Meet Basila and the Street Crew – battling social ills, trying to save Pakistanis

KARACHI: In a landmark decision, the National Assembly passed on May 8 this year the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Bill, 2017 with majority votes. Aiming to provide due rights to members of the transgender community, it validates transgender identity and expression.Pakistan achieved a milestone on May 8, 2018.

Echoing the necessity of civil participation and inclusion of marginalised members of society, which one can find in the above Bill, AzCorp Entertainment’s most recent venture – Basila and the Street Crew – brings issues of the transgender community to light. Set to release next week (December 2), the comic series portrays transgender persons in every day societal roles – a mother, a teacher, an aunt – highlighting their struggle to survive in and save an unforgiving society from social ills.

“We encourage concepts of diversity and tolerance through our comics,” AzCorp Project Manager Erum Daniyal told The Express Tribune.

Pioneers in comic book development in Pakistan, AzCorp Entertainment caters to children over six years up to young adults. They first launched ‘Team Muhafiz’, a comic series targeting teenagers which contains short and entertaining stories revolving around a group of teenage Pakistani superheroes fighting real-life issues of trafficking, terrorism and child marriages.

Next came ‘Sheeba and the Private Detectives’, featuring four friends who love education and are determined to challenge illiteracy and ignorance against all odds. What stood out in this comic series was that the characters use principles of science and math to help solve the gravest of community conundrums.

The third comic series, ‘Mein Hero [I Am A Hero]’, was based around the idea that there is a hero in all of us. It aimed to unglamorise the concept of a hero and instead encourage young minds to identify qualities of a hero and develop problem-solving skills to resolve matters. The comic celebrates unsung heroes in society. AzCorp took up the initiative to do pilot activities after this series with schools in Lyari, Shireen Jinnah Colony and Malir.

The brainchild of Anain Sheikh, Basila and the Street Crew – the upcoming comic is the story of a young girl raised by her transgender aunt, Riffat Apa. Together with the help of her friends, Basila fights to eradicate all the issues found on the streets of Karachi. From child labour to animal abuse, Basila is a saviour to anyone suffering from such evils.

Hoping to change public opinion about the transgender community, which is largely shaped by the media amid other factors, the team has worked with the likes of journalist Zarrar Khuhro on this project.

“The essence of Basila is to speak up,” said Daniyal.

In a society where we’re still struggling to find the courage to have difficult conversations, evoke social consciousness and fight for equality, Basila and the Street Crew won’t just serve the purpose of a comic, but rather as a voice for the oppressed transgender community. It will be a step in the right direction in the fight for rights for the next generation of transgender Pakistanis.

More than just comics

The group conducts trainings in various public schools across the city where children are engaged in a set of activities aiming to highlight diversity and tolerance. The trainings are not preachy, says Daniyal, highlighting that they are instead designed to be interactive.

Many public space management groups are also trained in “master trainings” after which they are responsible for conducting a set number of similar trainings targeting the youth over seven to eight months to keep the process going. These follow-up trainings are monitored by AzCorp.

Break the silence – #SpeakUp

A digital campaign, #SpeakUp, was launched in October this year as part of the Basila and the Street Crew project. The campaign aims to bring people together for open conversations about tough topics.

Since the campaign launch, AzCorp has been regularly updating its social media with short video messages encouraging people to speak on issues they want to take a stand for. In a series of videos, environmentalist and activist Afia Salam talks about environmental issues, writer Rumana Husain on everyone’s right to education and education as the way forward, Childrens Museum for Peace and Human Rights Program Director Rashida Khan on disability and inclusion, AzCorp CEO and Founder Imran Azhar on the importance and application of knowledge, Daniyal on rights of domestic help and the AzCorp creative team on children’s right to choose their own career, among various others.

The Express Tribune 

 

Women complaint office to be set up for protection of rights

gang-rape case

Karachi: The Sindh ombudsman will be setting up a women complaint office for protecting the rights of women and children.

Addressing the participants of a seminar on women’s rights organised by the office of the ombudsman at a hotel on Saturday, Ombudsman Asad Ashraf Malik said the complaint office was being set up in collaboration with the relevant organisation of the United Nations.

A complaint office for protecting the rights of children is already operating under the supervision of the ombudsman.

Malik said he had entertained a number of complaints lodged at the compliant office on behalf of the affected children.

He told the participants of the seminar that a plan was under way for setting up branch offices of the women complaint office.

He said the branches would be set up in different cities of the province to provide the women with easy access to the office of the ombudsman for registering their complaints.

He said the ombudsman’s office was working for eliminating maladministration in government departments and for redressing the grievances of people against those departments.

The ombudsman said the women complaint offices would help stop murders in the name of honour and incidents of harassment in society.

He said that creating awareness regarding the rights of women and children was an important need of the Pakistani society.

No fee is charged by the office of the ombudsman for registering cases against government departments, he added. “Moreover, no advocate is required for registering a case.”

He declared that the ombudsman’s office could be sent applications by post and he would entertain them himself.

He said that in the past, only the Jinnah and Civil hospitals were authorised to deal with medico-legal cases, but to provide quick medical help to victims, more hospitals had been authorised to deal with these cases.

Balochistan Ombudsman Muhammad Wasay Tarin said he would set up a children complaint office on the pattern of the office set up in Sindh.

He said that there was a uniformed police for providing justice and eliminating maladministration in government departments. No dual standards are adopted in delivering justice on part of the ombudsman, he added.

Sindh Ombudsman Secretary Malik Israr, representatives of the United Nations Children’s Fund, the United States Agency for International Development, the Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child and the Women Foundation, lawyers for human rights and legal aid, Director General Attaullah Unar, Director General Zamir Ahmed Khan, Registrar Masood Ishrat and Coordinator M Ali Shah also spoke on the occasion.

The News