Gulf News

Qandeel Baloch killed by brother

SHE WAS STRANGLED IN SUSPECTED HONOUR KILLING, POLICE SAY

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Pakistan’s social media star, model and actress is strangled in suspected honour killing

A Pakistani social media celebrity, actor and model whose selfies polarised the deeply conservati­ve Muslim country has been murdered by her brother in a suspected honour killing, officials said yesterday, prompting shock and revulsion.

Qandeel Baloch, praised by many of the country’s youth for her willingnes­s to break social taboos but condemned by conservati­ves, was strangled near the city of Multan, police said.

“Qandeel Baloch has been killed, she was strangled to death by her brother. Apparently it was an incident of honour killing,” Sultan Azam, senior police officer in Multan, told AFP.

Baloch, believed to be in her twenties and whose real name was Fauzia Azeem, had travelled with her family to Muzzafarab­ad village in central Punjab province for the recent Eid holiday.

She was killed there Friday, police said, adding that the brother, Wasim, was now on the run.

Up to 100 officers were gathered outside her family’s home in Muzzafarab­ad, an AFP reporter there said. Five ambulances were also parked nearby.

“My daughter was innocent, we are innocent, we want justice, why was my daughter killed?” Baloch’s father Azeem Ahmad told reporters there.

Police later registered a murder case against her brother based on her father’s written complaint, in which he accused his son of killing his daughter for honour because “his son wanted her to quit showbiz”.

Hundreds of women are murdered for “honour” every year in Pakistan.

The killers overwhelmi­ngly walk free because of a law that allows the family of the victim to forgive the murderer — who is often also a relative.

Filmmaker Sharmeemn Obaid-Chinoy, whose documentar­y on honour killings won an Oscar earlier this year, slammed Baloch’s murder as symptomati­c of an “epidemic” of violence against women in Pakistan.

News trending

News of the murder was trending on social media in Pakistan, with liberal users praising Baloch’s bravery, but some conservati­ves — including users identified as women — condemning her relentless self-promotion.

In one typical comment, Twitter user @JiaAli wrote: “Someone had to do it. She was a disgrace.”

But Facebook user Zaair Hussain said: “RIP Qandeel Baloch. You made us laugh, and you made us applaud,” adding that history would remember her as a “provocateu­r”.

Baloch shot to fame in Pakistan in 2014 after a video of her pouting at the camera and asking “How em looking?” went viral.

Baloch provoked controvers­y last month after posing for selfies with a high-profile cleric, who was sternly rebuked by the country’s religious affairs ministry.

Earlier this year she vowed to perform a striptease if Pakistan’s cricket team beat India at the World T20, though they later lost.

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 ?? Reuters ?? Social media celebrity Qandeel Baloch, who was strangled in what appeared to be an honour killing, in Multan, is pictured in a selfie on her Facebook page.
Reuters Social media celebrity Qandeel Baloch, who was strangled in what appeared to be an honour killing, in Multan, is pictured in a selfie on her Facebook page.

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