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Updated 06 Dec, 2019

This article was originally published on 31 July, 2018.

It's Sunday afternoon. Three women are hanging out at a coffee shop at Dolmen Mall near Sea View.

They are wearing uniforms, it looks like they are taking a break from work. They are talking and laughing. I pick up some chatter (unintentionally, harmlessly), it’s about everything from shopping ideas to office gossip. Difficult bosses and amusing colleagues are prime subjects.

I'm hanging out with my sister and a friend at a separate table. It's like any other typical day; we are engrossed in our own world, talking politics, economy, post #Election2018. Suddenly, one of the women gets up from her seat and requests the restaurant staff to ask this man sitting past our table to stop bothering them. It's their worrying but timid whispers that make me first notice him, and man, do I know quickly what creature I'm looking at.

She says he's been harassing her friends for a while. They're keeping the confrontation low-key, they obviously don't want trouble. First from a distance, in the form of winks and inviting facial gestures; then later, resorting to invitations like “why don’t you come sit with me?” and “Can I take you with me tonight?”

Here is how women experience everyday life:

This man, a man in his mid-40s, peers through his half-masked sunglasses. He looks influential and wealthy, judging by all the shopping bags by his feet and is sitting alone with a pack of cigarettes, pretending to smoke.

He has not made his order in about an hour. He is neither on the phone nor texting. Not staring at the sky or into the distance. Not lost in his thoughts, but in fact, very focused. His eyes planted on the table across, where three young women are trying to have a good time, his gaze squaring, flirtatious, inviting. This continues after they have complained; asking him to stop bothering them but he is adamant, even forceful.

“Why are you so worried? I just like you, darling.”

In some places like Pakistan, male superiority is deeply ingrained in the culture. A woman's life has become a delicate dance between anxiety and survival.

I stand up to intervene: I ask him to stop bothering the women and apologise for doing so in the first place. I tell him, he is harassing them. He responds with, “Why can’t I look? My eyes.”

Astonished, I assess his type. It was going to be a tough fight and I was right. We go back and forth for a while and then he says, in a pretentiously British accent: “Oh I forgot I was in Pakistan. This is what happens in Pakistan.”

"What do you mean?" I asked him. Where in the world does he expect to publicly make uninvited advances at women?

“Why? Is it illegal to look at women? Is It illegal to talk to women?”

I am disgusted but also way past my tolerance threshold.

I lobby with restaurant staff to make him leave the restaurant. These kind of men make it difficult for women to experience a normal day. They take away a woman's control over her life. They turn the perfectly pleasant evenings with the girls into bad-tasting memories. I tell all this to him and he keeps asking me what my problem is, that he’s “just sitting here.” He remains calm and cool-looking. It's the women who have been affected by this.

The staff is intimidated by his arrogance and at this point, they’re begging for him to move his location. I argue he has to leave. No one listens. I call for mall security.

When women are told to "calm down"

As a woman in my 30s, I have lost patience for this social tolerance for men who take liberties with women. Misogynistic behavior is present in almost every country I have worked in whether it's the West or the Middle East. Men use public spaces as their hunting ground to pick up women; I have seen men whistling at coffee shops in Batumi and malls in Istanbul, the subway in Brooklyn, walking down the street in a parking lot in Chicago.

In some places like Pakistan, male superiority is deeply ingrained in the culture, where a woman's life becomes this delicate dance between anxiety and survival. It could be that as a journalist covering hard places for so long has thickened my skin, that men don't scare me anymore but every woman who carries anger can say no.

What makes people uncomfortable in fact is seeing a woman objecting to the harassment. Whenever I have publicly confronted a man, people tell me to take it easy.

It’s been 30 minutes since and security staff outside is debating outside whether they should intervene or not. The man has finally ordered coffee, he proceed to light cigarettes.

“He is a customer,” one says. “We can’t kick him out,” “Why don’t you seat yourself at distance,” “Don’t look at him,” “Ignore him,” “This is not our problem,” “It’s between him and the girls.”

After batting out their objections, I negotiate how it’s their social and business responsibility and so, they finally move forward.

The first thing the head of security does is shake his hand. Greetings! "Are you enjoying your coffee, sir?" (Not even kidding!). The man does not want to leave, he definitely does not want to apologise. I intervene again,  asking for his ID and about a dozen mall and restaurant staff try to stop me.

