Brothers who murdered their sister, ‘Pakistan’s Kim Kardashian’, in an ‘honour killing’ over her sexual social media posts could walk free after their parents forgave them.
Waseem Baloch strangled his sister Qandeel, 26, to death at their home in 2016, claiming her risque photos and videos had ‘brought dishonour to the Baloch name.’
Her other brother Aslam Shaheen is also before the court at Multan, in Punjab, although his role is not clear.
An affidavit submitted today by the Baloch parents asked that the court throw out the case and that they had forgiven their sons.
The affidavit argues that anti-honour killing legislation was brought in months after Qandeel was murdered and therefore should not be applied in her case, Dawn reported.
Qandeel was strangled in July 2016, weeks after she had posed for pictures in a hotel room with high-profile Muslim cleric Mufti Abdul Qavi.
He was sacked from his position on a government committee and rebuked by a religious affairs council after Qandeel released images of her wearing his hat and pouting.
She later called Qavi a ‘blot on the name of Islam’ and accused him of inappropriate behaviour.
She said at the time: ‘I thought I would expose him as he is in reality. He is a different person alone and different when he has his followers around him.’
Some of Qandeel’s more notorious acts included offering to perform a striptease for the Pakistani cricket team, and donning a plunging scarlet dress on Valentine’s Day.
However, her raunchy videos were tame by Western standards and most pop stars can be found in far more provocative poses.
Initially dismissed as a Kardashian-like figure, she was seen by some, including many young people, as empowered in a country where women have fought for their rights for decades.
Her murder reignited calls for action against an epidemic of so-called ‘honour killings’, in which a victim is killed by a close relative – who can subsequently be pardoned by another family member under Pakistan law.
In October 2016, the parliament in Islamabad passed The Anti-Honour Killing Laws which removed the defence of pardoning by a family member.
It mandates life imprisonment, although leaves to the judge’s discretion whether to deem it ‘a crime of honour.’
The Baloch parents have previously attempted to have the case thrown out, but last time they appealed, the judge cited the anti-honour killing law.
This despite the father, Mohammad Azeem vowing to never forgive the murderers in the days after Qandeel’s death.
‘There is no pardon from our side,’ the father had said, ‘They should get life imprisonment or death – I will feel happy.’
Qandeel’s brother Waseem told a press conference in the days after the killing that he had no remorse over what he did, saying that ‘of course’ he had murdered his sister and adding that her behaviour had been ‘intolerable.’