The slogan was first chanted in Pakistan during the 2018
Aurat March. According to Muhammad Anwar Nasar, the slogan is symbolic, not literal. The expression underlines the
structural violence, injustices, and inequality inflicted on Pakistani women. By using this slogan, Pakistani feminists protest
honor killings,
acid attacks, harassment in public places and offices, child rape, forced pregnancy,
female genital mutilation, forced
child marriages, the
vani custom, and
domestic violence. The slogan also demands an
equitable world without sexism. Zainab Najeeb, a reporter, advises opponents of the slogan not to misinterpret the language. Conservative opponents have said that the slogan supports prostitution and attacks morality; Najeeb disagrees. She contends that women are humans, and as humans they should have
bodily autonomy. She argues that both the Constitution and Islamic texts recognize women as human beings, so no contradiction exists between the slogan and religious society. Najeeb asserts that is a declaration of women's independence: the slogan defends a woman's right to dress as she pleases, to receive medical help without fear of social taboos, to be seen as a human rather than a "piece of meat", to choose a partner or to not have a partner at all, and to protect herself from harassment. == Usage ==