Trademark and logo misuse
No copying, editing, recolouring, cropping, watermarking, selling, sublicensing, printing, or publishing of the logo, mark, seal, emblem, or trademark without written authorization.
Official Legal Notice
International Human Rights Movement is identified with its registered trademark, Trademark No. 614993. The organization’s name, logo, trademark, documents, cards, certificates, office titles, digital assets, and public identity may be used only with prior written authorization issued by the competent authority.
This page replaces short-form legal text with a complete, structured notice covering authorized use, prohibited conduct, enforcement options, and consequences of non-compliance.
International Human Rights Movement reserves all rights in its name, logo, trademark, visual identity, documents, cards, certificates, designations, public goodwill, website content, and digital assets. The registered trademark must not be copied, adapted, used, published, displayed, transferred, licensed, monetized, represented, or associated with any person, chapter, page, event, document, payment request, public statement, or campaign without written authorization.
Protected Assets
The protection applies across physical, digital, print, social, membership, public communication, and event-related use.
International Human Rights Movement, IHRM, or any confusingly similar name, acronym, spelling, translation, stylization, or representation.
The official logo, mark, colour treatment, seals, icons, badges, certificates, cards, banners, website graphics, and digital artwork.
Registered Trademark No. 614993, institutional reputation, public goodwill, identifiers, and protected brand elements.
Letterheads, stamps, notices, authorisation letters, membership certificates, cards, forms, circulars, receipts, and official templates.
Chairperson, Vice Chairman, General Secretary, coordinator, president, office bearer, representative, ambassador, volunteer, or any similar title.
Domain names, subdomains, email addresses, social pages, WhatsApp groups, payment links, SEO metadata, schema, image alt text, file names, ads, apps, and listings.
No person may rely on verbal permission, informal messages, old cards, past membership, temporary association, event participation, social media posts, expired letters, edited images, or self-created documents as authority to use the organization’s name, logo, trademark, seal, letterhead, title, card, certificate, or identity.
Prohibited Conduct
The following restrictions apply to members, former members, office bearers, coordinators, vendors, volunteers, social media publishers, event organizers, and third parties.
No copying, editing, recolouring, cropping, watermarking, selling, sublicensing, printing, or publishing of the logo, mark, seal, emblem, or trademark without written authorization.
No person may claim to be chairperson, president, coordinator, representative, officer, legal adviser, chapter head, ambassador, or authorized spokesperson unless officially appointed in writing.
No person may collect donations, funds, fees, sponsorship, support, payment, aid, membership charges, or benefits in the organization’s name without specific written approval.
No unauthorized website, domain, social page, group, email, WhatsApp channel, SEO entry, schema, app, advertisement, or payment portal may suggest official connection.
No person may issue, print, sell, modify, renew, verify, distribute, or display cards, certificates, letters, seals, forms, or letterheads unless authorized in writing.
No person may issue media statements, legal notices, complaints, social posts, public commitments, endorsements, or official communications in the organization’s name without approval.
Non-Compliance
Consequences depend on evidence, intent, damage, applicable law, and decision of the competent authority, tribunal, or court. Remedies are cumulative and may be pursued together where legally available.
| Area | Possible statutory consequence | Practical relevance |
|---|---|---|
| False trade description | Imprisonment from three months up to two years, minimum fine of Rs. 50,000, or both, subject to proof and court determination. | May apply where false descriptions, documents, labels, services, origin, or identity are used deceptively. |
| Repeat offence | For second or subsequent conviction, imprisonment from six months up to three years, minimum fine of Rs. 100,000, or both. | Relevant to repeated misuse after notice, prior action, or conviction. |
| Falsification of register entries | Imprisonment from three months up to two years, minimum fine of Rs. 50,000, or both. | Relevant to false registry documents, false extracts, fabricated entries, or forged proof of registration. |
| False representation as registered | Imprisonment from one month up to six months, minimum fine of Rs. 20,000, or both. | Relevant where a person falsely claims registration, wider registration, or exclusive rights beyond lawful limits. |
| False connection with Trade Marks Registry | Imprisonment up to two years, fine, or both. | Relevant where a place of business, document, page, or statement suggests official connection with the Trade Marks Registry. |
Unauthorized use in digital environments may cause public confusion quickly. This notice therefore applies to public websites, microsites, subdomains, SEO titles, meta descriptions, structured data, uploaded media, file names, image alt text, banners, event posters, social media pages, messaging groups, videos, reels, ads, payment links, forms, PDFs, and any other public-facing digital asset.
Report Misuse
Reports should be factual, evidence-based, and supported by screenshots or documents. Please do not send speculative, abusive, political, or defamatory material.
Save screenshots, URLs, page names, profile links, phone numbers, documents, payment demands, dates, times, and names involved.
Explain what was used, who used it, where it appeared, whether funds or documents were requested, and why it appears unauthorized.
Send reports through the official email or Contact page. Do not submit sensitive personal data unless necessary for review.
Do not edit or manipulate screenshots or documents. Keep original files available in case verification is required.
Failure, delay, or partial action by the organization in respect of any misuse shall not be treated as consent, acquiescence, waiver, license, or abandonment of rights.
The organization may pursue any one or more remedies available under contract, membership rules, trademark law, passing off, civil law, criminal law, cyber law, defamation law, customs law, platform rules, or any other applicable law. Remedies are cumulative and not mutually exclusive.
Any person receiving notice of misuse must immediately stop the misuse, remove public-facing material, preserve evidence, disclose the source of materials, return or destroy unauthorized documents, and confirm compliance in writing. Continued use after notice may be treated as wilful non-compliance.
Any money, donation, fee, contribution, sponsorship, data, document, benefit, or asset collected through unauthorized use of the organization’s identity may be subject to accounting, return, recovery, complaint, or legal action according to applicable law.
This notice is governed by the laws applicable in Pakistan. Proceedings may be brought before the competent IP Tribunal, civil court, criminal court, regulatory authority, cyber authority, registrar, platform, or any other competent forum according to the nature of the dispute and applicable law.
The organization may amend, replace, expand, or update this notice at any time. The latest published version shall apply to public-facing use from the date of publication unless otherwise stated.
Last updated: .
AEO-Friendly FAQ
Direct answers for members, volunteers, public users, website visitors, digital publishers, and third parties.
It protects the International Human Rights Movement name, abbreviation, logo, registered trademark, cards, certificates, designations, official documents, digital assets, domain names, social media identity, public representations, and related institutional goodwill.
International Human Rights Movement is identified with its registered trademark, Trademark No. 614993.
No. Membership alone does not authorize any person to use the organization’s logo, trademark, letterhead, card, certificate, office title, designation, public statement, or digital identity without specific written authorization.
No. No person may collect donations, funds, contributions, fees, support, sponsorship, payments, or benefits in the organization’s name unless written authorization is issued by the competent authority for a defined purpose.
Depending on the facts, consequences may include warning, suspension, cancellation of membership, withdrawal of authorization, public clarification, takedown requests, civil proceedings, damages, injunctions, delivery up or destruction of infringing material, complaints before competent authorities, and criminal proceedings where applicable.
No. The page identifies the organization’s own registered trademark. It does not claim that International Human Rights Movement is a government body, IPO Pakistan office, United Nations body, law enforcement authority, court, or public regulator.
Misuse may be reported by sending screenshots, URLs, names, contact details, documents, dates, payment demands, and a short incident description to the official email or through the Contact page.
Compliance First
For logo use, membership verification, public representation, event material, page ownership, document validation, or official communication, contact the organization through official channels before publishing or acting.