KARACHI: Oscar-winning filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy hopes her latest Academy Award-nominated documentary will help bring tougher laws against honour killings in Pakistan, which account for the deaths of hundreds of women and men each year.
The film, which follows the story of a young woman who survived attempted murder by her father and uncle after marrying a man without their approval, was nominated for an Oscar in January, prompting Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to pledge to take a firm stand against the “evil” practice.
More than 500 men and women died in honour killings in 2015, according to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan.
Many of these crimes, carried out by relatives who say their mostly female victims have brought shame on the family, are never prosecuted, observers say.
“People need to realise that it is a very serious crime,” Obaid-Chinoy told Reuters in an interview in Karachi.
“It's not something that is part of our religion or culture. This is something that should be treated as pre-meditated murder and people should go to jail for it.”