Law 
                        news
                     
                      Asma 
                        Jahangir beaten as police foil marathon bid
                      The 
                        police severely beat up and arrested scores of rights 
                        activists, including women, who tried to hold a mini-marathon. 
                        The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) and the 
                        Joint Action Committee for People's Rights (JACPR) had 
                        announced to organise the marathon from the Qadhafi Stadium 
                        to the Kalima Chowk to highlight violence against women, 
                        and for promoting 'enlightened moderation' in society.
                      As 
                        the HRCP chairperson Asma Jahangir and members of other 
                        rights organisations converged outside the AGHS Legal 
                        Aid Cell on the Main Boulevard in Gulberg to head for 
                        the Qadhafi Stadium, the police barred them from proceeding 
                        and, on resistance, resorted to baton charge. Women participants, 
                        along with their male companions, were manhandled, beaten 
                        up, dragged and bundled into police trucks to be driven 
                        to the Model Town investigation centre.
                      Around 
                        40 people were taken into custody, including Asma Jahangir, 
                        Iqbal Haider, former minister and the HRCP secretary-general, 
                        Hina Jilanni, Farooq Tariq, Muhammad Tehseen, Joseph Francis, 
                        and Azra Shad. The arrested people were set free hours 
                        after they were taken into custody. However, they staged 
                        a sit-in outside the Race Course Police Station for the 
                        release of two other arrested activists - Jan Nisar Baloch 
                        and Shazia - who were not released by the police. Those 
                        assembled at the stadium to take part in the marathon 
                        were scared away by the police, who threatened the intending 
                        participants with arrest if they did not disperse and 
                        continued to violate Section 144 enforced in the city.
                      The 
                        HRCP has sharply reacted to the police action, saying 
                        that by using brute force to prevent a peaceful attempt 
                        to draw attention to violence against women, authorities 
                        have demonstrated their anti-women bias and contempt for 
                        basic liberties. 
                      "The 
                        brutality of the police in preventing what was intended 
                        to be a peaceful event has unmasked the true face of the 
                        state. Sadly, such thuggish behaviour has increasingly 
                        become the norm in the city, as a means to prevent basic 
                        rights, including those of assembly," said a news 
                        release issued later. 
                      Source: 
                        Dawn, Pakistan.