Couple killed for ‘honour’

RAWALPINDI: A man and a woman were gunned down in the name of honour in the outskirts of Gujar Khan on Monday.

Shortly after the incident came to light, a police team constituted by SP Saddar Division Mohammad Nabeel Khokhar conducted raids and apprehended the alleged killers, including the father, brother and husband of the woman. A double murder case was registered against them.

Initial report suggested that the woman’s heirs murdered her and a man. The police said the bodies were shifted to the hospital for postmortem and circumstantial evidence collected from the crime scene.

Abdul Ghaffar Khan told the police that they were nine brothers and three sisters and he was living with his family in his house.

He said his brother Sher Khan and Wazir Khan, 30, who was married, lived with their respective families in a separate house.

He said his brother Sher Khan was at home when someone knocked at the door. When he responded he found Ghulab Sher and his sons who were armed, as well as Nisar Khan and Sartaj Khan standing in the street.

He said Ghulab Sher told his brother Sher Khan that he had murdered his daughter and were looking for their brother, Wazir Khan, whom they suspected of having a relation with the woman.

However, he said after Sher Khan informed them that his brother was not at home, they started looking for him in the fields where they found him and murdered him.

Source: Dawn

Suspect detained in connection with woman’s murder

TAXILA: A man who allegedly murdered a woman was arrested by Wah Cantonment police.

Investigation Officer (IO) Khurrum Shahzad said the victim, 25-year-old Hina Akbar, a resident of Gadwal, and former nurse went missing under mysterious circumstances on March 15, when she left her house to go to a training centre. Her mobile phone was also switched off after some time.

The IO said her brother registered an abduction case under section 365-B against unknown kidnappers at Wah Cantonment police station on March 17.

He said later Rescue 1122 officials found her body parts packed in plastic bags near Leh Nullah in Rawalpindi on March 19 in Dhoke Dalal in the jurisdiction of Ganjmandi police station.

Sub-Inspector Mohammad Riaz, the in-charge of the heinous crime investigation unit of the said police station, said Rawalpindi police identified the victim through her fingerprints.

Mohammad Rafeeq, station house officer of Wah Cantonment police station, revealed that an investigation team through mobile data of the victim detected that the girl was in contact with a 35-year-old man, father of two, who was her colleague at the centre, and presently living in Gulshan Raza Colony.

The SHO said further geo-fencing of both mobile phones’ data revealed that on the day she went missing, both remained at the same location for hours.

It was further revealed that the man travelled on the same day on the same route and helped the victim’s family trace her.

Mr Rafeeq revealed that when the suspect was taken into custody for interrogation, he denied his involvement in the case however, later he confessed to the crime, saying that his wife came to know about his extramarital affair with the girl.

He told investigators that the girl asked him to marry her and upon his refusal she threatened to ruin his marital life. The IO said the suspect told them that he took the girl to a farm house near Margalla to settle the issue but she refused to put the issue under the carpet so he killed her and threw her body in Rawalpindi.

Sub Divisional Police Officer Taxila circle ASP Zainab Ayub, while quoting the suspect about reasons behind the cold-blooded murder, said the girl was blackmailing him to marry her or face consequences so “he had no other choice but to get rid of her in such a way that nobody could find any clue about her death”.

Source: Dawn

Woman, nephew shot dead over ‘old enmity’ in Shikarpur

SUKKUR: A woman and her nephew were shot dead allegedly by some fellow clansmen in the Shahu area of Shikarpur district on Monday.

Officials at the Shahu police station of the district’s riverine area said that the woman, Sonia Shar, and her nephew, Attaullah Shar, were on their way back home when they were ambushed by a group of their fellow clansmen. The assailants kept firing into the air to make their escape good after committing the double murder, they added.

The police told local reporters that the victims and assailants had been embroiled in an old dispute for long and the attack seemed to be linked to the same matter.

