Speaking on the occasion to a houseful of human rights defenders from across South Asia, Ms. Radhika Coomaraswamy, recounting her memories of Asma Jahangir, said that Asma had the kind of courage that she not only fought for justice but also enabled kindness, generosity and integrity.
“When I worked with her very closely in the 1980s and the 1990s, she was known as the “little heroine”, this diminutive figure who was a doughty fighter for social causes but whose house was an open place where sensitive people from all over the world gathered, bonded and knew that she would always be there for them.”
Ms. Coomaraswamy said that we owe it to Asma to fight for what is right and just in all our societies, and that the world is not as safe of a place as it used to be with Asma.
Mr. I A Rehman, a life-long colleague of Asma and a leading human rights defender from Pakistan, said that one critical challenge to human rights defenders is that we are struggling without Asma Jahangir. He said “what greater tribute can be paid to her than thousands of human rights defenders across the world are missing her tremendously and they feel that the journey is much harder without her.”
SAHR Chairperson, Sultana Kamal, presented Asma Jahangir’s daughter and prominent journalist, Munizae Jahangir, with a book compiled by the South Asian Human Rights defenders paying tributes to Asma Jahangir.
Published in Daily Times, August 19th 2018.
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