“Maam, let’s cool down. He is harmless.”

Sadly, this is an all too familiar scenario women face, when they’re told to calm down. This is what the other side of being silent looks like, so anyone who enthusiastically objects to why women don't speak, now you know why, this is why.

The staff and mall security, all men, are holding two-way radio devices; it was clearly embarrassing for them to ask a man to leave. For them, a man harassing women within their cafe really did not seem like an important, pressing issue.

While they did try to help me, they were not on board with me on principle. They evidently did not care for consequences. They said he knew they were watching now, let’s move forward, they said.

To me, this works in defense of the man; exactly the attitude that encourages men to believe that in public spaces they have power over women no matter what their behaviour.

Lose-lose situation

At this point, the staff asks the women to forgive him and accept their apology on his behalf. They have not bothered asking him to do so himself.

The women do forgive him with a smile. Gratefulness in their eyes, they are mesmerised by the fact that people care but really, it’s their fear of asking a powerful looking man to leave. The fear of attention. The fear of being judged. The fear of being heard. The attention! They’d rather be invisible in a man’s world.

They tell me it’s okay. I should rest and let the man stay. They are now lobbying for him. They are gentle, they’re kind, they’re forgiving. Women do that.

The issue has shifted: from letting women freely use public spaces to letting a man ‘freely use public spaces’. Pun intended. The man has not apologised. Still.

These kind of men make it difficult for women to experience a normal day. They take away a woman's control over her life. They turn the perfectly pleasant evenings with the girls into bad-tasting memories.

It doesn’t end. It goes on. I go on. It’s when I start shooting a video that the staff is threatened into taking this seriously. They tell me I'm “not allowed to shoot”.

Great cue for me: “Is it allowed to harass women at your restaurant?”

Around 20 people from the mall join in and finally, the man asks me, “Will it solve your problem if I leave?” I wanted his ID, which I didn’t get but he sure got something from a woman: a lesson.

I want to see a day when I don't have to bring my rage to a coffee shop. If one out of five women in the country are in the workforce, these women leave homes and use public spaces. Household women too leave homes, often on their own.

Are these public spaces safe for women to enjoy? They are not. It is widely acceptable in the country that men can use their eyes and words to harass women.

What makes people uncomfortable in fact is seeing a woman objecting to the harassment. Whenever I have publicly confronted a man, people tell me to take it easy. They say, “You never know what may happen after” or “He could be dangerous” or “Why put yourself through unnecessary trouble?”

The unnecessary trouble is what women have been putting up with in public spaces. It is the responsibility of restaurants, malls and other public spaces to ensure strict policies against harassers. Harassing women and LGBT in public spaces should be socially unacceptable and women should not feel obligated to forgive any man who has made them feel violated or has given them a hard time.

The women thanked me profusely when the man was finally made to leave and the restaurant staff later came by and apologised on his behalf. Oh, the irony.


Kiran Nazish is an independent journalist based between Istanbul and New York. She tweets @kirannazish