The bodies were transported to the taluka hospital for a post-mortem examination before they were handed over to the heirs, the police said, adding that an investigation into the incident was started. They said a hunt for the culprits was also under way.

Source: Dawn

 

 

Minor girl raped in Korangi shelter home

KARACHI: A minor girl was raped in a Korangi shelter home, police and doctors said on Monday.

The Korangi Industrial Area police had on Sunday night brought a girl, aged around 11-12 years, to the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre for a medical examination.

Police Surgeon Summaiya Syed told Dawn that the medical examination confirmed that the girl was raped. She said that DNA samples had been taken for cross-matching.

Hospital sources said that the girl informed them that she was living in a shelter home in Korangi as her father did not take care of her after the death of her mother.

She said that she was subjected to a sexual assault by a boy, said to be son of the woman owner of the shelter home.

Korangi SSP Sajid Amir Sadozai told Dawn that the police picked up the owner of the shelter home in Korangi’s Allah Wala Town. Her underage son had not been detained so far, but his medical examination was carried out, he added.

A case was registered under Sections 376 (Punishment for rape), 109 (abetment), 353 (assault or criminal force to deter public servant from discharge of his duty), 342 (punishment for wrongful confinement) and 34 (common intention) of the Pakistan Penal Code.

Source: Dawn

Pakistan’s BPW organization targeting rural women to learn IT-based skills

Pakistani women are gifted with immense talent, vision, commitment and energy to bring positive change in their lives as well as society and the Federation of Business and Professional Women Organization supports such women entrepreneurs, businesswomen and small and medium scale investors in their endeavours to live a financially independent life. These views were expressed by 1st Vice President of International Federation of Business and Professional Women (For UN matters) Chularat Israngkool Na Ayutthaya (Toyting) in an exclusive interview with Pakistan Observer.

She was in Islamabad after visiting Karachi where she attended an annual event, 19th Hazrat Khadeeja-tul-Kubra Conference, organized by the Pakistan Federation of Business and Professional Women Organization and was briefed about various projects and initiatives of women empowerment launched by the federation.

As per the UN guidelines, we are targeting from the BPW platform, rural women to digitally transform their lives and encourage them to learn the Internet and make full use of Google, Youtube and other social media applications, said she.

In Karachi, Chularat Israngkool visited BPW Quality Secondary School Azam Town, Dr Salima Raisuddin Ahmed BPW Home Economics & Technical Institute where children, especially girls are not only educated they are also trained in various professions such as course in beautician, cooking classes, cutting & sewing, fashion designing and computer education. I am very glad to be in Pakistan and am pleasantly surprised to see women from backward areas getting training and earning on the basis of their skills, said she, adding the world around us is changing fast and in order to keep pace with it, we have to change ourselves.

Since 51 per cent of the population of Pakistan consists of women, they must be empowered to make Pakistan economically strong, Chularat further said. In Karachi she was received and briefed by President of Pakistan BPW Nasreen Mehdi while in the federal capital, President of the Islamabad chapter of BPW Malka Farooqi played host to her delegation.Member of the Nation al Assembly (MNA) and former President of BPW, Mrs Farrukh Khan was also there during her visit to the Hill House Boarding School Rawal Town where she saw girls busy in stitching, sewing, learning and using the Internet. She was all praise for her Pakistani colleagues and members of the Federation of BPW Organization for their untiring efforts to carry forward the goal of women empowerment.

In Pakistan, we have had representation for the last 69 years and a number of women-friendly initiatives including opportunities for entrepreneurs and startups, she said.

Chularat, herself is a realtor, a certified International property specialist and member of the National Association of Realtors worldwide.

Moreover, she is a Coordinator for the Ambassadors of the Republic of Liberia and Republic of Côte d’Ivoire in Thailand.

Recently, while addressing the UN CSW67 in New York, in an oral statement, she noted that more targeted gender-responsive recovery measures were needed to address the considerable gender gaps and inequalities.

Source: Pakistan Observer