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Pakistan: Woman burnt to death for rejecting marriage offer

PostPosted: Wed Jun 01, 2016 2:35 pm
Author: Anthea
Pakistan: Woman burnt to death for rejecting marriage proposal

A Pakistani woman who was set on fire for refusing a marriage proposal has died of her injuries.

Maria Sadaqat, a schoolteacher in her early 20s, was attacked in her home by a group of men on Sunday and died in hospital in Islamabad on Wednesday.

Her family say she had turned down a marriage proposal from the son of the owner of a school she had taught at.

Campaigners say attacks against women who refuse marriage proposals are common in Pakistan.

Chief Minister of Punjab Shahbaz Sharif launched an immediate investigation into the killing, which will report in two days.

Maria's father has said the school owner was one of the men who attacked his daughter. Police told the BBC that the men beat her and doused her in petrol before setting her alight near the hill resort of Murree, not far from the capital.

She suffered serious burns on nearly all of her body. Local media report that she had 85% burns.

Nearly 1,100 women were killed in Pakistan last year in so-called honour-killings, the country's independent Human Rights Commission says.

Most are by relatives, but a small number carried out by people outside the family are also related to perceived loss of honour, correspondents say.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said in April: "The predominant causes of these killings in 2015 were domestic disputes, alleged illicit relations and exercising the right of choice in marriage."

Campaigners say most "honour killings" are not reported.

The BBC's M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says that in many cases, including those reported to the police, relatives hoping to keep the family name out of the news prefer to make out-of-court settlements and therefore there are no convictions.

Under Islamic laws introduced in the 1980s the victim's family can pardon the perpetrator in return for money or other considerations.

In February, Punjab province, where the attack on Miss Sadaqat happened, passed a landmark law criminalising all forms of violence against women.

However, more than 30 religious groups, including all the mainstream Islamic political parties, threatened to launch protests if the law was not repealed.


Religious groups have equated women's rights campaigns with promotion of obscenity. They say the new Punjab law will increase the divorce rate and destroy the country's traditional family system.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-36425946

Re: Pakistan: Woman burnt to death for rejecting marriage of

PostPosted: Wed Jun 01, 2016 2:43 pm
Author: Anthea
In February, Punjab province, where the attack on Miss Sadaqat happened, passed a landmark law criminalising all forms of violence against women.

However, more than 30 religious groups, including all the mainstream Islamic political parties, threatened to launch protests if the law was not repealed
.


A great many Pakistani girls in UK suffer from forced marriages and violence

Pakistanis belong in Pakistan UK does NOT want them bringing their slave wives here

Any Muslim who cannot treat their wife with respect does NOT belong here

Most Muslims do NOT even allow their wives to learn English, including many KURDISH men X(

Re: Pakistan: Woman burnt to death for rejecting marriage of

PostPosted: Fri Jun 17, 2016 9:49 pm
Author: Benny

Re: Pakistan: Woman burnt to death for rejecting marriage of

PostPosted: Fri Jun 17, 2016 10:16 pm
Author: Anthea
Benny wrote:Another story from Pakistan:

http://edition.cnn.com/2016/06/17/asia/ ... dex.html/B

Benny thank you for the link :ymapplause:

Pakistani man beats sister to death over marriage argument

A Pakistani man has beaten his teenage sister to death, smashing her skull with a large wooden stick, because he didn't want her to marry her boyfriend.

Police said Anum Masih, 19, was murdered by her brother Saqib Masih, 21, on the evening of June 10. "She wanted to marry, we didn't agree on this wedding. We were arguing," Saqib told CNN from a police cell in the city of Sialkot.

"She was my sister. I didn't mean to kill her. I've been crying ever since. She was my sister." Police said Saqib Masih, 21, beat his sister to death on the evening of June 10.

Yousuf Masih, the victim's father, said that he was against the match because the two families were related.

"They started arguing. He hit her with the stick, he has no intention to kill her, " the father told CNN. "Things just got out of hand, he reacted in anger. In the end I guess it did become an issue of honor." He added that he filed the police report against his own son.

Rampant violence

Violence against women is rampant in Pakistan, according to the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan.
It said that in the first five months of 2016, as many as 212 women were killed in the name of 'honor'. In a case earlier this month, a Pakistani teen was burned to death by her mother and brother for eloping against their wishes.

The crimes originate from tribal and cultural practices and are often meted out as punishment for behavior viewed as bringing dishonor to a family or village.

Honor killings in Pakistan's Christian community, of which the Masih family is a part of, are "extremely rare", says Peter Jacob, a minority rights activist and secretary at the National Commission for Justice and Peace.

The death of Anum, he says, showed that Christians weren't immune to this custom.

"The incident in Sialkot shows that not only the peer pressures but cultural norms and patterns have crept into minority communities as well," he said.

Pakistan's population is 95% Muslim.

'No honor'

Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan's Prime Minister, has vowed to tackle the problem of honor killings, but critics say few concrete steps have been taken.

"There is no honor in honor killing, in fact there can be nothing more degrading than to engage in brutal murder and to refer to it as honor," he said in a press statement five months ago.

On the walls of Anum's spartan family home are pictures of Jesus and Mary. Beneath them her mother weeps.
Sajilia Masih, told CNN, she wasn't home when the murder took place. She has two other children, who weren't involved in the incident.

"He had no intention to kill her. I guess what happened, happened. I want my son to be released, he is my child after all."

http://edition.cnn.com/2016/06/17/asia/ ... index.html