Brother of ‘Pakistan’s Kim Kardashian’ acquitted after he murdered her in ‘honour killing’ for bringing shame on their family by being a feminist

Brother of ‘Pakistan’s Kim Kardashian’ acquitted after he murdered her in ‘honour killing’ for bringing shame on their family by being a feminist

The brother of a social media star known as ‘Pakistan’s Kim Kardashian’ has been acquitted of her murder less than three years after being convicted.

 

Qandeel Baloch, 26, whose real name was Fauzia Azeem, was strangled to death in 2016 with her brother later found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison.

 

Brother of

 

Muhammad Waseem claimed at the time of his sister’s death that she had brought shame on their family for challenging traditional views of women.

 

Brother of

 

Waseem was jailed in September 2019. However, less than three years after, his defence lawyer Sardar Mehboob said on Monday, Feb. 14, that “he has been fully acquitted” by an appeals court in Multan.

 

Waseem’s release comes after major witnesses retracted their testimony, the attorney explained.

 

The killer never showed remorse for his sister’s death, nor did his parents hold it against him.

 

Brother of

 

Waseem explained he ended his self-proclaimed “modern-day feminist” sister’s life because her actions online were “intolerable”.

 

Baloch faced misogynistic abuse and death threats for her feminism but defiantly shared content she believed in as she tried to change “the typical orthodox mindset” of people in Pakistan.

 

Her murder sent shockwaves across the country, sparking a tightening of laws so killers could not simply be spared jail because their victim’s family forgave them.

 

A government prosecutor also confirmed the acquittal. He is expected to be released later this week, Agence France-Presse reported.

 

Waseem and Qandeel Baloch mum’s lawyer, Safdar Shah, said she had given “her consent” to pardon Waseem but it has not been confirmed that her approval sanctioned Waseem’s freedom.

 

Waseem’s acquittal has outraged women’s rights campaigners in Pakistan.

 

Biographer Sanam Maher, who wrote ‘A Woman Like Her: The Short Life of Qandeel Baloch’, said: “Waseem may now walk free while Qandeel was condemned for stepping outside the bounds of what is deemed ‘acceptable’ behaviour for women in Pakistan.”

 

Lawyer and activist Nighat Dad said on Twitter: “This man who confessed of killing Qandeel, his own sister, is a free man today in the same country where Qandeel couldn’t live her life freely.

 

“This is the sorry state of not so sorry State…we are sorry Qandeel. Shocked and speechless.”

 
 

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