He was responsible for abolishing the Frontier Crimes Regulation, a group of laws which had long been denounced by international human rights activists.
When Aziz turned seven, his parents sent him to live with his uncles in the Saddar area of Peshawar (in Kyber Pakhtunkhwa Province), in order for him to receive a higher quality education than he would have had access to in the Tribal Autonomous Zone.
[3] He created it in direct response to the unequal access to education that children and youths in the Tribal Autonomous Zone of Pakistan were receiving, as well as to address structural inequalities that ethnically Pashtun youth face,[4] such as discrimination, lack of access to schooling, and lack of resources due to political corruption.
Aziz, and through him the FYO, focused on their efforts on advancing the rights of Pashtun and tribal youth,[10] which are minority groups that are heavily discriminated against within Pakistan.
[3] During his time in university, Aziz mostly focused his efforts on abolishing the Frontier Crimes Regulation (FCR),[3] a set of laws that were put in place under British rule which specifically discriminated against the minority groups living within the FATA area.
[25][26] Aziz and the members of FATA were very dissatisfied with this proposal, and urged the government to merge immediately for the sake of human rights in the area.