Two women among four killed for honour in two incidents

DERA MURAD JAMALI: A man killed his wife and a police officer in Gandakha area of Jaffarabad district in the name of honour and on similar ground a woman was murdered along with a man by her father in Haji Shahar area of Bolan district.

Police said that at Bachal Goth in Gandakha area Liaquat Ali allegedly opened fire on his wife and a police officer Naseer Ahmad Jamali, killing the two on the spot.

The suspect was arrested.

“It is an incident of honour killing,” police said and added that investigation was in progress.

In Shahbaz Balanari village, Bakhtiar Khan Habani allegedly shot dead his daughter and her alleged paramour, Levies said.

The bodies were taken to the Dhadhar district hospital for medico-legal formalities.

“They were killed for honour,” said Levies officials, adding that the suspected killer escaped after the incident.

DAWN

Call for ending child, forced marriages

illiterate panchayat

LAHORE: Plan International, a child’s rights organisation, on Saturday welcomed the United Nations’ resolution for ending child marriages.

According to a press release, the organisation termed the resolution “a historic step” to protect the basic rights of millions of girls.

The resolution was adopted in the 69th session of the General Assembly on November 22. It was led by Canada and Zambia and co-sponsored by 118-member states. The latest resolution is the most substantive to date and urges all states to enact, enforce and uphold laws and policies aimed at preventing and ending child, early and forced marriage and protecting those at risk.

It also calls on states to ensure that marriage is entered into only with the informed, free and full consent of the intending spouses. The resolution puts child marriage and girls’ human rights at the heart of development stressing that child early and forced marriage (CEFM) hindered achievement of six of the eight Millennium Development Goals.

Plan International Pakistan Country Director Rashid Javed said that the resolution would boost Alliance Against Child Marriages (AACM) endeavors to end child marriages in Pakistan.

“I appreciate the approval of Sindh Child Marriage Restraint Act 2013 and call upon the federal and provincial governments for the promulgation of such legislations,” he added.

Rashid Javed appealed the parents to allow children the time and opportunity to receive an education. “We want children in schools instead,” he asserted.

He said that in Pakistan and elsewhere Plan International has been running a girls’ rights campaign titled “Because I am a girl”, adding that according to the latest statistics nearly 41,000 girls aged under 18 are married worldwide every day

“One in three girls in the developing world will be married by her 18th birthday. If the current trend continues, more than 140 million girls will be married by 2020,” the Plan International country director said.

“Child marriage is a violation of children’s human rights. Despite being prohibited by international human rights law, child marriage continues to rob millions of girls around the world of their childhood. It forces them out of education and into a life of poor prospects, with increased risk of violence, abuse, ill health or death.” Plan International Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Nigel Chapman said.

“The UN resolution must not stay on paper and should serve as a force to galvanise nations to act and protect lives and futures of millions of girls. The resolution also recognises education as one of the most effective ways to prevent and end CEFM and calls upon all states to promote and protect women and girls’ right to education,” he added.

Daily Times

Killings in the name of honour

An anti-terrorism court in Lahore handed death penalty on Wednesday to four men for killing a young woman in the name of family honour because she had contracted a marriage of her choice. These men – the victim’s father, brother, a cousin and former husband – bludgeoned her to death last May outside the Lahore High Court where she had gone to record her statement in favour of her husband who had been accused of abducting her. In his verdict, the ATC judge observed that the gruesome murder, reminiscent of dark ages, having taken place near the High Court created fear and outrage among people who come to courts to seek protection against oppression. It is worthwhile to note that the male relatives of the women acted the way they did because of loopholes in the law that makes so-called honour killing a compoundable offence. It has become an accepted practice for male relatives, like in the present case, to murder a woman for deciding on her own to marry somebody, even on suspicion of having a liaison. The ‘honour’ pretext in some instance has also been used to get rid of women – even men – to grab the victims’ property. According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, about 900 women fell victim to honour-related crimes during 2013 alone.

In almost all cases these horrific crimes are committed secure in the knowledge that under the Qisas and Diyat laws ‘honour killing’ is a compoundable offense that can be forgiven by another blood relative. The Honour Killings Act, 2004, has failed clearly to address the issue due to the same reason, providing encouragement to people to go on killing in the name of family honour. This must change. Creditably for it, the Punjab government’s Women Development Department has undertaken an initiative to amend the relevant laws with a view to make the crime a non-compoundable offense. However, a committee discussing the proposed amendment is said to be apprehensive about religious circles’ reaction. Instead of worrying about reaction from one or the other section of society, the government needs to show the way forward. One of the proposals under discussion that makes ample sense is to amend Section 311 of the PPC under which the courts ‘may’ punish a murderer if the murder is found to be an act of ‘Fasad Fil Arz’ even if heirs of victims agree to pardon the killer(s). As per the law ‘Fasad Fil Arz’ principle applies to “brutal or shocking manner in which the offense has been committed which is outrageous to the public conscience, or if the offender is considered a potential danger to the community, or if the offense has been committed in the name or on the pretext of honour.” This section provides adequate rationale for amendment.

First of all there, of course, can be no civilised argument against this crime being outrageous to public conscience. Secondly, and more to the point, included in the crimes falling within the purview of ‘Fasad Fil Arz’ is an “offense [that] has been committed in the name or on the pretext of honour.” It is also worthwhile to note that a 2011 amendment to the relevant law provided that courts “may” punish killers pardoned under an agreement to life imprisonment (25 years), 14 years, or even hand them death sentence. And that the sentence “may” not be less than ten years. The Punjab Women’s Development Department is on the right track in putting forward an amendment proposal that seeks to replace the word “may” with “shall” in order to make so-called honour killing a non-compoundable offense. No one should be allowed to create mischief in society in the fair name of religion.

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