Aurat March
Aurat March is an annual feminist protest movement in Pakistan, launched in 2018, that organizes demonstrations on International Women's Day in cities including Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad to demand protections against gender-based violence, economic equality, reproductive rights, and an end to patriarchal restrictions.[1][2]
The initiative, coordinated by loose collectives of activists rather than a centralized body, has featured manifestos addressing workplace discrimination, domestic abuse, child marriage, and transgender inclusion, drawing participants from diverse backgrounds including supportive men.[3][4]
While credited with elevating national conversations on women's issues in a society marked by honor killings and low female labor participation, the marches have provoked significant opposition from conservative religious figures and political groups, who decry provocative slogans such as "Mera jism meri marzi" (My body, my choice) as vulgar, anti-Islamic, and emblematic of elite urban disconnect from rural realities.[5][6][7]
Critics argue the movement's focus on bodily autonomy and secular demands exacerbates cultural divides rather than fostering broad consensus for reform, amid reports of threats to participants and limited tangible policy gains despite heightened visibility.[2][6]