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ISLAMABAD: A group of determined women took to their bikes on Friday, riding through the Pakistani capital to demonstrate their rights and love of exercise in a culture that often treats them as second-class citizens.
ome wearing helmets, others in headscarves, dressed in jeans or in loose traditional dress, the group navigated the leafy streets with colourful balloons tied to their handlebars, past baffled police and security guards.
“I remember when I was little I used to ride a bicycle quite openly but... when I was growing up and I was at school or college I was told not to do it publicly because it is not acceptable in society,” she added.
Pakistan does not ban women riding bikes, but it is a rare sight even in Islamabad where driving is less dangerous than on the traffic-choked streets of the two biggest cities, Karachi and Lahore.
To mark International Women’s Day in a country where women are rarely seen on a bike, they set out from Kohsar market, a collection of upmarket coffee shops, to the city’s landmark Faisal Mosque set in the Margalla Hills.
“The point is that women have the right to ride a bicycle. We are just having girl power here,” said charity worker Masoora Ali, 30.
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Saturday, 9 March 2013
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