Comments

Talha Jul 31, 2018 10:34am
Worth the effort. Gender boundaries require long due redefinition.
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Tali Jul 31, 2018 10:41am
Bravo! Well done on persisting....that takes courage. Thankyou.
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ahsan Jul 31, 2018 10:46am
Very disturbing ..unfortunately that is the norm .Sad
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DFDB Jul 31, 2018 10:58am
Thank you! That's the way to deal with it.
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Mehreen Jul 31, 2018 11:06am
Dear Kiran, Thank you for your courage. These low lives need to be called out and i'm grateful to you for showing the courage that i would have found hard to muster myself. Too often we choose to ignore. This thing will only stop when we stop ignoring and start acting. Thank you again.
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Rahim Jul 31, 2018 11:06am
Thank you - Wish all of us can learn from you and take a stand in public instead of turning away!
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Sajan Jul 31, 2018 11:14am
I can see pakistani men always staring at women in Dubai..
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Mustafa ur Rehman Jul 31, 2018 11:34am
Kudos to you ma'am for standing up to disgusting behaviour that has become all too common in public places. I have especially noticed such behaviour at Dolmen City Clifton and it is simply disgusting. About time people knew they can no longer get away with behaving like this
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truthspeaks Jul 31, 2018 11:40am
In Pakistan, women and men generally don't know how to interact and make friends with each other.
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sheema zain Jul 31, 2018 11:42am
I hope all women have the courage to come forward like you. And that other people like the restaurant staff shared your attitude of zero tolerance for harassment. If that man was openly asking the girls harassing questions why couldn't he be arrested or atleast thrown out. He had no right to insult their dignity. Aren't their laws on this?
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The Right Left Jul 31, 2018 11:54am
There needs to be a way of shaming these creeps in public. Thats the only way they would learn. Take their videos and share on social media.
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faraz Jul 31, 2018 11:55am
You should have video taped the evidence at the first place in stead of arguing for so long and exaggerating the issue. Should have told the restaurant I am video taping it (while making a video) and I will put it on social media if they did not take care of this situation.
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Fazi Jul 31, 2018 12:11pm
It is highly important the resturants should provide for a safe environment to its customers. The reluctance on the part of the coffee shop shows that they just are concerned with making money. To teach a lesson to such joints and also set an example one should avoid such places.
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The learningone Jul 31, 2018 12:14pm
Total bs In our low society.. Things like this are the norm and will be the norm
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iqbal Zaman Jul 31, 2018 12:22pm
Well done. The lecherous behaviour has to be punished to make women comfortable in our society.
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Babu Jul 31, 2018 12:29pm
Religious fundamentalism is the main cause for gender injustice against women. People forget that it is a female who has given birth to them.
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Shumaila Jul 31, 2018 12:43pm
Miss, when I was between 20 and 30 years of age, I would have liked to react the way you did. But at 42, with my daughter at 13, I have learnt that you can't fight with every other person staring at you. The best way is to handle the situation. Firmly, without creating a scene at the situation. What if the man in the cafe liked one of three girls and was raised to watching the Pakistani and Bollywood movies, where the hero always chased the heroine even she showed anger first but later fell in love with him? Cultures matter in developing psychologies of people.
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Faisal Rana Jul 31, 2018 12:46pm
You should have taken a photo/video of him and posted it on social media.
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Owais Gillani Jul 31, 2018 01:01pm
Great effort and a lesson to all such creepy people out there. Such misogynistic and abusive behavior will not be tolerated. One question though, why was the writer asking for ID of that person? She had no legal right to ask for it.
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shahram khan Jul 31, 2018 01:07pm
Very brave of you, men with egos and power kill to prove. This dilema is in existence for thousands of years and might stay for another thousand.
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M. Kamran Jul 31, 2018 01:07pm
Well done Maam! I hate to see such people making mockery of our culture and traditional values.
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Nasir Waheed Jul 31, 2018 01:19pm
Excellent for showing courage. Please keep it up
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Jr Jul 31, 2018 01:19pm
Great. That was very principled and bold.
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Sabiha Jul 31, 2018 01:19pm
We need more women like you, that was commendable.
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KRS Jul 31, 2018 01:22pm
In the west, this guy would have been arrested for his "looking".....we need to make all our girls confidence enough to say when they feel uncomfortable...Well done to the writer for not backing down....And FYI - you didn't develop a thick skin - you stood up for your fellow ladies and they are equally brave to make it known that the attention wasn't needed.... Instead of Sports - schools should use that time to teach our girls self defence... Laws should be made fool proof for such "watchers"...
