Jahangir was born in Lahore in January 27, 1952. She received a bachelor’s degree from Kinnaird College and an LLB from Punjab University. She was called to the Lahore High Court in 1980 and to the Supreme Court in 1982. She later went on to become the first woman to serve as president of the Supreme Court Bar Association. Happy birthday Ami,Pak & the world is poorer without you.Wherever I go people miss her,yearn for a voice like hers.Her legacy lives on through organizations she founded like SAHR,HRCP & AGHS.She continues to inspire the young with her struggle against dictatorship & misogyny. RIP pic.twitter.com/S0eoApaDU9 — Munizae Jahangir (@MunizaeJahangir) January 27, 2020 She became a pro-democracy activist and was jailed in 1983 for participating in the Movement for the Restoration of Democracy, which agitated against military dictator Ziaul Haq’s regime. She was also active in the 2007 Lawyers’ Movement, for which she was put under house arrest. She co-founded the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and the Women’s Action Forum. Jahangir also served as the UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial Executions from 1998 to 2004, and as the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion and Belief from 2004 to 2010. She received several awards, including a Hilal-i-Imtiaz in 2010 and a Sitara-i-Imtiaz. She was also awarded a Unesco/Bilbao Prize for the Promotion of a Culture of Human Rights and an Officier de la Légion d’honneur by France. She also received the 2014 Right Livelihood Award and the 2010 Freedom Award from the International Rescue Committee. Jahangir was known for her outspoken nature and unrelenting pursuit for human rights as well as for remaining undaunted in the face of extreme pressure and opposition. The late lawyer was posthumously awarded the top United Nations human rights prize, which received by her daughter, Munizae, at an impressive ceremony in the General Assembly hall in December last year. Jahangir had breathed her last on February 11, 2018, in Lahore at the age of 66 due to cardiac arrest.