Rule of thumb when dealing with toxic people..
Keep all interactions:
-Positive
-Superficial
-Brief
Give them no information, no fuel & no authenticity.
Save the good stuff for those you trust.
Strongly condemn the shameful and regressive remarks made by this SHO. This kind of language is not just inappropriate, it is an insult to the Constitution, to our society, and to the uniform he wears. No officer has the right to sit in judgment over the character, choices, or lives of citizens, especially women. That is not policing. That is an abuse of authority. The police exist to protect people, not to morally police them. Any officer who humiliates, demeans, or shames citizens is unfit to serve in a public role. There must be zero tolerance for this mindset.
I expect immediate and strict action, @dcswabi@KP_Police1. Respect for women is not optional, it is a duty. #KhyberPakhtunkhwa will not move backward into fear and control. We will move forward with dignity, rights, and justice.
@KPChiefMinister@MohsinnaqviC42
Capacity-building session held on 29 Jan 2026 by Mera Ghar – NET to strengthen coordination between Gender Desks and Pro Bono Lawyers in KP for improved access to justice and protection services.
#MeraGharNET#AccessToJustice#GBV#WomenProtection
#Pakistan: The conviction & sentencing of Imaan Zainab Mazari-Hazir & Hadi Ali Chatha under the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA), following fair trial concerns, is deeply disturbing. This case highlights the danger of this law being used to suppress dissent. We urge the Government to protect & uphold freedom of expression & the right to peaceful assembly in line with Pakistan’s int’l human rights obligations.
I don’t know how as a nation, we’ve become this numb. Families are suffering in snow in Tirah, being thrown out of their homes due to military operation, left without shelter. The least we could do is raise our voices but there’s barely any outrage over this.
#TirahValley
HRCP expresses grave concern over the continued practice of arbitrary arrests and detention, and enforced disappearances, which Pakistan must urgently confront. The alleged abduction of University of Peshawar students Habib Wazir and Adnan Wazir, missing since 12 November 2025 after attending a government-convened grand jirga, exemplifies how due process is routinely bypassed.
Equally alarming is the alleged disappearance of former MNA Nisar Panhwar and his son Mohsin Panhwar, reportedly taken by men in plainclothes in Karachi on 22 December 2025, despite earlier assurances following Mr Panhwar’s brief release.
These cases sit alongside the detention of women and minors in Balochistan, including such activists as Mahjabeen Baloch, a disabled student, and at least six others in November and December 2025 alone.
Such acts violate constitutional guarantees and inflict irreversible harm on families and communities. We reiterate that the state must ensure transparency, accountability for perpetrators and unconditional access to justice for all affected families.
Going away does not always mean ending. Sometimes it is a pause, sometimes a quiet exit. Coming back is not always a return to notice, but to familiarity. Existence lingers in small traces, then slips into disappearance. With time, what once mattered becomes forgetfulness, and what remains settles into habit, lived without being named.