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Pakistani girl mauled by dogs, shot dead by inlaws: Parents

EagleEyes

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Pakistani girl mauled by dogs, shot dead by inlaws: Parents
AFP
Published: Tuesday, October 28, 2008

KARACHI - A pregnant Pakistani teenager was mauled by dogs and then shot dead by her inlaws over a property dispute, the girl's parents and a human rights group said.

But 17-year-old Tasleem Solangi's death was later justified as an honour killing by a local jirga or tribal council over allegations that she had affairs with other men, they claimed.

The incident, which happened in March but details of which have only emerged, is the latest honour killing that has claimed the lives of more than 150 women this year

Gulsher Solangi, from Khaipur district, 425 kilometres from the southwestern city of Karachi, said his daughter's new family, who deny any wrongdoing, repeatedly beat her after her marriage and demanded she transfer land and pay money to them.

She was killed when he refused to hand over his property, he added.

"I saw my daughter running helplessly trying to save herself from hounding dogs," the 59-year-old farmer said, adding that he was held inside a house as his daughter was thrown to the baying pack.

"I would not forget the screams of my daughter for the rest of my life."

Gulsher said he had since been threatened and forced to flee with his family from their village.

Tasleem's mother, Zakira, added that tribal elders later falsely accused her daughter of having illicit relations with other men to justify the killing.

One of her alleged suitors was also forced to pay a 400,000 rupees ($5,000 US) "fine" to the inlaws, she claimed.

Tasleem's father-in-law and Gulsher's brother, Zamir Solangi, said his family was not involved in her death and his son was innocent.

"All such allegations are baseless and concocted," he added. "We were sleeping at our home when about midnight we heard gunshots and came out from our house and saw her dead outside."

He said they were "forced" to accept the fine imposed by the jirga because it was a decision of the elders and they have authority in the area.

Pakistani girl mauled by dogs, shot dead by inlaws: Parents
 
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Bastards.I hope they get capital punishment."DSP Khairpur Liaqat Abbasi said it was a simple case of honour killing..."

this line alone made me smh in disgust...
 
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Bastards.I hope they get capital punishment."DSP Khairpur Liaqat Abbasi said it was a simple case of honour killing..."

this line alone made me smh in disgust...

I know, I also smh at this nonsense. Honour killing or random act of terrorism, they should be shoved through the court system and be handed heavy sentences.

We must make honor killings disappear or people will always resolve their problems themselves with no respect or fear for the law. This "honour killing" nonsense and dowry/infidelity related crimes tarnishes the Pakistani name abroad in the world and bolsters people's beliefs that our societies are backwards and that women have no rights. People ought to have access to jirga or councils in their area but there needs to be proper oversight on these mafia gatherings.

Firing squad would be too honorable for these criminals, I say throw them in a pit filled with poisonous snakes.
 
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I am really shocked by hearing this news and I urge those culprits should be severely punished. And they should be punished so strictly as no one can even think of such heinous crime. I am very sad to read out the news.:(

DEAR PAKISTANI MEMBERS, URGE GOVERNMENT TO ENSURE THAT THE CRIMINALS SHOULD BE DEATH SENTENCED FOR THEIR UNBELIEVABLE CRIME.
 
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This seems to be a dowry related crime. Similar cases also happen in India.

The perpetrators must be punished severely
 
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This cannot stop no matter how severe the punishment is? The reason being that inorder to remove such acts from the society, we need to educate them, uneducation is the biggest enemy in this case.
 
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were is humanty shame on these jahils.what kind of these animals .when we will live in 2008
 
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This cannot stop no matter how severe the punishment is? The reason being that inorder to remove such acts from the society, we need to educate them, uneducation is the biggest enemy in this case.

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Bastardry of Character is not an acquired art it flows through the bloodstreams ..... we cannot just get rid of this menace by simply eliminating the offender ..... Steps need to be taken to shift the mental paradigm of the entire group/tribe/village ......

Phase-1 could encompass a group of educationists visit the area and reason/discuss/debate the moral elements.

Phase-2 could invlove religious scholars visiting the elders/influencers and explain the religious negativities of the act.

Phase-3 should dispatch Law Enforcers to set examples of offenders of such a henious crime so that nio one else dares

if all else fails ...... elimination is the only answer in the form of genocide...Although nothing can be done unless proper government is established in that part of Pakistan.
 
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She pleaded to the President and the Prime Minister and didn't get justice. After her death they sent a minister to her house, who goes on T.V and says justice will be brought. I ask him Why couldn't he provide her justice when she was alive. What good is it to her parents now. Their daughter is dead. The heel with his justice.
 
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‘Please forgive me mother, I was wrong. They will kill me’

By Faraz Khan

KARACHI: Tasleem Solangi’s story cannot be classified as that of any village girl who met a bad fate, of a girl who got married by force and who died by force. She cannot be called a girl who only dreamt village dreams, who will only be remembered and soon forgotten as just another girl from just another village.

