Islamabad, Pakistan -- Relatives of a pregnant
woman beat her to death with bricks near a court building in eastern Pakistan
after she married a man against their will, authorities said.
Farzana Parveen, 25, was
attacked Tuesday close to the high court in Lahore by a group of about 20
people, including her brothers, father and cousin, police said.
One family member made a
noose of rough cloth around her neck while her brothers smashed bricks into her
skull, said Mushtaq Ahmed, a police official, citing the preliminary report
into the killing. She was three months pregnant, he said.
What had Parveen, who came
from a village in Punjab, done to provoke such a brutal attack?
Police officials said she
had refused to wed the cousin whom her family had selected for her, choosing
instead to elope with a widower named Mohammad Iqbal.
The cousin her family wanted
her to marry was among the people who attacked her, police said.
The family had challenged
her marriage to Iqbal in the courts, accusing him of abducting her. The attack
took place as Parveen was on her way from her lawyer's office headed to the
high court in Lahore, where she was expected to make a declaration that she had
married Iqbal of her own volition.
So-called honor killings
often originate from tribal traditions in Pakistan, but are not a part of
Islam. Although they're common in rural areas, Tuesday's attack in a public
area of a big city was unusual.
One of Pakistan's leading
newspapers, The Nation, expressed outrage over Parveen's killing .
"The familiar brand of
barbaric 'justice' yet again triumphs over the written law of the land,"
it said in an editorial Wednesday. "Another case is settled
outside the courts. Another woman, in search of justice, stoned to death, in
the name of honor."
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