The latest killings are being attributed by police to an ‘honour’ motive. This would appear to be nothing more than a convenient excuse. It is unlikely that all the murders, spread over a period exceeding a decade and a half, were rooted in this factor. The case also highlights the many possibilities of abuse inherent in a law which, over the years, has been repeatedly used as a convenient way to kill off women and then escape punishment. The provision that allows the heir of the victim to seek either capital punishment or blood money means that when murder is committed within the family, the brother of the victim is often stated to be responsible, with his father — who is also the victim’s closest kin — opting to let him off.
These loopholes in the law need to be plugged. Police also need to be persuaded that the lives of women are not entirely dispensable and that cases of so-called ‘honour’ killings need to be examined in much greater depth. A failure to do so can only encourage other acts of killings, either by different perpetrators, or — as we have seen in the latest case — the same man opting to commit murder over and over again.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 16th, 2011.
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