This paper discusses the complicated issue of human rights in Pakistan through the lens of contradicting principles between international practice and regional reality. Pakistan has been struggling with the systematic failure of upholding the rights of women, minorities, and freedom of expression despite the constitutional protection offered and international laws committed by the country. The continued existence of discriminatory cultural actions, ineffective law enforcement process, and the politicizing of laws, especially those on blasphemy law, discourage the protection of human rights and propagates social injustices. Religious and ethnic minorities continue to find themselves in a vulnerable position, talking of marginalization, violence, and legal exclusion as the main manifestations of their lives. Gender discrimination, violence and hurdles to empowerment in womanhood is deep-rooted even after the change in laws. This paper discusses these problems in the context of a larger life question of universal human rights and more cultural relativism but specifies how socio-political resistance impedes reforms. It gives policy recommendations to put in place secure legal frameworks, rights-based teaching, and conforming the domestic practices to the Pakistani way of thinking with the international standards of human rights.
Mohammad Tariq (Fri,) studied this question.
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