Malik Tahir Iqbal - Pakistan

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See updates from Tahir's project.

See Tahir's application to the 2008 JusticeMakers Competition.

Tahir grew up in a hierarchical society where the rule of law and human rights didn’t exist. It was his parents who fostered his belief system based on equality and justice. These ideas, otherwise unfamiliar in rural Pakistan, fascinated him as a child and culminated in a career in law and social activism. As a law student at Sindh Muslim Law College, Tahir would visit local jails with his class and saw the suffering of children in prisons, sometimes languishing in the same cells as adults and serious offenders. This ignited his passion for the rights of juveniles. As an advocate for their rights, he believes that they are entitled to certain basic rights: to live in a safe environment, to education, to health and for them to enjoy childhood.

Tahir has done social work since university. At law school, he was actively involved in student associations, including serving as president of his school’s student union. Shortly after, he became involved with the Anjuman Talaba-e-Islam and Al-Mustafa Welfare Society following the major Pakistani earthquake in 2005. There he observed with earthquake victims and saw first hand how people suffered from the devastating affects of a natural disaster. This opportunity affirmed his interest in working to benefit society’s most marginalized groups.

Tahir is aware of the gap that exists between the written law and the actual implementation of human rights legislation; often, juveniles and the indigent accused are the ones who are neglected by the system. He also knows that one cannot rely solely on the  government to deliver and protect the rights of his people.  

With that reality in mind, Tahir founded the Legal Rights Forum (LRF) in Karachi in 2007. LRF was created to ensure legal protections for society’s most vulnerable — particularly Pakistan’s indigent accused and children.  A legal aid center powered by pro bono legal assistance, LRF has become well known in the Karachi area for providing effective defense for those who need it most. (For more on Legal Rights Forum - Pakistan, see: http://www.lrfpk.com.)


The Problem

Hundreds of children are languishing in Pakistan’s prisons where they are exposed to malnutrition, denied an education, and held without access to legal counsel. The establishment of a formal juvenile justice system is long overdue — due to lack of interest and shortage of funds.  Terrible condition within the jails, few resources to help child detainees, and lack of financial support — the problems are pervasive and the need is critical.

The Innovation

Tahir is using his $5,000 JusticeMakers Fellowship to advocate for a functional juvenile justice system. By addressing the physical and psychological abuse juveniles often suffer while in detention, he hopes to ensure children are safe and properly rehabilitated. Tahir will also implement a reliable system for collecting prison data, so as to gage the progress of reforms within the delivery of juvenile justice. 

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Ikram ul haq Subhani  - Impressave |213.3.41.xxx |2010-02-15 17:00:01
Dear Malik Tahir Iqbal sb,
A.O.A, I m Ikram from QTA. Today during vist I read This site. Your presance on this site pleased me. Its nice. May ALLAH ALMIGHTY reward u. Thanks. IKram
muhammad |62.203.217.xxx |2010-03-29 01:05:15
sir your phone no is not correct iin uyour mail please correct
Moazzam Iqbal  - Rate the Project for 2010 compet. |213.3.41.xxx |2010-05-07 10:35:17
Dear Malik Tahir,

I request you to kindly rate my project i.e. Land Grabbers.

Thanx,

Moazzam Iqbal
theraheelali  - Rana Law Association |Registered |2010-05-07 10:34:40
Dear Tariq Bhai i am an Advocate having office at Tahir Plaza would you please tell me would this forum gives us a better opportunity to enhance good career growth and help the people who are falsely implicated in jail ??

!joomlacomment 4.0 Copyright (C) 2009 Compojoom.com . All rights reserved."

 

Tahir Updates

Reinforcing the protection for, and the individual dignity of, people facing criminal prosecution in developing and transitional countries
  • Barrister Shahida Jamil Guides Tour of Judicial Complex and Jail
    Tahir arranged an appointment for us to meet with Shahida Jamil, a well-respected lady barrister who (among several other current titles) was the former Federal Minister for Law, Justice and Human Rights in Pakistan.  Ms. Jamil would give us a tour of the “judicial complex” near the jail I’d visited the day before.The judicial complex [...]
  • LRF-Organized Lecture: Pakastani Public Prosecutor Abdul Maroof
    The past few weeks, Legal Rights Form has advertised excitedly about their Juvenile Rights Training Forum, and the day finally came. The key speaker was Mr. Abdul Maroof, Public Prosecutor and former Assistant Inspector General of the prisons of Sindh (Karachi province, Pakistan). I thought I was going to be late because my rickshaw ride [...]
  • Karachi Police Station Visits
    Legal Rights Forum arranged to visit a few police stations in Karachi today.  Two car-fulls of attorneys and I pull up to the Artillery Maidan Police Station in one of the high security areas in Karachi.  We are greeted in an air-conditioned room that feels like it’s stamping the cigarette-smoke smell into your clothes.  An officer seems [...]
  • Karachi Youthful Offender Remand Home Visit
    Today we have a visit to the remand home, where Legal Rights Forum wants to establish a Juvenile Rehabilitation (Career Training) Center.  In the cab we go, and we drive about 20 minutes outside of Karachi’s center to the home.  Remand Home Entrance When we get to the home, Safi - an LRF advocate - stops at [...]
  • Intern’s Introduction to Karachi City Court
    Tahir, the Legal Rights Forum Chairman and 2008 JusticeMakers Fellow, and his roommate pick me up at 10:30am to head to Karachi City Court.   On the way, Tahir tells me of the people I will meet at the courthouse today and points out legal buildings and landmarks on the way.  We drive into parking for [...]