ISLAMABAD — Despite objections from religious hard-liners, lawmakers Thursday took the first significant move to curb mounting numbers of “honor” killings in Pakistan, stiffening the penalties and closing a loophole that allowed such killers to go free.
Public outrage has been growing in Pakistan in the wake of a string of particularly gruesome slayings.
More than 1,000 women were killed last year in so-called honor killings in Pakistan, often by fathers, brothers or husbands who believed the victims had tainted the family name by marrying the man of her choice — or even meeting or being seen sitting with a man.
Those who carry out such killings are almost never punished. In accordance with Islamic Shariah law, Pakistan’s legal code since the 1990s has allowed families of victims to forgive the killer. Since the killers in these cases are usually close relatives, the family almost always forgives them.
The measure passed Thursday imposes a mandatory 25-year prison sentence for anyone convicted of killing in the name of honor and bans family members from forgiving them.
Relatives can only forgive an honor killer who has been condemned to death, in which case the sentence is commuted to prison.
Activists and liberal opposition members who backed the law said it was a step in the right direction, although they said it should have gone further to eliminate forgiveness.
“Remove these clauses which allow the option of forgiveness, otherwise these killings will keep happening,” warned Sherry Rehman, an opposition legislator and fierce champion of women’s rights in a speech to parliament.
She pointed to the Oscar-winning documentary “Girl in the River” that told the story of a girl who survived an attempt by her uncle and father to kill her but then was forced to forgive them.
“We should be ashamed. We should all be ashamed. You should all be ashamed,” she said of the forgiveness provisions. The film prompted Pakistan’s conservative Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to promise legislation to end the practice.
Only about a third of the 446 lawmakers attended the session, but debate was raucous, with the loudest opposition coming from hard-line Islamists.
Conservative Sen. Hafiz Hamdullah said parliament should instead address elopements by women, claiming 17,000 had done so since 2014. “Why don’t we see what are the reasons behind such killings? Why are girls eloping from their homes?” he said.
Speaking later to The Associated Press, he echoed a stance taken by many hard-liners that the law is bringing Western-style independence for women. “They are trying to impose Western culture over here. We will not allow (it),” he said. “We will impose the law that our holy Quran and Sunnah (tradition) say.”
Honor killings are rooted in traditions by which a family’s honor is bound up with a woman’s chastity. Such killings often are met with acceptance, even approval, by neighbors and relatives.
A man who killed his sister for marrying without family approval described how his co-workers taunted him relentlessly, even telling him he should kill her.
But public outrage over the practice has also been growing as proliferating TV channels and more access to social media have lifted the secrecy that once surrounded the killings.
In recent months, a social media celebrity, Qandeel Baluch was choked to death by her brother; a mother, with the help of her son, strangled and set fire to her daughter because she married the boy of her dreams; a teenage girl was tied up in a car and set ablaze on orders of tribal leaders because she helped a friend elope.
