Pakistani star’s brother ‘not embarrassed’ by killing her

Wasim (R), the brother of slain social media celebrity Qandeel Baloch, is escorted by police following his arrest for Qandeel's death in Multan early on July 17, 2016.  A Pakistani social media celebrity whose selfies polarised the deeply conservative Muslim country has been murdered by her brother in a suspected honour killing, officials said July 16, prompting shock and revulsion. / AFP PHOTO / SS MIRZA

 

Multan / AFP

The brother of a murdered Pakistani celebrity said Sunday he is “not embarrassed” to have killed her, as Qandeel Baloch’s death reignited polarising calls for action against the “epidemic” of honour killings.
The strangling of Baloch, judged as infamous by many in deeply conservative Muslim Pakistan for selfies and videos that by Western standards would appear tame, has prompted a wave of shock and revulsion.
Her brother Muhammad Wasim was arrested late Saturday, Multan City police chief Azhar Akram told AFP, and confessed to drugging then strangling her “for honour”.
“Yes of course, I strangled her,” Wasim told reporters at a defiant press conference, organised by police, early Sunday. “She was on the ground floor while our parents were asleep on the roof top,” he continued. “It was around 10.45 pm when I gave her a tablet… and then killed her.”
Wasim said he acted alone.
“I am not embarrassed at all over what I did,” he said. “Whatever was the case, it (his sister’s behaviour) was completely intolerable.”
Baloch, believed to be in her twenties and whose real name was Fauzia Azeem, rose to fame for her provocative Facebook posts that saw her praised by some for breaking social taboos but booed by conservatives.
She was killed on Friday night at her family’s home near Multan. Wasim went on the run and was arrested late Saturday in neighbouring Muzaffargarh district.
Hundreds of women are murdered for “honour” every year in Pakistan.
The killers overwhelmingly walk free because of a law that allows the family of the victim to forgive the murderer — who is often also a relative. Filmmaker Sharmeemn Obaid-Chinoy, whose documentary on honour killings won an Oscar earlier this year, slammed Baloch’s murder as symptomatic of an “epidemic” of violence against women in Pakistan.
She joined other liberals in Pakistan who called for anti-honour killing legislation. “Activists have screamed themselves hoarse,” she said. “When will it stop?”

Face of honour killings
in Pakistan
Some of Baloch’s more notorious acts included volunteering to perform a striptease for the Pakistani cricket team, and donning a plunging scarlet dress on Valentine’s Day.
She also posed for selfies with a high-profile mullah in an incident that saw him swiftly rebuked by the country’s religious affairs ministry.
She told local media she had received death threats in the wake of the controversy, and that her requests for protection from authorities had been ignored.
Baloch’s funeral was held early Sunday near her family home in southern Punjab.
A vigil held late Saturday in Lahore was attended by dozens of mourners, while an online petition entitled “No Country for Bold Women” and demanding accountability over her death had gone viral by Sunday with hundreds of signatures.
Baloch was seen by some as empowered in a country where women have fought for their rights for decades. “Qandeel was an extremely astute individual who knew that what she was doing was more than being the most loved bad girl of Pakistan” columnist and activist Aisha Sarawari said.

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