Monday, September 6, 2010
Email
Make My Homepage
RSS
  • Taqaza
  • Google
  • Yahoo
Feedback
English Arabic French German Hindi Turkish Persian
Image

Pakistan in terrible pain, need support badly

Saturday, 28 August 2010

It is only the people who make the real difference and rulers and leaders powerful, corrupt, crazy and cruel. People are victimized and become helpless when they become or remain weak, dumb, stupid, misguided and misdirected. They do not or deliberately don’t want to... Read more...
Image

Paradox of media freedom in Pakistan

Monday, 16 August 2010

Though they claimed but at the end its also proven forged like most of those false myths which we were having as an optimistic nation, yes I am talking about the veracity of free media in Pakistan which has been recently busted as a sequel of past, so cannot be consider as... Read more...
Image

The Case Against Religion

Sunday, 15 August 2010

Before we can talk sensibly about religion – or almost anything else – we should give some kind of definition of what we are talking about. Let me, therefore, start with what I think are some legitimate definitions of the term religion. Other concepts of this term, of... Read more...
Image

Social Media and Islam

Sunday, 15 August 2010

Wikipedia is the sum all human knowledge ever acquired; this is what Jimmy Wales thinks, but it’s not necessary that over one billion Muslims of the planet consent him, a Pakistani lawyer named Muhammad Azhar Sidiqque has petitioned the nation’s highest court to charge the... Read more...
Image

Politics of Alarm

Sunday, 15 August 2010

Through the length and breadth of the country, a chorus of troubled voices is sounding the alarm on Balochistan. Asked to comment on this mounting sense of panic, a senior army officer told The Friday Times: “This is mere alarmism. Alarmists have succeeded in creating a sense... Read more...
Dishonored killings PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 03 January 2010 09:28

Malik Siraj AkbarBalochistan does not have a vibrant middle class nor does it have an active civil society. The media are too restricted and operate unprofessionally with the intention not to offend the government and the tribal chiefs. Perhaps it is this reason that Balochistan is absolutely quite even after the barbaric killing of four women in different incidents in a period of barely one week. Women have been killed brutally by their own close family members in Balochistan’s districts located on the Sindh border on suspicion of having illicit relations with other men. The wired justification given for these reprehensible murders is the “family honor” that is presumably compromised by the “immoral girls”.

In a fresh incident of on December 31st, a man, Nazar Muhammad, a resident of Gott Essa Khan Umrani in Dera Murad Jamali of Naseerabad district, gunned down his wife, Sodhi Bibi, after he suspected her of having “illegitimate relations” with his cousin Muhammad Hayat. He shot both of them down. Another woman was killed in the same district near Rabbi Canal area due to some domestic differences.

On January 1, 2010, A resident of Gott Boral in Dera Allah Yar killed his wife on similar charges of having secrete relations with some men. There was also a confirmed report about a man who killed his wife in Naseerabad last three days ago in an absolutely similar case.

The society in Balochistan has remained a silent viewer of such cases. Talking about the murder of women on the name of honor is still widely considered taboo while those who speak a word of sympathy for the victims of such killings are by and large branded as “shameless” people who oppose the “deserving death punishment” for a girl who brings shame to the name of her resepctful family.

Balochistan came under media trial last year when the issue of five women being allegedly buried alive by influential Umrani tribal elders  was raised by the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) and several media outlets in the country. Instead of punishing the masterminds of the inhuman killings, the attention of the society was cleverly diverted by apply different tactics. For example, the issue was very clearly put under the carpet after it was said that only three, not five, girls had been killed. The others added that they were not “buried alive” but “only killed”. Thus, the controversy revolved around “five versus three” and “burying alive versus killing with sharp tools”

In the meanwhile, everyone was stunned when Senator Israrullah Zehri, the central president of the Balochistan National Party (BNP-Awami) defended the killing of five or three girls on the floor of the Senate of Pakistan by saying that this (killing of women on the name of honor) was a Baloch tradition. While this statement sparked a wave of criticism from bodies striving for the rights of women, a former chief minister of Balochistan and the Deputy Chairman of Senate, Mir Jan Mohammad Jamli, also supported Senator Israr Zehri’s stance. He expressed anger over the fact that “outsiders” were “interfering” in “our deep-rooted cultural practices”.

