Pakistan: Transgender rights defender Nayyab Ali physically assaulted

On 9 November 2020, transgender rights defender Nayyab Ali was physically assaulted and robbed at her home in Islamabad by two unidentified, armed men. The defender, after a struggle, was able to fend off the attackers but suffered serious injuries. Nayyab Ali had recently been vocal about the increased targeting of the transgender community in Pakistan through her social media pages, and had since been receiving death threats. A First Information Report (FIR) was filed regarding the attack at the Golra police station on 10 November.

Nayyab Ali is a transgender rights defender and Chairperson of the All Pakistan Transgender Election Network. She also manages the ‘Khawaja Sira Community Centre’ in Okara, which offers a basic literacy and numeracy programme, vocational training, life skills education and driving classes for the transgender community. In 2018, Nayyab was one of four transgender candidates who ran for Pakistan's general elections. Nayyab has also been leading the advocacy efforts for the approval of the Pakistan’s National Transgender Rights Protection Policy. She is a winner of the Galas Award in 2020, for her human rights work. The day prior to her attack, Nayyab was nominated for the APCOM Hero award for her work on transgender rights.

On 9 November 2020, two unidentified men, armed with knives, entered Nayyab Ali’s home in Islamabad. The defender was bound and beaten for nearly three hours. The attackers forced her to sign her cheque book and took her identity card, bank cards, jewellery, and devices, including phone and laptop. The men threatened to kill the defender if she continued to raise her voice for victims of violence in the transgender community. An FIR was lodged by the Golra police only the following day (10 November), after much pressure from civil society. Read more via Front Line Defenders