she gave him her whole life her youth, her dreams, her strength believing he would be the one beside her in old age. Instead he became her killer. And the children she raised tnhe ones she loved and fought for, refused to take any action against her murderer
If Umer Hayat can get a death sentence in Sana Yousaf's case so quickly, then why is Zahir Jaffer still alive 5 years after Noor Mukadam's murder? Justice should never depend on wealth, influence or status. The law must be equal for everyone. Justice delayed is justice denied.
Dude, stop settling some petty political scores through this. Every fcking political party is misogynistic and it has always been a problem. Fck off man, we are here seething and you all need to do this. Fck off.
17 year old, first year student abducted, gang r*ped and murdered by four MEN (mard) in jhang and we’re still debating whether the state should focus on protecting women or giving civil awards for basic human instincts. this is what a failed, shameful society looks like.
beyond the fact that what happened to referee omar artan is pure injustice, it once again reminds us that the filthy empire doesn't even see people of the global south as humans deserving of any rights or dignity......
this liar omfg he wasn't proven innocent, he thinks bc they settled and he paid some money everyone will forget about it, i'm glad he was reminded of it in what's supposed to be the happiest day of his life
alexander zverev could win 20 slams and would still be an abuser
Lewis Hamilton says he is uncomfortable with materialism as he wears a 400k watch, has a multimillion dollar yacht, showed Jo at F1 looking ridiculous, and is fake dating a Kardashian. Talk about tone deaf.
Man killed his wife, and his sons refuse to file a case. They’ll pardon him. Another version of honour killing. As a woman even your own sons won’t side with you when needed.. what the actual fuck
@bentheorder2 i do not think it is that insane to demand that the attention should soley be on the victim -- instead, a man gets lauded and applauded for showing up at the scene and the narrative shifts to the hero who saved her rather than the woman who got ACID thrown on her brutally
@bentheorder2 its not about whether the man was a hero or not -- it is about the fact that a woman gets acid thrown on her and the gov's reaction is to award the man for his bravery. what about the victim? or the measures taken to make sure it doesn't happen again? where is law and order?
a couple of times helped my ammi's friends in US with some stuff here in pak which was really basic and they ended up sending me money. it feels professional at first then you think how they dont believe in genuine compassion and humanity rather how everything is a paid gig
At the library a young woman gave up her table for a little boy and her after-school tuition teacher.
I paid attention when I heard the teacher saying repeatedly, ‘But why would you DO that?’. The girl said politely, ‘it’s ok I just sat down’, and started collecting her books and bags. I think she did it because the boy was really small and had been looking around disappointedly earlier.
The teacher just looked shocked and I suppose pleased but didn’t hear her say an effusive thank you or anything. The response felt more like, ‘But why would you DO that…sucker?’ No, ‘aw your parents have raised you well’, or ‘that’s so kind of you’, or ‘little tommy, look how nice this girl is. Say thank you’ (probably teaching little tommy any tameez would go beyond her job description and cross ‘boundaries’ anyway).
People giving up their space for another is a rare event around these parts. Everyone is taught me first individuality so I suppose they don’t even know how to have any tameez in the face of genuine courtesy or selflessness. The latter just not being a virtue of any variety in a hyper individualistic universe. All their tameez stops at holding of doors and ‘have a good one’. A genuine gesture leaves them baffled.