Mohammad Iqbal sits next to his wife
Farzana's body, who was killed by family members, in an ambulance
outside of a morgue in Lahore May 27, 2014.
Credit: Reuters/Mohsin Raza
(Reuters) - A
25-year-old woman was stoned to death by her family outside one of
Pakistan's top courts on Tuesday in a so-called "honor" killing for
marrying the man she loved, police said.
Farzana Iqbal was
waiting for the High Court in the eastern city of Lahore to open when a
group of around dozen men began attacking her with bricks, said Umer
Cheema, a senior police officer.
Her
father, two brothers and former fiance were among the attackers, he
said. Iqbal suffered severe head injuries and was pronounced dead in
hospital, police said.
All
the suspects except her father escaped. He admitted killing his
daughter, Cheema said, and explained it was a matter of honor. Many
Pakistani families think a woman marrying her own choice of man brings
dishonor on the family.
Iqbal
had been engaged to her cousin but married another man, Cheema said.
Her family registered a kidnapping case against him but Iqbal had come
to court to argue that she had married of her own free will, he said.
Around
1,000 Pakistani women are killed every year by their families in honor
killings, according to Pakistani rights group the Aurat Foundation.
The
true figure is probably many times higher since the Aurat Foundation
only compiles figures from newspaper reports. The government does not
compile national statistics.
Campaigners
say few cases come to court, and those that do can take years to be
heard. No one tracks how many cases are successfully prosecuted.
Even
those that do result in a conviction may end with the killers walking
free. Pakistani law allows a victim's family to forgive their killer.
But
in honor killings, most of the time the women's killers are her family,
said Wasim Wagha of the Aurat Foundation. The law allows them to
nominate someone to do the murder, then forgive him.
"This is a huge flaw in the law," he said. "We are really struggling on this issue."
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