reaction is almost always of shock or disbelief, of powerlessness and extreme isolation, and of them blaming themselves for letting something so horrible happen to them.

It stems from the betrayal they have experienced at the hands of someone they trusted, thereby instilling a sense of denial within. It is an experience of cognitive dissonance, of shutting down, of them fearing the hostility they would face once they decide to share their grievances out in the open.

One has to understand that sexual harassment, as a crime, involves complete control and power over a victim, so that she is intimidated from speaking regardless of the severity of her experiences.

Furthermore, over-reliance on concrete ‘evidence’, on legislation, justice, legal frameworks, and formal legal rights as transformative tools, completely ignores a woman’s subjective experiences of oppression. How does one even begin to prove harassment?

Gulalai has said she will furnish text messages to prove that Imran Khan was indeed harassing her, but can such evidence accurately document the breadth of the abuse she has allegedly experienced?

Recourse to the law is seen as an inevitable and rational conclusion to such claims: “She should go to court if she is telling the truth.”

Approaching a judicial forum is deemed necessary because our law somehow legitimises a woman’s personal experience of abuse, or else it never happened in society’s eyes. It is the only way publicising a private injury would make sense to our society.

However, what people fail to realise is that the law repeatedly fails to take into account a woman’s subjective experiences of mistreatment and is, more often than not, susceptible to legitimising societal norms, especially when applied conservatively.
Hence, the legal system cannot be seen as a neutral entity, but as an institution which is very much a product of Pakistan’s history, and can, many a times, result in the arbitrary exercise of power, and reification of structural discrimination.

This incident lays bare the gender politics of our society. Instead of society providing abused women safe spaces to discuss their harrowing experiences, they are treated like a public spectacle worthy of mockery and disdain.

By discrediting a woman’s experience like this, we willingly ignore the problems that exist at the structural level and in institutional responses, even though they are fraught with challenges.

Moreover, who are we, as the public, to put a limitation period on when a victim of harassment should speak about her experiences? Such victim blaming encourages a culture of discrimination that condones personal attacks, character assassination, and even threats of violence.

One ought to consider the personal, social and professional costs of coming forward with an accusation this serious, instead of resorting to insensitive statements and irresponsible journalism from public figures and citizens alike.

It takes immense courage for a woman to recall the harassment she has experienced at the hands of a well-known man on a public forum, considering the shame involved for her personally in coming forward after suffering in silence for so long.

Considering the differential power dynamics in such cases, a survivor of harassment should be supported, or at least given the benefit of the doubt, if she publicly raises her voice, instead of being accused of making false allegations.
Moreover, Imran Khan is not an ordinary man: being a political figure, particularly one who persistently pushed for accountability in the Panama case, he owes it to the Pakistani public to absolve himself of any alleged crimes, and in any case, should be held accountable as per his own political and moral standards.

The burden of proof rests on him just as much as it does on Gulalai, now that he has served her a legal notice.

Avoiding self-reflection and denying female politicians the right to a redressal mechanism (and also a sense of personal security) is equivalent to turning a blind eye to issues of gender-based violence on the part of PTI members as well as its supporters.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1349568/a...ng-the-price-for-decrying-harassment-publicly
Look at these Feminist apologists - jumping to conclusions on the matter without proper homework. These blind advocates of 'women-rights' typically fail to account for additional realities in their shortsighted assessments.

Harassment is a bad thing - no ifs and buts about it. However, one needs to be careful about what constitutes as harassment and what constitutes as altercation.

The issue of harassment should be settled in a court of law, not on media.

Problem is that Ayesha's story has many loopholes and she knows that her accusations will fall apart in a court of law, this is why she chose media as the platform to defame Imran Khan - very cheap move on her part. She is facing the music for her stupid move on the behest of her [behind-the-scenes] string-pullers in PML(N) and ANP and she will learn a lesson very soon.

Another thing is that if a person (irrespective of gender) is [WRONGLY] accused of harassment and gets into trouble for it - who is responsible for this predicament? The accuser (irrespective of gender) deserves heavy punishment in return.
 
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Because I don’t think she cares about messages. Neither it affected her mentally like she claim. She continued to defend Imran khan on media at least till day before blaming him.

Generally in such cases victim can’t even see face of pervert, such is disgust and hatred. But Niazi did send dirty messages and if there is proof then he will have to answer. Or prove that the affair was consensual like it looks like from outside. Also her father went to meet IK for marriage proposal but Niazi refused. Maybe she was looking to marry but not playboy Niazi.

Then Niazi told Naeem you can marry her if she agrees.
Stockholm syndrome.
 
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This prove goons did it not leaders, I.K himself trying to do that but fails even Reham Khan claims he fails to perform some important task lolss
Goons dont work independently in Pakistan they had orders
 
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no you (Potians) are saying she is lying, asking why didnt she come out the first time she received a message...as if speaking out for a woman and that too from Pushtoon family is so simple.
Arey jindali baboon court mein ja raha hy case iski statements badal rahi hain iskey case ka haal bhi Neefay Podri wala hoga :D

Did I.K also doing it on orders ? lolssss
Ab iska tumhain hi pata hoga agar aisa kuch tumharey sath hoya hy :whistle:

Stockholm syndrome.
or something more desi knows as NAZRIYE WAQT KI SIYASAT
 
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Arey jindali baboon court mein ja raha hy case iski statements badal rahi hain iskey case ka haal bhi Neefay Podri wala hoga :D

nehee yar pilley, bus wait ker aur dekh aba ji ka kya hal hota hay
 
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nehee yar pilley, bus wait ker aur dekh aba ji ka kya hal hota hay
Apkey aba ji to gt road par a rahey hain phir adiyala jayein gay jalsazi aur money laundering kay case ki wajah sey ap canada mein naye aba ji bana lo apkey mulk mein to ye sab legal hy :D
 
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She is under the impression that she is Benazir no.2, but her political career is done for. She could have damaged PTI without damaging herself and the career, but the her greed and stupidity came into play.
 
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