I agree my words were poorly chosen in a time of heated emotion: Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy

The statement comes after countless Pakistanis called her out for 'abuse of power'


Entertainment Desk October 31, 2017
PHOTO: NEW YORK TIMES

Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy was recently heavily criticised by fellow social media users as a doctor from AKUH was fired after the Emmy winner posted a series of tweets regarding how he 'harassed' her sister.

Obaid-Chinoy disapproved when the doctor sent her sister a friend request on Facebook after her sister went to the hospital emergency.

https://twitter.com/sharmeenochinoy/status/922367253605175297

The film-maker received flak after she called out the doctor for harassing her sister, which sparked a debate among people, whether sending a friend request is considered harassment or not.

Celebrities like Hamza Ali Abbasi came forward to disapprove of Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy's drastic claims.

https://twitter.com/sharmeenochinoy/status/922368511195930624

Some called Obaid-Chinoy an influenced personality, who over-used her power to destroy a career of a potential individual.

https://twitter.com/sharmeenochinoy/status/925242089444651009

Now, Obaid-Chinoy has given her stance on the matter, and wrote, "The conversation has unfortunately steered far from the safety of women, unchecked unethical practices and harassment. Some of the words I used have disappointed people and I agree they were poorly chosen in a time of heated emotion."

She further added, "My tweet about the wrong women in the wrong family was not meant to suggest a sense of privilege or power, what I meant to say was that the women in my family are strong and stand up for themselves and always have."

AKUH doctor 'sacked' over sending FB friend request to Sharmeen Obaid's sister

"You may disagree with the manner in which I called the doctor's behaviour, debate the boundaries of social media with medical profession and my form and tone of expression, but ultimately, what happened was a breach of trust and severe lack of a professional code of conduct that led to a woman feeling violated or harassed. And on that I will not stay silent," she concluded.

The AKUH administration, however, neither confirmed nor denied the development.

“The AKUH always maintains the highest standards of confidentiality and will not release any information on either employees or patients,” the spokesperson told The Express Tribune.

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COMMENTS (17)

Farhan | 6 years ago | Reply She accepted her mistake of using wrong words, and this is commendable. But her point was valid. Now those who (mostly men) ran a hateful campaign against her should also apologise. Will they?
KKash | 6 years ago | Reply Lesson learned from this saga is that social media should be used to discuss social issues !
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