Perween Rahman

Perween Rahman

2011 interview screenshot
Born 22 January 1957
Dhaka, East Pakistan (now Dacca, Bangladesh)
Died 13 March 2013(2013-03-13) (aged 56)
Karachi, Pakistan
Cause of death Murder
Nationality Pakistani
Organization Orangi Pilot Project
Known for Director of the Orangi Pilot Project

Perween Rahman (22 January 1957, Dhaka – 13 March 2013, Karachi) was a Pakistani social activist, director of the Orangi Pilot Project Research and Training Institute. She was murdered on 13 March 2013.[1]

Biography

Perween Rahman was born on January 22, 1957 in Dhaka, then situated in East Pakistan. She moved to Pakistan as a teenager. She obtained a Bachelor of architecture in 1982 at the Dawood College of Engineering and Technology,[2] and a postgraduate diploma in housing, building and urban planning in 1986 from the Institute of Housing Studies in Rotterdam. She worked at a private architecture firm before being recruited by Akhter Hameed Khan to become Joint Director of the Orangi Pilot Project in 1983, where she managed the housing and sanitation programmes.[3] In 1988, OPP was split in four organisations, and Perween Rahman became director of OPP-RTI (Orangi Pilot Project – Research and Training Institute), managing as well programmes in education, youth training, water supply and secure housing.[3]

In 1989, she founded the NGO Urban Resource Centre in Karachi[4] and was also part of the board of Saiban, another NGO dedicated to low-income housing, and OPP-OCT (Orangi Charitable Trust, the microfinance branch of OPP).

She was teaching at the University of Karachi, NED University, Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture and Dawood College of Engineering and Technology.[5]

She is the sister of author and teacher Aquila Ismail.

Murder and Investigation

On March 13 2013, Parweeen Rehman was killed when four gunmen opened fire on her vehicle near Pirabad Police Station, ending her 28-year-long career for land and basic services rights for Pakistan's poor. Rehman has been an outspoken critics of the land mafias in Karachi and their political patrons.

Ms Rehman has complained in the past that she has received death threats. At one point some armed men stormed her offices and ordered her staff to leave

Main suspect in Perween Rahman murder arrested from Mansehra: police

Perween Rahman. — Illustration by Khuda Bux Abro

PESHAWAR: The prime suspect in the murder of Orangi Pilot Project Director Perween Rahman was arrested Thursday during a joint operation conducted by Karachi and Mansehra police in Mansehra.

The suspect Ahmed Khan alias Pappu Kashmiri was arrested in Mansehra, police said.

Police further said that the suspect will be presented before a district and sessions court in Mansehra shortly.

Take a look: Parveen Rehman: a fighter for the poor silenced

Perween Rehman, a media-shy social worker who devoted her life to the development of the impoverished neighbourhoods across the country, was gunned down near her office in Karachi's Orangi Town on March 13, 2013.

The very next day, police killed a Taliban operative named Qari Bilal in an encounter and claimed he was the murderer, resulting in a closure of the case.

Explore: TTP 'commander' Qari Bilal killed in Karachi's Manghopir area

Last year on April 15, the Supreme Court of Pakistan had ordered authorities to conduct a fresh probe into Rehman's murder after a judicial inquiry had revealed that police officers had manipulated the investigation.

Examine: SC orders fresh review of Parveen Rehman murder case

Nisar Ahmad Khan, 19 March 2015 DAWN NEWS

Awards

Publications


References

  1. BBC News - Pakistan mourns murdered aid worker Parveen Rehman
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 CV as Board member of Saiban, submitted to Homeless International
  3. 1 2 IIED, Lessons from Karachi 2008 http://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/10560IIED.pdf
  4. Arif Hasan, The Urban Resource Centre Karachi http://www.urckarachi.org/URC%20Introduction%20Case%20Study%20by%20Arif%20Hasan.pdf
  5. Karachi: Socially Responsible Architect Parveen Rehman RIP
  6. UN-HABITAT.:. Publications
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.