Woman, alleged paramour killed

QILA SAIFULLAH: Unknown armed men gunned down a woman and her alleged paramour on suspicion of Siakari here on Sunday.

According to Levies Force, the woman and her alleged paramour Ainuddin were shot dead by armed assailants on allegation of having illicit relations. They managed to escape from the scene after committing the crime. The bodies of the deceased were handed over to the heirs after legal formalities. Levies Force registered a case and started investigation.

Source: The News

Woman, paramour killed over Karo-Kari in Kandhkot

SUKKUR: A man shot dead 20-year-old Farida Bhutto and her young paramour Babu Lashari, accusing them of indulging in illicit relations. The incident took place on Sunday in village Khan Muhammad Khan Jakhrani in the limits of Kandhkot police. The accused later managed to escape. Police shifted both the bodies to a local hospital but had not been able to arrest the accused.

Source: The News

Husband goes missing as woman found dead

KARACHI: A 35-year-old woman was allegedly strangled by her husband in a Quaidabad locality on Sunday, police said.

A duty officer at the Quaidabad police station said that the body of Islam Khatoon was found in a washroom of the house in Labour Colony.

The victim’s brother Shahzaib claimed that his sister had been strangled by her 40-year-old husband, Hakmeen Khan, the duty officer said.

He said the suspect, missing since the incident, was a rickshaw driver. The couple have four children.

The police shifted the body to the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre for medico-legal formalities.

Later the body was handed over to the family for burial.

An FIR (32/2012) under Section 302 (premeditated murder) was registered against the woman’s husband at the Quaidabad police station on the complaint of the victim’s brother.

Source: Dawn

Fans mob Pakistani women writers in Jaipur

Jawed Naqvi

JAIPUR (India): Celebrated Pakistani women writers — historian Ayesha Jalal and social activist Fatima Bhutto — were mobbed, applauded and loved at the Jaipur Literary Festival here on Sunday where they canvassed support for friendlier ties with India and pooh-poohed the prospects of a military coup in their country.

Clearly upstaging the top-billed American media star Oprah Winfrey who made a widely televised appearance at the festival at the same time, though at a separate platform, Miss Bhutto and Ms Jalal were roundly cheered for an incisive analysis of the evolving political situation in Pakistan and its impact on the world.

Ms Jalal evoked peels of laughter when she claimed that India had moved to the third spot and America had replaced it to become the enemy number one in common perception across Pakistan. Asked who was deemed the enemy number two, she smiled: “Israel.”

Pakistan’s High Commissioner Shahid Malik intervening in the discussion endorsed Ms Jalal’s claim that recent talk of a coup had flowed from media hype. “I don’t see a coup taking place as all the state institutions are working according to the constitution,” Mr Malik said.

He invited Indians to seize the moment for an unprecedented rapprochement with Pakistan, saying that it was for the first time ever that all stakeholders in Pakistan — the civil society, media, the opposition and the army — “are on the same page” for friendly ties with New Delhi.

The Bhutto scion thought it was demeaning for her country to be gripped by political arithmetic in parliament and the parties jostling for power outside as real issues faced by a vast majority of Pakistanis were being sidelined.

She listed Pakistan’s dismal investment in health care and the fact that millions were starving in the agriculture-rich country as scandalous.

Miss Bhutto was particularly severe on PTI leader Imran Khan for what she considered to be his support for obscurantist causes and his alleged anti-women stand on a landmark bill in parliament.

When she woke up to the call of Azaan in Jaipur, she was disoriented for a while because she had not anticipated the sound in India. That revelation tugged at the emotional chords of the audience and drew a long applause. A few thousand milling fans had crammed into an otherwise large enclosure.

Miss Bhutto slammed the “American occupation of Afghanistan” and cited what she said was a credible analysis to claim that US drone attacks were mostly killing innocent people — 30 possibly genuine militants in every thousand innocent people annihilated, she said.

Indian TV anchor Karan Thapar, who hosted the discussion, observed that the two women from Pakistan had drawn more serious people to listen to them than the American TV star next door.

Source: Dawn