Date: Sunday, 29 June 2025
Time: 10 am ET, 3 pm UKT, 7:00 pm PKT, 7:45 pm NPT, 7:30 pm IST , 8 pm BDT
Register to join via Zoom:
Across Southasia, as women contribute to social and political movements and make significant strides, they also face resistance.
Women’s voices often trigger the patriarchal power structures in all the dynamics of society, whether religious, social, or political. In this context, Bangladesh offers a compelling case study of how progress triggers backlash and what it reveals about the broader dynamics across the region.
In recent years, Bangladesh has witnessed a resurgence of resistance to feminist organizing and state-led initiatives supporting women’s rights, such as the aggressive reaction to the Recommendations placed by the Interim Government’s Reform Commission on Women’s Affairs.
These efforts have been met with fierce opposition from right-wing religious groups who frame women’s empowerment as a threat to cultural and religious identity.
Political leaders encourage this trend to retain power or feel pressured and start appeasing, as well as to maintain control.
The Sapan discussion for the last Sunday of June marks the Monsoon Revolution anniversary as we revisit movements led by women, often provoking intense reactions from patriarchy.
Speakers




- Shakila Khatun, artist and youth activist
- Maheen Sultan, Member, Reform Commission on Women’s Affairs and Head, Gender & Social Transformation Cluster, BIGD, Brac University
- Dr. Fawzia Moslem, President, Bangladesh Mahila Parishad, Bangladesh’s largest and oldest women’s organisation
- Shireen Huq, Chair of Bangladesh’s Interim Government’s Reform Commission on Women’s Affairs and founder Naripokkho

Discussion moderator
Khawar Mumtaz
Feminist activist, founder member Shirkat Gah and Women’s Action Forum; Founder member Sapan

Event host: Urvashi Butalia
Independent researcher, writer, and publisher concerned mostly with issues relating to gender; author of The Other Side of Silence: Voices from the Partition of India.
In today’s rapidly changing global social and political landscape, we need more women’s voices, and to explore how we can strategize more effectively to move the needle towards justice.
This discussion will launch a new Sapan series exploring gender, power, and resistance across Southasia, starting with Bangladesh.
Particularly relevant for civil society organisations working on human rights, peacebuilding, and regional cooperation, policy experts on Southasia, academics and students exploring Southasian politics, international relations, and sustainable development, activists and community leaders advocating for the rights of marginalised communities, including women, children, ethnic minorities, and religious groups.
Register to join via Zoom:
Or watch live on the Southasia Peace YouTube channel.
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