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Alcadius Jul 31, 2018 01:22pm
Much respect! Pakistan needs more strong women like you
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Syed irfan ali Jul 31, 2018 01:27pm
So brave of you!!! Hats off to you.
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Saba Jul 31, 2018 01:37pm
You know, it's not just tge public spaces they're using, but they're making it very difficult to use private spaces as well. Can we really stand even NEAR our windows IN OUR HOMES? Not loitering, nor staring aimlessly, just doing house chores by the window? Ironing for instance. People don't want boys to make their lives luxurious, they're afraid if they'll be able to protect their daughters.
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Khurram Jul 31, 2018 01:58pm
Wish I would have been there to teach the restaurant staff and Mall security a lesson on differentiating between a customer and a harasser! The way they treated that man full of filth was really disgusting. I assume that is just because he was speaking in English. If he was a commoner in average dressing, the same staff and security would have dragged him outside the mall. This is the behavior due to which criminals from elite class always get the best treatment.
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Rakesh Jul 31, 2018 02:03pm
Great job! It's the same in India too. The staff of the coffee bar should have supported you . I wonder if any males would come forward in Pakistan or India . With the current atmosphere, people would be scared lest they get lynched
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Hira Jul 31, 2018 02:23pm
Thank you for taking a stand. Shameless, entitled man posing as a customer to get his thark on.
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Faiz Jul 31, 2018 03:12pm
Well done on taking a stand but I wouldn't agree with you on some things. Its not the culture or people abandoning their duties its the system. Although it is the responsibility of public spaces to control such incidents, in our country you can't just blame the restaurant staff or mall security when there is no system in place to protect them. Even the police are not spared. People are afraid of the consequences, ranging from loss of livelihood to something much more dire, which is a sad reality. While the system in which the powerful's children go about beating up ordinary workers remains, nothing will change.
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Khan Jul 31, 2018 03:17pm
Proud to know that strong women like yourself are taking a stand. Each and every opportunity to reassert yourself in our male dominated society is essential !
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Jiyalo Wadero Jul 31, 2018 04:58pm
@Shumaila You are right.It is the imaginary world of Pakistani,Indian Movies and TV Dramas where Directors over emphasize the prolonged staring part between male and female characters.In real life it is the most disgusting thing that any man can do to a woman because you are violating her as a person and her dignity to a low class prostitute which she is not.
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khurshid Jul 31, 2018 05:23pm
The restaurant is a public service, and sexual harassment in services is actionable in human rights codes across the developed world - both the individual and the establishment would be held responsible and liable to pay damages, render a public apology, give human rights training to its staff, and submit to future monitoring by the concerned human rights commission.
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Smarajit Kanungoe Jul 31, 2018 05:31pm
Enjoyed the story and thanks to the writer for taking the right move.
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Alya Jul 31, 2018 05:31pm
Being a women, a women just like him was staring at me constantly too. I just ignored her.
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DocBil Jul 31, 2018 05:52pm
Impressed by your courage.you should have shared video or picture of his misbehavior. For such lot, public shaming is a good medicine.
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Jiyalo Wadero Jul 31, 2018 05:53pm
A man will get up and break the teeth of the man staring at his wife,sister or daughter but that same man will go and stare at other women? Where is the justification? Respecting women starts at home.
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Hunain Jul 31, 2018 06:18pm
I was agreeing with you throughout the article until I read the second last paragraph. Why did you have to confine the harassment to two groups (especially highlighting the LGBTs)? Shouldn't society be intolerant to harassment inflicted upon any human being? Let's try to address the core issues that are relevant to our society. Don't try to import the problems of the Western society and impose them on us as if they are ours. This is the only way to move forward.
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SQ Jul 31, 2018 06:19pm
The problem with perverts, especially in societies like Pakistan or India - where blame for men's actions is usually put on women's shoulders - is that arguing with them is futile. Cell phones are a woman's best friend in such situations these days. Film the pervert, post it on social media and shame him.
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Riaz Uddin Jul 31, 2018 06:55pm
It is male- dominating culture. Harrasing female in civilzed world is hardly imagined! Deplorable! .
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King Akbar Jul 31, 2018 07:13pm
Hi Kiran, I am indebted to you for taking action against this man at the time, this type of behaviour is intolerable and unconscionable. What type of society are we creating if we let these individuals have a pass? A society where one can say anything on their minds to women? Or one in which they can harass them without constraint? Today he is doing this with these nameless girls, tomorrow he will do the same to our daughters & wives, will we still be soo impassive?
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sanjeev Jul 31, 2018 07:32pm
