Father among nine people arrested in Pakistan over suspected ‘honor killing’

Policemen stand guard outside a mosque in Karachi, Pakistan on January 31, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 29 July 2025
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Father among nine people arrested in Pakistan over suspected ‘honor killing’

  • Sidra Bibi, 18, was killed on the orders of a local council of elders in Rawalpindi after she married a man of her choice, police say
  • At least 405 women were killed in 2024 in such cases, compared with 226 in 2023, according to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan

LAHORE: The father and the ex-husband of an alleged “honor killing” victim are among nine people arrested in eastern Pakistan in connection with the young woman’s death, police said.

Police said Sidra Bibi, 18, was killed on the orders of a local council of elders in the garrison city of Rawalpindi after she married a man of her choice.

Some of her relatives are alleged to have buried her body and flattened the land to erase evidence of a grave, police official Aftab Hussain said Monday. The victim was suffocated using a pillow placed over her face, he added.

The arrests came after authorities exhumed the body and carried out an autopsy, which confirmed she had been tortured before being killed.

The case has drawn widespread condemnation in a country where honor killings are still common.

The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said 405 women were killed in 2024 in such cases, compared with 226 in 2023.

“The actual number is believed to be higher due to underreporting,” said Sadia Bukhari, a member of the commission’s council.

Honor killings, in which family members kill women for actions perceived as bringing shame to the family such as choosing their spouse, have increased in recent years.

Earlier this month, police in southwestern Balochistan province arrested 11 suspects after a video shared online appeared to show a young couple being fatally shot for marrying without their families’ approval.

Police confirmed the authenticity of the footage, saying the killings happened in the Deghari district in the province of Balochistan.

In January, police arrested a Pakistani man suspected of killing his US-born 15-year-old daughter for refusing to stop posting videos on TikTok, a platform with more than 54 million users in the country.

“These so-called honor killings reveal a deep-rooted mindset that views women as the property of men,” Bukhari said. “Most women in Pakistan face discrimination from childhood through adulthood.”


Gun attack kills policeman, civilian during polio drive in northwest Pakistan

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Gun attack kills policeman, civilian during polio drive in northwest Pakistan

  • Pakistani authorities have temporarily suspended vaccination activities in Bajaur district
  • The campaign that started this week aims to vaccinate over 45 million children in Pakistan

PESHAWAR: A gun attack on a polio vaccination team in Pakistan’s northwestern Bajaur district killed a police constable and a civilian on Tuesday, prompting authorities to suspend vaccination activities in the area, officials said.

The attack took place in a small settlement of Bajaur’s Salarzai tehsil, near the Afghan border, where militants have targeted health workers and security personnel involved in polio campaigns in the past despite police escorts assigned to protect vaccination teams.

Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan are the only two countries where polio remains endemic, and vaccination drives have frequently been disrupted by militant violence, misinformation and vaccine hesitancy.

Authorities routinely deploy police and paramilitary forces to guard polio teams, but attacks have continued in recent years.

“The incident occurred at approximately 12:20 p.m. in Village Tangi Loei Khel, UC Khar 2, when unidentified individuals opened fire on Constable Sajjad, killing him on the spot,” said Shadab Younas, a media officer at the Peshawar Emergency Operations Center.

A civilian bystander, Fazal Rahim, was also hit by gunfire and later died of his injuries after being taken to Khar Hospital, Younas continued, adding that the polio team itself was unharmed.

Global polio tracking data show that 30 of the 39 confirmed wild poliovirus type 1 cases worldwide in 2025 were reported in Pakistan, with the remainder in Afghanistan. Pakistan recorded 74 polio cases in 2024, a sharp rise from six cases in 2023 and just one in 2021, underscoring the fragility of eradication efforts.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned the attack and directed authorities to swiftly identify and bring the perpetrators to justice, according to a statement from his office.

He said the assault on those serving the nation’s polio eradication effort was “deeply regrettable” and reaffirmed that the campaign would continue with full resolve until the disease is eliminated.

The National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC) said the nationwide polio campaign was continuing for a second day, reporting that more than 13.3 million children were vaccinated across the country on the first day of the drive.

The campaign, which started on Dec. 15 and will continue until Dec. 21, aims to administer oral polio drops to more than 45 million children across the country.

Health officials urged parents and communities to cooperate with vaccination teams and ensure children under five receive the drops.

Pakistan and Afghanistan are conducting the polio campaign simultaneously, the NEOC said.