Close X
Sunday, December 22, 2024
ADVT 
International

Pakistan court pardons murderer of famous singer Ghazala Javed

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 23 May, 2014 01:54 PM
    A Pakistani high court has granted pardon to the husband of the singer Ghazala Javed, who had killed her two years ago after he was forgiven by the family, media reported Friday.
     
    The husband was sentenced to death in December last year.
     
    The young artist had become a symbol of women's resistance and the music of the Pashtun community in the face of fundamentalism, so her murder and that of her father generated much anger in the Asian country.
     
    According to local media, the lawyers of the murderer presented documents in the high court of the northwestern city of Peshawar Thursday confirming that the mother and siblings of the singer had reached an agreement according the Islamic law of 'diyat'.
     
    This tradition, also known as 'blood money', states that a criminal can be pardoned even after being sentenced for violent crimes if the victim's family comes to an agreement to forgive him, normally in exchange for money.
     
    The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) recently criticised this rule which encourages the persistence of the so-called honour crimes that last year cost the lives of some 900 Pakistani women, according to official records.
     
    The young singer, who was 24 years old, was shot dead along with her father by some unidentified assailants in June 2012 while she was leaving a beauty salon in Peshawar.
     
    Right from the start, the police suspected her husband of being behind the murder.
     
    According to local media, her husband forced Ghazala to stop performing after marriage because of which she expressed her intention to divorce him.
     
    Women engaging in public activity violates the strict moral code prevailing in a large part of Pakistan.
     
    A judge from the district of Swat to which Ghazala belonged pronounced the death sentence for her husband after it was proved that the accused was behind the shooting that also wounded the artiste's sister.
     
    Ghazala had to flee from the Swat region to the nearby city of Peshawar after being threatened by Islamist radicals.
     
    She got married there in 2011.
     
    Before her death, Ghazala had gained popularity with television appearances and a dozen albums that earned her recognition from the artist community of the Pashtun language.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    North Korea defends racist slurs against Obama

    North Korea defends racist slurs against Obama
    North Korea Monday defended recent racist slurs, including "evil black monkey", fired off at US President Barack Obama through its state media.

    North Korea defends racist slurs against Obama

    EU broadens sanctions for Ukraine crisis

    EU broadens sanctions for Ukraine crisis
    The European Union (EU) Monday added 13 people to the list of those subject to targeted sanctions for alleged actions "undermining Ukraine's territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence".

    EU broadens sanctions for Ukraine crisis

    Ukraine crisis: Russia warns Europe of gas supply risk

    Ukraine crisis: Russia warns Europe of gas supply risk
    The ongoing Russia-Ukraine stand-off may jeopardise natural gas supplies to the European countries despite Moscow's efforts to abide by contracts, a senior official said Monday.

    Ukraine crisis: Russia warns Europe of gas supply risk

    India-born Hinduja brothers emerge richest in Britain

    India-born Hinduja brothers emerge richest in Britain
    India-born Hinduja brothers, Srichand and Gopichand Hinduja, have emerged as the richest men in Britain with a net wealth of 11.9 billion pounds (about $20 billion), according to a report.

    India-born Hinduja brothers emerge richest in Britain

    Taslima diagnosed with breast tumours in US

    Taslima diagnosed with breast tumours in US
    Exiled Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen has been diagnosed with breast tumours at a hospital in New York. Doctors found the tumours "quite big" and advised her biopsy to check on possible malignancy, bdnews24.com reported.

    Taslima diagnosed with breast tumours in US

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored
    The last time this happened was 37 years ago when citizens' groups stood guard outside the rooms where the boxes containing the ballots cast in the 1977 general election - after the emergency was lifted - were stored. 

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored