Reports about another horrific event involving violence against women surfaced on Sunday in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Kohistan region, where an 18-year-old woman who was seen in a photo with a local man met a gruesome fate.
Police reported that after images of the woman went viral on social media, a local jirga allegedly ordered her death and she was shot dead inside her home. There are reports that a second woman was also seen in viral photos with the same man and she had been handed over to her family by a local court.
While details remain murky, Aaj News has been attempting to gather information from this remote region known for tribal tradition and secretive honour-killing business.
Kohistan is known for its tribal traditions and closely guarded secrets. A similar incident was reported here in 2012 when up to five girls were killed after their videos with local men went viral. The entire episode of the so-called honour killings was so secretive that a probe spanning several years could not determine how many girls were murdered. In 2018, there were claims that two of the five girls were alive.
The latest incident also remains shrouded in mystery. Aaj News has compiled the following information from various sources.
Kolai-Palas was part of Kohistan district until 2017 when it was carved out as a separate administrative unit. The two girls who were seen in the viral photos are from the Barshriyal village of Kolai-Palas.
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Earlier, a similar case that took place in May 2012 in Palas Valley, Kohistan, involved the honour killing of up to five girls, of whom a video had emerged on the internet. The video featured a boy dancing while four girls clapped and sang along.
It is claimed that, when the footage became public, a tribal jirga was held shortly afterwards where it was decided that the participants as well as the boy who filmed the video should be killed.
Despite campaigns by rights groups and laws in the country, such killings are frequently carried out over perceived offenses such as elopement, fraternization with men outside marriage, or other violations of religious and cultural values on female modesty.
In Pakistan, hundreds of women fall prey to honor killings each year, which are committed by relatives claiming to be defending the honor of the family.