Ushna Shah wrote about her torture from bullies who resented Feroze Khan for reportedly abusing his ex-wife Syeda Aliza Sultan. She labelled the world “ugly and toxic” and that she is a “abuser sympathiser” not a “human sympathiser.”
Shah posted a lengthy Instagram Story pleading with people not to drive Khan to suicide. She stated his crime as a crime that doesn’t warrant an execution.
She began, “This Ramazan, I’ve stood up to a powerful corporation in solidarity with a woman who lost her father to them. Defended an unjustly imprisoned friend. If we lose him like Aamir Liaquat, While, I’ve warned against assaulting an ex-colleague who reportedly harmed a woman.
Moreover, Shah said internet comments can kill. “I have urged people not to go to the other extreme from which there is no turning back. As I have seen what social media does; stealing may punished by chopping hands, but we chop heads.”
Indian style lehenga’ and dance at my own wedding
She added, “The backlash at my choice to wear the supposed ‘Indian style lehenga’ and dance at my own wedding was a prime example. I know what happens when hundreds of thousands of people abuse a person for whatever they done and abuse their family 24/7. Unfair punishment. My views are own. I reflect despite criticism. I avoid extremes. No apology.”
The Parizaad actress sympathises with Khan and doesn’t dispute his ex-allegations. wife’s I oppose abusers. “I am a human sympathiser and don’t believe in killing people for a crime that doesn’t warrant an execution, even if the alleged criminal found guilty,” she said.
Shah determined that individuals are separated into extreme conservative and extreme awakened thinking, with little tolerance for moderate thinking, but she refuses to stay in a binary. From extreme conservative to extreme woke, the world has grown too ugly and toxic for faceless mob justice. “I have a voice, and I will lend it to any cause I see fit, be it animals, be it women who are allegedly wronged, be it actors who passed away and deserved (and vocally expected) more recognition from the people I work for, and be it alleged wrong-doers who are being punished too severely,” she wrote.
I can face God and myself. Don’t report my voice’s irritation. “I will not sell my conscience,” she concluded.