Tasleem Solangi was the daughter of a livestock trader, was the third among six siblings, she did work around the house and she married to end family disputes. All this makes her seem like an ordinary village girl but her life was far from ordinary. Tasleem made the most out her life, she made more of it than any other girl in her village. She was a brave child, she wasn’t born into a rich and prominent family, she was a village girl with a city mind, she had dreams that reached farther than the outskirts of her Hajan Shah village, dreams that touched the roots of modernity. She was the daughter of a simple village livestock trader but she wanted her daughter to have a doctor as a mother. She always stood out among other villagers. The simple fact that education and knowledge left an impression on her reveals that she was no ordinary village girl who was content with being illiterate, with only doing house work and raising a family. After she saw her uncle, Abdul Hameed, work as a doctor, she knew right then that was her calling, helping people, curing people, saving people. Tasleem had passed her matriculation and after seeing her uncle, she wanted to continue her studies and become a doctor but could not do so because she got married.

This is not where her extraordinary story turns ordinary; this still doesn’t make her just another village girl, she got married on her own decision. She married to do what she in essence always wanted to do, to help people. She got married to settle a dispute among her family, she was hopeful that by marrying her cousin she would be able to resolve and settle issues, she compromised her dreams to help her family. She did what she thought was best and went against her mother. “I tried to stop her from getting married but she did anyway,” lamented Zakara Bibi Solangi, Tasleem’s mother, “she said that she was very lucky because she was getting married to her cousin and that she would manage to resolve the issues.”

Her act of sacrifice shows the importance Tasleem gave to her family, rather, it shows the importance Tasleem had in the family. Not being able to continue her own education did not deter Tasleem from imparting education to others. She would teach her siblings, mother, grandmother and others. “Tasleem first taught me how to write my name,” her mother recalls with teary eyes. “I am a doctor, please listen to me, is what she used to say.”

Nobody could say that Tasleem was a village girl of seventeen, her life, the way she used to dress, the way she used to think was that of a city girl. She had a separate room, even a separate cup for tea, a separate glass for water, jewelry, bangles, a mobile phone and many suits. This villager girl used to wear bangles that matched the colors of her clothes. She never complained about the things she didn’t have, never refusing any housework, she sang her way through her chores. Black and blue were her favorite colors, she followed fashion whether in technology or in clothes.

Tasleem was even religious, she offered all her prayers and read the Quran. She took the little things in life that God gave her and did the most she could do with them. She had dreams and hopes and ideals that could have blossomed into a new age in her village. However, on March 7, 2008, in the Hajna Shah Village, Taluka Bara Masi Goth in Khairpur district, her dreams were buried with her. On that day she was dealt the same fate that many village girls are dealt- Tasleem Solangi was brutally murdered in an alleged case of ‘kari’. All her hopes were snatched from her before death, she had to go through the torture of realizing that she was indeed in a village and she was indeed a village girl who was up against the people who followed rigid decrees.

Before she died, she realized that there was no hope to resolve the family dispute, “please forgive me mother, I was wrong and you were right, they will kill me.” Tasleem sacrificed herself to save her family, and for that, she was chased by dogs before she was shot to death. Her dreams of bringing peace in her family were repaid by making her see her son, who was barely months old, being bitten to death by dogs. Her father was tied in a room and, through the window, was made to see his grandson being ripped, he watched helplessly as his daughter, being chased by dogs, ran out of site, he heard a gunshot and was made to assume the worst.

Tasleem’s brother Asif Solangi told Daily Times that his father had property worth almost five million rupees and this property was what his father’s brothers were after. This issue was what Tasleem gave up her dream for and in the end gave her life for. Her family is now living in Karachi, hiding without any protection and living arrangements, while the inquiry of the case has started.
 
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Bastards.I hope they get capital punishment."DSP Khairpur Liaqat Abbasi said it was a simple case of honour killing..."

this line alone made me smh in disgust...

there is no honour in such killing, it is complete dishonour.

It was homicide, no need to use any adjectives.

Where are the the "dharna" kings now? Where are the laakhs of people who visit religious ijtimas? Where are the molvis who rant and rave at Friday Sermons?

Why don't you ever speak up on these crimes? You had a lot of energy to protest that Pakistani passport should not be opened from the left hand side, but from teh right hand side, that religion should be mentioned in teh passport.

Where does your verve, your sermon go when it concerns issues of social injustice?

If some local molvi, rendered a speech, and got some local vigilantees to burn these culprits' houses, and beat them senseless, then I would be the first to salute them.

Why don't they involve themsleves in such issues, and gain the trust of people?
 
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I have never been to Pak.. can anyone please tell me.. is it legal to get married by that age in Pak?? she s 17 and she s pregnant!! its a crime in here!!
 
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I have never been to Pak.. can anyone please tell me.. is it legal to get married by that age in Pak?? she s 17 and she s pregnant!! its a crime in here!!

Buddy where is it a crime to get married? If you are talking about then just to let you know in lusiana girl can get married at the age of 12 with parents permission so buddy its not a crime! I live in USA too and i am very much awar of crimes and there isnt a crime to get married as long as your parents or gardian say ok to it!
 
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