ISLAMABAD: Parliamentary Secretary for Law Maleeka Bokhari has said the Pakistani state is “reviewing options” in light of laws and court judgments in the murder case of social media star Qandeel Baloch, whose brother was acquitted by the Lahore High Court (LHC) this week.
Qandeel Baloch was strangled to death in 2016 by her brother Muhammad Waseem, who described her suggestive behavior on social media as “intolerable.”
Waseem walked free on Saturday after a court ruled it was not an “honor killing,” lawyers said, allowing their mother to pardon him.
In response to public outrage over the murder, Pakistan passed legislation supposedly closing a legal loophole that allowed family members to forgive those behind so-called “honor killings,” imposing a mandatory life sentence instead.
But after less than six years in prison, an appeal judge ruled that Baloch’s murder could not be defined as a crime of honor, dismissing his confession.
In line with Pakistan’s other laws on murder, the mother was allowed to grant his freedom.
“The state is undertaking a review of legal options in the Qandeel Baloch case in light of law & SC (supreme court) judgments,” Bokhari wrote on Twitter.
The State is undertaking a review of legal options in the Qandeel Baloch case in light of law & SC judgments. Honour killings of women & girls is a black mark on our society. Law was amended to ensure murderer of women, whether a 'celebrity' or ordinary woman does not walk free
— Maleeka Bokhari (@MalBokhari) February 19, 2022
She called “honor killings” a black mark on society and said the law had been amended to “ensure murderer[s] of women — whether a celebrity or ordinary woman — does not walk free.”
The National Commission on the Status of Women (NCSW) has also announced plans to appeal the verdict before the Supreme Court on Wednesday.
Earlier, Pakistan’s information minister Chaudhry Fawad Hussain had said the government will challenge the verdict at Pakistan’s top court.
“We as a nation should be ashamed of such (legal) system,” Hussain said on Twitter.
Baloch became famous for her flirty and defiant posts which flew in the face of the nation’s conservative mores.
Waseem was arrested immediately after her death and later sentenced to life in prison for strangling her — brazenly telling the media he had no remorse.
The case became the most high-profile “honor killing” of recent years — where women are dealt lethal punishment by male relatives for purportedly bringing “shame” to the reputation of a family.
The court’s verdict published on Friday said he had been “acquitted from the case on the basis of compromise,” saying a confession from the killer “cannot be considered more than a piece of paper.”
In Baloch’s case, her parents initially insisted their son would be given no absolution, but they later changed their minds and said they wanted him to be forgiven.
A lawyer for the mother said she had given “her consent” to pardon him.