@Shumaila What if the man in the cafe liked one of three girls and was raised to watching the Pakistani and Bollywood movies, .... your statement starts with "What if"; there are no answers to hypothetical questions; what matters is courage to challenge the situation. I am no hero or super talented by birth; but such example is appreciated if we really want to change the situation. Do we really want to change social env. for girls in our society?
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Erum Jul 31, 2018 07:33pm
I disagree with author that she has experienced the same in west. My 22 years old daughter (born and raised in US) went to pakistan first time last year. She had such a horrible experience that she would refused to go out. She couldnt understand why men stare at her PS: She would wear shalwar qameez and fully covered
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ga Jul 31, 2018 08:10pm
Next time discreetly video record and send to YouTube or WhatsApp so it goes viral. I am sure his wife, mother, sister and his boss viewing it would put an end to this behavior.
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Muhtaat Jul 31, 2018 08:26pm
The SOB should have been smacked by a man his size and sent reeling to the ground for all the ladies in the coffee shop to spit on him. Gloria Jeans, Australia Take Note. It happened at your franchise, not a desi chai khana. To stop these savages, this societal problem will only get solved when men will stand up and show ZERO tolerance. Next time tell the SOB if he gets away with his mother, aunts and sisters behaving like this then he should go home.
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Sid Jul 31, 2018 08:48pm
A big big shame on the restaurant and the mall security staff. You should post this guys picture on social media so he is publically shamed. Face palm to the restaurant staff and management .. they always have the right to refuse service to anyone and specially such goon of a customer
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Jiyalo Wadero Jul 31, 2018 08:50pm
It is my strong belief that a truly educated man coming from a good family would never stare at the women.
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Bas Jul 31, 2018 10:35pm
Oh, you should have taken this picture, and posted it on social media/here.....
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Parvez Jul 31, 2018 11:12pm
Excellent write up....and you handled the situation in a dignified though long process. Let me suggest another way that almost always works in Karachi ....... the woman being harassed gets up strides towards the man and slaps him soundly and makes a noise ....... immediate result is, all around will jump to the aid of the woman ( she immediately becomes ' sister ' ) and the man is left virtually alone to defend himself.
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M. Siddique Aug 01, 2018 12:07am
The author is right. In Pakistan men feel they own the space beyond limits. I live in the West and here everyone has his/her space and no one better cross into that. Law enforcement will be swift in their response. Unwanted advances are tackled quickly. In Pakistan society needs to set those spaces for everyone according to local customs. Don't invite Mullahs into this.
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Sana Aug 01, 2018 12:45am
Best part, you named the coffee shop and the mall! Such stories usually only say ‘a famous coffee shop/ restaurant’ at a ‘busy mall’. These places also need to be named.
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Shaista Aug 01, 2018 02:13am
There must be no space for harassers in here
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syama Aug 01, 2018 02:39am
@Shumaila , thats you understanding him. But this is he understanding that movies are different from reality. He'll learn to draw the line hereon.
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Raja Aug 01, 2018 03:33am
This behaviour is imported culture from Islamic Arabia. In Indus Valley civilisation, women were bare chest and nothing was wrong in it. It’s the sick mentality of arabia polluted Indus Valley in the last 1000 years. Even 30 years back in Bali, Indonesia, women were bare chest - sunnis from Java has changed their beautiful culture.
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Jay Dutt Aug 01, 2018 08:26am
Great respect for you.
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Imran Aug 01, 2018 08:29am
Great Job and shame to Gloria Coffee, if this was the case in GC here in Australia by now he would be kicked out and in police lockup.....Or the girls would have shouted with their lungs out as how the hell you are staring.....
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MD Aug 01, 2018 11:25am
Thank you for taking a step. Props to you :)
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safana Aug 01, 2018 12:08pm
Bravo.. We need examples like that... Women should support each other and fight together the world of harassment....
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Lyone Fein Aug 02, 2018 07:41am
This is fight that has been happening now for thousands of years. Thank you for being on the front lines. All of our daughters will benefit.
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Annie Aug 03, 2018 10:34am
@Shumaila please don't encourage sexual harassment. Shocked at someone with a daughter encouraging lecherous behaviour.
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Najwa Aug 03, 2018 02:30pm
I have stood up too against male haressing me while i am travelling in public bus or while i am chilling with my friends at a restaurant. The reaction..soem pervs are embaressed the moment you start ahouting at them. Once tho, after litterally enjoying the attention he was getting for being humiliated loudly by a female, this perv followed me in his car when i left the restaurant. It was only when i stopped near a police mobile and told them of him following me dod he decide to disappear. Sadly tho, our society is turning lecherous due to inappropriate media content, absolute lack of mannerism, blatantly poor upbringing, zero tolerance, fear of the powerful and lack of respect for all. Once upon a time any elder of the neighbourhood could object at a minor thing eg. like roaming around of shorts in front of girls and that would be a lesson well learned. Instead its an individualistic society now, nobody cares for the other..
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ABC Dec 06, 2019 11:13am
More power to your persistence! The moral indifference of the bystanders amazes beyond measure, here! Went to Butler's once. One of the two guys sitting in-front was probably taking our pictures - no one has their phone in a perpendicular angle to the table when you're using it. When we confronted, it was basically their word against ours with the restaurant staff meekly as a bystander!
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Maryum Khan Dec 06, 2019 11:41am
You did it right! You did it right the way it's supposed to be. And those cowards in the staff, they can't see their own contribution to such a culture where women are objectified to men-pleasing objects. They need to be reminded that we are humans as well and probably even above the male population, so yeah! damn right. we can have the public safe place to us as well. !!!!!
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Managed Dec 06, 2019 11:46am
Well written! there should be these special securities in public spaces, dominated by women and in direct coordination with press and police, until we have a culture here which expose these big shots or sliver-spooned men who think they own every women in Pakistan and have legal right to harass women in public, women is not safe!
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Asad Dec 06, 2019 11:47am
Best would be to shoot these type of people in the public... or a thrashing in front of every one if guns are too much. Best to speak to them in the language they understand.
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OH Dec 06, 2019 11:55am
I have found that a very hot or cold drink poured in the lap cures suxh men! My mom did it once
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ALI Dec 06, 2019 12:24pm
BRAVO !! We need more ladies like you & this was indeed a shameful incident. I would rather that the girls beat him up.
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Shanti Dec 06, 2019 12:25pm
Reading a stranger's mind. Know his mind through dark glasses. Rampant paranoia?
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masood Dec 06, 2019 04:14pm
Harassment is to be defined as perception of a women in a certain situation. Low lighting, abusive people men or women, all are kind of a harassment. In Pakistan laws need changing and a better communication needs to be established amongst the male population to inform them of this concept of perception.
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HashBrown® Dec 06, 2019 04:43pm
@Shanti "Reading a stranger's mind. Know his mind through dark glasses. Rampant paranoia?" He openly confessed to staring, in fact it seems he was practically bragging about it. How much of the article did you actually read?
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suraiya kasim Dec 06, 2019 07:14pm
well done! bravo. request to all women who are brave enough to confront such men, please do so.
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JHN Dec 06, 2019 09:57pm
Its really sad to see that in our culture everyone is powerless in front of an influential person (even if they are pretending) this mentality of Ghulamii not going anywhere !!
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Rehman Dec 06, 2019 11:02pm
Kudos to the young journalist for intervening, everyone has the right to enjoy public spaces without being harassed. Oh by the way, had that happened in a cafe in London, the three young girls themselves would have confronted this guy and he would in all probability been thrown out by the manager or failing that, he would have been attacked by these girls themselves or other customers or made to leave by security or the police.
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Shafiq Ahmad Chughtai Dec 06, 2019 11:38pm
I must say please do not stop. What you did is the right thing to do. Just carry on and teach these idiots a lesson. We all should stand with you.
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gullu Badsha Dec 07, 2019 09:17am
The security staff of the mall has to be briefed on the, "Mall Rules" if any. The staff has to be trained & told very clearly to follow the rules. This guy should have been thrown out of the mall, even barred from entering it again.
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Lalvaz Dec 07, 2019 10:58am
Appreciate you standing up for what’s right. Sad that women have to endure the harassment in their daily lives. Hope people’s attitudes change.
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Sara Dec 07, 2019 11:59am
Well these kinds of men whether they have lived abroad or in Pakistan does not change the fact that he feels he can harass women period. If he did this in State or any western countries he would have gotten whooped.
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Chris Roberts Dec 07, 2019 12:14pm
Perhaps this bloke would have enjoyed being harrassed in this way by women. That behaviour should never be tolerated or encouraged. Maybe, as some have mentioned above, a video of this specimen could have been posted on social media. It's true that women everywhere are all too often on the receiving end, but this type of incident can be more common in societies where males and females are denied the opportunity of being in each other's company at an early age. But be it as it may, such men really need to be put in their places and given a good swift kick! The restaurant staff should have kicked him right out.
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Ali Dec 07, 2019 03:27pm
Entire subcontinent is the same, more or less. Sad.
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Alam Khan Dec 07, 2019 10:28pm
Why do people apologize on behalf of other people ?
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