The National - News

FAMILY SEEK JUSTICE FOR WOMAN TORTURED AND KILLED IN DISPUTE

▶ Killing, allegedly by her husband, turns spotlight on Pakistan’s bride-exchange custom

- HAROON JANJUA Islamabad

The family of a pregnant woman who was tortured and beaten to death in Pakistan revealed that she was reluctant to return to her husband’s home in the weeks before her death.

Wazeeran Bibi’s killing in the Jamshoro district of southern Sindh province on June 28 sparked an outcry online. Her body was dumped by the side of a motorway, the family and police told The National.

Police say the killing was linked to the practice of watta satta – literally meaning give and take – wherein Bibi was matched with her husband Ali Bux in exchange for an agreement her younger brother would later marry into Bux’s family.

Police said when the deal began to go awry, 30-year-old Bibi was murdered by her husband and accomplice­s.

“The killers pretended it was an accident and the body was unrecognis­able with severe head and face injuries,” said Police Inspector Rasool Bakhsh Sheikh, who is investigat­ing the death.

A postmortem report seen by The National indicates Bibi died after “lethal injuries to the brain and face caused by a hard and blunt substance”, leading to accusation­s she was stoned to death. Bibi was eight weeks pregnant at the time of her death, the report said.

“I need the same punishment for the murderer, and all who killed my innocent daughter should be hanged. If we do not get justice then we will take revenge by ourselves,” Bibi’s father Gul Mohammad told The National.

“My daughter’s body was fully injured and her face was unrecognis­able and women who bathed her for the last rites could not bear the scenes and fainted. It takes courage to see such a brutally injured body. It’s like our blood has flown down in river Indus,” Mr Mohammad said.

The case caught the attention of social media users after a video showing Mr Mohammad, a livestock worker by profession, sobbing at his daughter’s graveside and begging for justice was posted on Twitter and viewed 150,000 times.

Social media users created a hashtag, #JusticeFor­WaziranCha­char, to demand accountabi­lity and raise awareness of violence related to the practice of watta satta.

Inspector Sheikh said Bibi’s husband Ali Bux and his elder brother Kareem Bux had been arrested, but a third suspect, Abdul Qadir, is on the run. Police said the investigat­ion would take some time.

In Pakistan’s conservati­ve interior and southern regions of Sindh and Punjab the exchange of girls between two families is a common tribal practice.

In 2015, surveys published in the Open Journal of Social Sciences found that 92 per cent of respondent­s in southern Punjab who were married by watta satta were wedded to cousins.

Numerous studies and reports have found such exchanges often lead to violence being meted out against the women exchanged.

Bibi married five years ago on the condition that her brother Javed, who was 8 years old that time, would marry Ali Bux’s niece, Zaira, who was then only 5 years old.

When the time came for Javed, now 13, and Zaira, now 10, to wed, the Bux family refused to hand the little girl over. The resulting row between the families led to Bibi’s father bringing her back to the family home and Mr Bux threatenin­g to divorce Bibi, Allah Waraya, a family member of Bibi’s, told The National.

The dispute was later settled by local chieftain Mohammad Ilyas in a jirga – assembly of local leaders – and Bibi was sent back to her husband.

Mr Waraya said that Bibi expressed her concerns about returning to the relationsh­ip and to her husband’s family.

“Just two weeks before her murder, Bibi, the eldest among six siblings, told her concerns to her mother Meer, saying ‘my husband and brother-in-law Kareem Bux are threatenin­g me and please don’t demand a girl for Javed, it will ruin my life’,” said Mr Waraya.

Activists have long campaigned against the practice of watta satta because of the threat of retaliatio­n and violence under this type of marriage settlement.

It is a widespread issue – a survey conducted by Rutgers World Population Foundation in 2013 found that more than 77 per cent of marriages in Pakistan were settled under customary practices such as watta satta and 66 per cent of married women had experience­d violence in their marriage.

“The issue and the reason for the murder of Ms Bibi is not yet clear, but it is obvious that crime against women has reached such a brutal level that killers haven’t spared single part of her body to be mutilated,” said Amar Sindhu, a women’s rights activist in Sindh.

Mrs Sindhu said women were not protected at the family, police and judicial levels, and predicted the suspected killers would be released on bail soon. “This case has shown misogyny at work in many layers of society,” she said.

Bibi, who was eight weeks pregnant, died after ‘injuries to the brain and face caused by a hard and blunt substance’

 ??  ?? Wazeeran Bibi’s death on June 28 sparked an outcry online
Wazeeran Bibi’s death on June 28 sparked an outcry online

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