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Sunday 29 June 2014

Young Pakistani Couple Tied Up And Have Their Throats Slit By The Girls Dad For Marrying Without Permission


Brutal: The 17-year-old girl and 31-year-old man married without the consent of their families in eastern Pakistan's Punjabi village of Satrah, police said. They were lured to a home and then killed by the girl's mother 

A father killed his newlywed teenage daughter and her husband by slitting their throats with scythes after they married without their families consent, police have said.

The 17-year-old girl and 31-year-old man were lured home by the girl's mother and father with the promise that their marriage would receive a family blessing.

However, when they reached the home they were attacked and killed.



Local police official Rana Zashid said: "When the couple reached there, they tied them with ropes. He (the girl’s father) cut their throats."

DailyMirror Reports:


The couple married on June 18 without the consent of their families in eastern Pakistan’s Punjabi village of Satrah.

Police arrested the family, who said they had been embarrassed by the marriage of their daughter, named Muafia Hussein, to a man from a less important tribe.
Cultural traditions in many areas of Pakistan mean that killing a woman whose behaviour is seen as immodest is widely accepted.



Remote: The pair where killed in a rural area near Gujranwala in eastern Pakstan
The community where the couple where killed 



Immodest behaviour that sparked recent killings included singing, looking out of the window or talking to a man who is not a relative. For a woman to marry a man of her own choice is considered an unacceptable insult by many families.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said 869 so-called "honour killings" were reported in the media last year - several a day.

But the true figure is probably much higher since many cases are never reported.

The weak Pakistani government, battling with a troubled economy and a Taliban insurgency, does not collect centralized statistics and has no strategy to combat the killings.

Pakistani law means that even if a woman’s killer is convicted, her family are able to forgive the killer.

Many families simply nominate a member to do the killing, then formally forgive the killer.



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