Brother of Pakistan social media star arrested for her murder: Police


(MENAFN- The Peninsula) Wasim (R), the brother of slain social media celebrity Qandeel Baloch, is escorted by police following his arrest for Qandeel's death in Multan early on July 17, 2016. (AFP / SS MIRZA)

Islamabad: The brother of a Pakistani social media star strangled to death has been arrested for her murder and confessed to killing her "for honour", police said Sunday.

"The police arrested Muhammad Waseem, brother of Qandeel Baloch, for killing his sister late on Saturday," Multan City police chief Azhar Akram told AFP.

"Waseem confessed to his crime, saying he killed his sister for honour after her recent objectionable videos, mostly posted on Facebook."

According toa report in Al Jazeera, late on Saturday, Waseem was found some 100 kilometres from Multan in Dera Ghazi Khan and arrested. Police presented him with his face covered during a press conference, during which he said he "killed for honour" and had "no regrets".

Nabila Ghazzanfar, a Punjab Police spokeswoman said that the initial post-mortem showed that the 26-year-old's nose and mouth had been pinned shut before she died, blocking off her airways. She had not, contrary to earlier reports, been strangled, Ghazzanfar added.

On her final, July 4 post to her Facebook page, which has almost 800,000 fans, she wrote: "I am trying to change the typical orthodox mindset of people who don't wanna come out of their shells of false beliefs and old practices. "

Her apparent "honour killing" has caused outrage.

'Honour killings are epidemic'

Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy, who won an Oscar for a film about honour-based violence, told Al Jazeera that such attacks were an "epidemic".

"I'm very shaken up today. Activists in Pakistan have been screaming hoarse about honour killings; it is an epidemic, it takes place not only in towns, but in major cities as well.

"What are we going to do as a nation?"

Chinoy added that an anti-honour killing bill should be passed.

"It's upon the lawmakers to punish these people. We need to start making examples of people. It appears it is very easy to kill a woman in this country - and you can walk off scot free."

During screenings of Chinoy's recent documentary Girl in the River, in which a father tries to kill his daughter, she had heard people cheering for the father.

"It is a mindset we have to change," she said.

After the release of a recent music video in which Baloch starred, the celebrity's ex-husband Aashiq Hussain revealed intimate details of their relationship.

The story of her personal life was scrutinised in the media. She was pitted against clerics and her former husband, and cried publicly about torture and abuse she suffered during the short marriage.

Last month, she posted a series of selfies with a leading cleric, Mufti Abdul Qavi - a member of the "moon-sighting" committee, again causing a furore. During their meeting, the cleric reportedly proposed. A video shows Baloch sitting on the cleric's lap, while photos show her wearing his traditional wool cap.

'She was more than Kim Kardashian'

Fasi Zaka, a radio show host, told Al Jazeera: "She was the most self-exposed person, and what was different about her is that she was from a poor background. She did all this on her own. She is much more than Kim Kardashian, she went against the norms of society - and went on do what she wanted, on her own terms."

Mufti Naeem, a conservative, vocal cleric, condemned the killing.

"Her personal life was her business, and killing someone is haram [not permissible in Islam]," he told Al Jazeera. "The brother must be punished - we cannot have any more murders in the name of honour."

Sherry Rahman, a Senator and outspoken advocate for the rights of women and minorities, called for the national assembly to pass an anti-honour killing bill.

She said: "Assuming that Qandeel Baloch's brother will probably be arrested and punished for murder because of the high profile [nature] of the case, the fact remains that an essentially right-wing government is sitting on vital amendments in the Pakistan Criminal Procedure Code that would disallow justice to be privatised for crimes against women."

Vigils were held in Lahore and Karachi.

Natasha Ansari, who helped organise the Karachi event, said the media should have acted more responsibly when covering stories about Baloch. "In a country where lives are easily at risk, media has responsibility to protect them instead of making tabloid issues out of them."

"She was killed because she said and did things that made people feel uncomfortable and angry," said Erum Haider, a Karachi native and PhD student at Georgetown University. "We feel that there is no value to a woman's life if she doesn't live in a particular way ... in the bounds of what a conservative, patriachal society expects of you. We're here to protest that."

Nida Kirmani, who teaches sociology at Lahore University, said: "[She was] a woman who was living life on her own terms she wasn't afraid ... she was fun, loud, bold brash and beautiful - we would like to drown out those voices who think she deserved it because of the way she was behaving."

'No honour in killing' read one of the placards at the Lahore vigil for Qandeel Baloch [Alia Chughtai/Al Jazeera]

Source: Al Jazeera and agencies


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