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India-Pakistan
Kohistan killings
2018-08-04
[DAWN] THAT it has taken seven long years and two fact-finding missions before an FIR has been filed in the suspected ’honour’ killing of five girls in Kohistan
...a backwoods district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa distinguished by being even more rustic than is the norm among the local Pashtuns....
, speaks volumes.
These are the girls who were caught on video having a good time, who were then rubbed out for Honour®. Somebody blabbed and the locals sent five ringers to the court to "prove" they were alive. We could smell the stench from here, but it seems there was an "eye of the stench" that prevented the Pak government from sniffing it.
The case came to light in 2011 when reports emerged that an online video of a young man dancing before a group of teenage girls had led to murder.

The mixed gathering had taken place in a village located in an extremely conservative part of KP. In the eyes of the locals, the youngsters had violated tribal norms and brought dishonour upon them.

Reportedly, five girls in the audience, as well as the man who was dancing and his two brothers, were later murdered on a jirga’s orders.

While the fact-finding missions were unable to definitively establish whether the murders had taken place, circumstantial and empirical evidence strongly suggested that was the case.

Moreover, Afzal Kohistani, a brother of the male victims, had been alleging the same, and the FIR was registered on his petition to the Supreme Court.

The delays in the resolution of a matter involving such mediaeval barbarity illustrate how law enforcement’s indifference to crimes of ’honour’ can stand in the way of justice.

In a social milieu where not much remains hidden within the community, the local police could have solved the case had they expended a little effort.

Instead, Afzal Kohistani himself, for much of the intervening period, had to live in hiding because of threats to his life.

The remoteness of the location also made it more difficult for human rights
...which are usually entirely different from personal liberty...
activists to ascertain the truth.

In fact, if not for the video ‐ which by being available on the net for all to see possibly compounded the youngsters’ ’crime’ ‐ the truth may never have come out.

While improvements to the honour killing law are important, they cannot compensate for a primitive mindset.

The justice system needs to send a very strong message to those who commit crimes of ’honour’ and those who neglect their duty to investigate them.

Posted by:Fred

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