Like wise, when Balochistan Governor Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi was asked about the practice of killing of women on the name of honor, he said in an interview with Samaa TV that this practice indeed existed in Balochistan. He refused to condemn it even though the interviewer asked him three times if he condemned such practices.

The men of patriarchal Baloch society still defend such cases under various pretexts.

As a matter of fact, the issue of target killing women can not be described as something related to Baloch traditions because women are not killed in any other district of Balochistan under such excuses. Barring Naseerabad, Jaffarabad and Jhal Magsi districts, no other district in Balochistan exercises such embarrassing practices. Many people in the area say killing women on the name of honor has become a “profitable business” in these three districts. For example “A” accuses “B” (both males) of having illicit relations with his wife, say “C”. In order to assure the community of his truthfulness, he kills his wife i.e. “C” but spares “B”, with whom his wife has alleged relations. Thus, “A” demands a hefty amount of money and agricultural lands from “B” as a settlement of the dispute. So this could rightly be billed as killing for gaining economic benefits not to restore one’s honor. There are definitely other reasons as well for this inhuman practice.

Statistics available confirm that more women are killed than men on the name of honor. According to one report by Abid Aziz Baloch, a journalist of the Urdu newspaper, Daily Jang, Quetta, 47 people were killed in cases of honor killing in Nasirabad, Jaffarabad, Derea Bugti and Jhal Magsi. Among the victims, 26 were women and 21 were men.

Daily Times, while quoting sources of the Aurat Foundation (AF), said that around 600 cases of violence against women were reported in 2008 in Balochistan, which included the murder of 89 women in the first nine months of the year.

“At least 115 women were murdered in cases of honor killing. The reported cases included 255 incidents of women being subjected to domestic violence,” said the Daily Times report.

It added that the people were unwilling to discuss the violence as a majority of Balochistan people justified such acts in the name of tradition. “In some other cases, violence against women in rural areas remains unreported in media because of inaccessibility of the area as well as the dominance of men in society, who believe the publication of reports of violence against women amounts to the disrepute of their respective tribes,” it observed.

Statistics about violence against women in Balochistan are shocking. There is a need for changing people’s attitudes towards women in the parts of the province where girls are killed on the name of so-called family honor. Since God has given every individual the right to live a life, no one has the right to finish the other person’s life under any pretext. The recent murders of women in Balochistan should come as an indictment to the non-governmental organizations that spend handsome amounts arranging seminars and workshops in posh venues but fail to raise their voice in response to such tragic incidents.

On its part, the government should also take strict notice of the recent killings of women in Balochistan by some greedy men who justify their acts under the name of “family honor”. These are acts of dishonored killings which should stop at once. Men responsible for killing women should be granted capital punishment so that every woman feels secure under the law.

 

By Malik Siraj Akbar

Courtesy TheBaluchHal.com

 
Share |

SCI TECH

Image

First 'intelligent' stamp launched

Friday, 03 September 2010

Royal Mail will launch the world's first 'intelligent' stamp Royal Mail is due to launch the world's first... Read more...
Image

RIM 'must reveal Blackberry data'

Friday, 03 September 2010

BlackBerry maker RIM should make their customer data available to law enforcement agencies, the UN telecomms chief said ... Read more...

AMAZING

Image

Introducing R2-D2′s Cousin, the In...

Monday, 06 September 2010

Japanese techno-gurus have engineered an intelligent toilet that swallows up poop and pee, provides a free drug test... Read more...
Image

Carpenter Ants and Fossilized Mind C...

Sunday, 05 September 2010

This is the unlikely story of a fungus in Thailand that has seemingly magical powers.  Far away from their origins in... Read more...

HEALTH

Image

Foods that make you beautiful

Thursday, 19 August 2010

Rex Features We spend so long coating ourselves in serums, lotions and potions we sometimes... Read more...
Image

Are you destined to inherit your mot...

Sunday, 15 August 2010

PAGenes are a huge factor in determining your body shape and propensity to put on weight. A 1990s study of identical... Read more...
Home Opinion Dishonored killings
Copyright © 2010. Taqaza.com. Part of Naxaf LLC