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Pakistani man kills wife,
daughter over ‘honour’
June 21, 2005 - (Reuters) A Pakistani man killed
his wife and daughter by pouring kerosene over them and setting
them on fire in the latest incident of so-called honour killing
in the conservative country, police said on Tuesday.
Hundreds of women are killed by male relatives in Pakistan every
year after being accused of bringing shame on their families, usually
for having what are considered unsanctioned relations with men.
In the latest incident, a man identified as Jalil Ahmed Jhabail
suspected his daughter of having an affair and accused his wife
of failing to stop her, police said.
The man, who had been working in the southern city of Karachi, returned
home in Tiba Miani village in the central province of Punjab late
last Friday, and, together with two male relatives, assaulted the
women.
"They shut both women in a room, poured kerosene over them
and set them on fire," said police official Naveed Mumtaz.
The wife, Azeem Mai, 40, died at the scene while the daughter, Shumaila,
17, died of serious burns in hospital, he said.
President Pervez Musharraf has been trying to project Pakistan as
a moderate and progressive Muslim nation and his government last
year passed a law that prescribes the death penalty for honour killings.
But human rights activists say much more must be done to stamp out
the practice, which is particularly common in rural Pakistan where
feudal and tribal laws still hold sway.
Jhabail and one of the male relatives had been arrested. The other
male relative was still at large, police said.
The men would be tried in a special anti-terrorism court for what
are termed "heinous crimes", police said.
Government officials say there were more than 1,200 honour killings
in 2003 alone.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/ISL41106.htm
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