Man murders wife, her father, and brother over land transfer issue

SAHIWAL: A man shot his wife, her father and her brother dead for refusing to transfer a piece of land (inherited by his wife) in his name at Sham Kot village in Pakpattan District on Sunday.

Police say the suspect, Zaheer Baloch, managed to escape after committing the triple murder.

Taking notice of the incident, Regional Police Officer (RPO) Mahboob Rasheed ordered District Police Officer (DPO) Tariq Walayat, to arrest the suspect within 48 hours.

The DPO formed a three-member investigation committee headed by Sadar sub-divisional police officer (SDPO) for the suspect’s arrest.

Meanwhile, Chak Bedian police have registered a murder FIR against the suspect.

Police say the suspect, a resident of Jagga Baloch village, had married Amina Bibi of the same clan. After the marriage, Zaheer moved to the house of his father-in-law Gulam Farid, where his brother-in-law Saqib was also living with his family.

Last year, Zaheer started pushing his in-laws to transfer his wife’s share in her father’s land in his name. However, his in-laws opposed the idea.

As Zaheer kept on insisting that the land must be transferred to him, the issue caused bitterness between him and his in-laws.

Locals say that Zaheer would exchange hot words and even scuffle with his in-laws and wife over the issue.

On Sunday, Zaheer repeated his demand for land transfer, upon which hot words were exchanged between him and his in-laws, including his father-in-law and brother–in–law. Following the verbal clash, Zaheer took out his pistol and shot his wife, father-in-law and brother-in-law dead on the spot. The suspect then fled the scene.

On being informed of the incident, Chak Bedian police rushed to the village and after collecting forensic evidence from the crime scene, moved the bodies to the district headquarters hospital for autopsy.

Police sources say that Sadar police SHO Rai Khizer and Chak Bedian SHO Rana Imran, along with police teams, conducted a raid in Mohalla Saeedabad in Pakpattan city, to arrest the suspect, who left the place before the police arrived there.

Source: Dawn

2 arrested for gang rape of a mentally challenged girl in Hafizabad

GUJRAT: Hafizabad police claimed to have arrested two suspects involved in the alleged gang-rape of 14-year-old mentally challenged girl at village Kot Khushaal of Kusaisa police precincts.

About four days back, when the girl was alone at home the suspects, who were her neighbours, lured her to a deserted place where they allegedly gang-raped her.

When her parents returned home, they suspected something unusual about the condition of the girl and asked her about it. The family came to know about the incident and later reported it to the police.

Hafizabad District Police Officer Dr Fahad Ahmed told Dawn by telephone that police arrested both the suspects after registration of a case against them while the medical examination of the victim and the DNA tests of both the suspects had been conducted by the Punjab Forensic Science Agency (PFSA).

In yet another incident, a girl student of college was allegedly gang-raped after being kidnapped at Soiyanwala village of Vanike Tarrar police precincts of Hafizabad.

Police arrested three out of five nominated suspects, including two women.

Reports said the first year college student had lodged a complaint with the police that she was on the way back to her home from tuition centre when the suspects kidnapped her and three men gang-raped her in connivance of two women.

The DPO said police registered a case against five suspects and arrested the main suspect and two women. He said the medical examination of the victim had already been done whereas the DNA test of the main suspect would be conducted by the PFSA on Monday.

He said the case was being investigated from different angles as the victim girl had first gone to the women protection centre and then reported the matter to the police; however, the forensic evidence might help the police in reaching any conclusion.

Source: Dawn

Supreme Court may get its second female judge

ISLAMABAD: Another female judge is being elevated to the Supreme Court as Chief Justice of Pakistan Umar Ata Bandial has proposed the name of Peshawar High Court (PHC) Chief Justice Musarrat Hilali for appointment to the apex court.

According to sources, the chief justice summoned a meeting of the Judicial Commission of Pakistan (JCP) on June 14 to consider the nomination of Justice Hilali as a SC judge.

On June 7, the commission members informally discussed the issue of filing two apex court posts lying vacant for the last several months. After a heated argument with some JCP members, the chief justice agreed to summon a JCP session soon.

It is expected that Justice Bandial would recommend the name of Justice Hilali for elevation to the top court.

PHC Chief Justice Musarrat Hilali is retiring in August. In case of her elevation, she will serve in the SC for next three years. In January last year, the SC got its first female judge after the JCP elevated Lahore High Court’s (LHC) Justice Ayesha Malik to the SC.

Last month, SC Senior Puisne Judge Qazi Faez Isa, who is also a member of the JCP, wrote a letter to all members of the body proposing the elevation of the PHC chief justice, Musarrat Hilali, and the Sindh High Court (SHC) chief justice, Ahmed Ali Sheikh, to the Supreme Court.

The letter said two judicial positions in the SC had been lying vacant for a combined period of about nineteen months. Justice Mazhar Alam Khan Miankhel retired on July 13, 2022 while Justice Sajjad Ali Shah retired August 13, 2022.

“Cognisant of my constitutional duty, I would like to propose for your kind consideration to appoint Justice Ahmed Ali M Shaikh and Justice Musarrat Hilali as judges of the Supreme

It said the people of Sindh were dismayed when their chief justice was not appointed to the Supreme Court and the people of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) remained concerned that there is only one judge from their province in the Supreme Court.

“The Constitution mandates equality of citizens and forbids discrimination on the basis of sex and it also stipulates that there should be no discrimination on the ground of race, residence and place of birth,” says the letter written by Justice Isa.

Legal opinion

Advocate Nida Usman Chaudhary, who is founder of the Women in Law Initiative Pakistan, said Justice Musarrat Hilali has the distinguished honour of being a trailblazer throughout her legal career and her judicial career is full of many firsts.

Sharing her profile, Nida said Justice Hilali was appointed to the PHC as an additional judge on March 26, 2013. She became a permanent judge of the PHC on March 13, 2014.

Before her appointment as a judge, she had the honour of being the first woman to be elected as the secretary of the Peshawar High Court Bar Association (PHCBA) from 1988-1989. She was twice elected as the PHCBA vice president from 1992 to 1994 and again as its general secretary from 1997-1998.

She was the first woman twice elected as an executive member of the Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) from 2007-2008 and 2008-2009. She was also the first female additional advocate general (AAG) of the K-P from November 2001 to March 2004.

She was the first chairperson of the K-P environmental tribunal in 2009 and the first federal ombudsperson in Pakistan for harassment against women at the workplace. She was also the first female additional advocate general in the country.

She was the first female lawyer in the K-P to become a judge of PHC without first serving at district judiciary. Just recently, she was appointed as the first female chief justice of the PHC.

“The news that she is now considered for appointment as a judge of the SC is, therefore, very welcome as her vast and diverse experience will enrich the jurisprudence emerging from the apex court.

“Furthermore, not only will she be another female judge in the highest judicial forum but also someone whose presence will give additional representation to the K-P as well.

“If she is not appointed now, she will retire in August 2023 after which if seniority is strictly applied, the K-P will have no representation in the SC for the next 8 years at least—till 2031.

“So her appointment now is very important from the perspective of fair representation in the justice sector for the K-P as well as for women,” said Nida Usman Chaudhry.

Source: The Express Tribune