She had been an associate professor at Quaid-i-Azam University and later became chairperson of the university's Department of Defense and Strategic Studies.[7]
Personal life
Shireen is married to Tabish Aitbar Hazir. The couple has a daughter, Imaan Zainab Mazari Hazir[13] and a son Sabeel Hazir.[14][15]
Political career
Mazari joined the PTI in 2008[16][17] In 2009, she was Information Secretary and Spokesperson of PTI.[9][18]
In 2012, she resigned from PTI[16][17] where she was the Central Vice President[19] and in charge of Foreign Policy.[20] citing "policy differences and its takeover by corrupt elements"[10] after she was served a show cause notice by PTI for "making unfounded, incorrect, inaccurate and false statements in the media".[10]
She was the chief whip of PTI in the National Assembly of Pakistan.[26]
She was re-elected to the National Assembly as a candidate of PTI on a seat reserved for women from Punjab in the 2018 Pakistani general election.[27]
On 18 August, Imran Khan formally announced his federal cabinet structure and Mazari was named as Minister for Human Rights.[28] On 20 August 2018, she was sworn in as Federal Minister for Human Rights in the federal cabinet of Prime Minister Imran Khan.[29]
In January 2020, she strongly condemned an attack on Karak temple[30] by a mob of 1,500 local Muslims led by a local Islamic cleric and the supporters of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam party.[31]
In May 2022, she was arrested, but released after Islamabad High court ordered her release and called the arrest unlawful.[32]
Resignation
On April 10, 2022, because of the Vote of No Confidence, She resigned from the National Assembly on the orders of Imran Khan. The newly elected Speaker accepted the resignations of eleven members on July 28, 2022, one of them was Shireen Mazari.
[33]
After the 09/05 vandalism of Army installations, the beneficiaries of regime change after accusing the PTI members and leadership, carried out mass-scale arrests. Shireen Mazari upon 5 consecutive arrests and bails announced her retirement from active politics.
On May 23, 2023, Shireen Mazari made the decision to leave the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party and publicly announced her retirement from active politics seemingly under considerable duress. Mazari cited personal reasons as the basis for her departure from the political arena.[34] But according to some sources Sheeren Mazari left politics as she was forced to leave politics by the PDM government and the Army Establishment.
Controversies
In 2019, after a terrorist attack in London, she chose to criticize Pakistan's leading newspaper Dawn for publicizing that the terrorist had been a man of Pakistani origin, rather than deploring the attack itself or offering condolences. She accused Dawn to pursue an anti-Pakistani agenda. While mobs surrounded the offices of Dawn calling for the editor to be hanged, she left the defense of the freedom of expression in Pakistan to others, such as Reporters without Borders.[35][36][37]
On 21 November 2020, Mazari while citing an online article, wrote on Twitter that French president "Macron [was] doing to Muslims was what the Nazis did to the Jews – Muslim children will get ID numbers (other children won't) just as Jews were forced to wear the yellow star on their clothing for identification". French government denounced Mazari's tweet as "fake news and false accusation" and stated that "the proposed ID would be for all children in France". Bina Shah, a writer and New York Times columnist, said "just like in Pakistan, where as soon as you register a child's birth, the child will get assigned a 13 digit number which is then their NIC number when they reach 18".[38][39] Later, Mazari deleted her tweet and issued a clarification stating that the article on the basis of which she had written her tweet has been amended. The online article, which was quoted by Mazari, now includes a clarification stating that the new law will be applied to all children in France. Foreign Ministry of France thanked Mazari for deleting her tweet and accepted her clarification.[40][41]
Shireen Mazari has also been criticized for her silence on China's persecution of Uyghurs during a talkshow at Al Jazeera. However, Mazari said that "there may be such cases in China and we have taken up those cases with the Chinese and that is how we deal with our allies."[42]
Works
Books
Pakistan's security and the nuclear option, Institute of Policy Studies, 1995, 167 p. Co-edited with Tarik Jan et al.
The Kargil conflict, 1999 : separating fact from fiction, Institute of Policy Studies, 2003, 162 p.
Research papers
Nuclear safety and terrorism : a case study of India, Institute of Strategic Studies, 2001, 46 p. Co-written with Maria Sultan.
Pakistan's nuclear doctrine and approach to arms control, Institute of South Asian Studies, 2005, 17 p.
Islam and the West' dialogue : what achievements? What new effective methods?, ISIS Malaysia, 2008, 16 p.
^"ISSI DG Shireen Mazari removed". Daily Times. 15 May 2008. Archived from the original on 9 February 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2017.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)