The jirga that murdered Ambreen should be Pakistan's last
As if the reasons for which women are killed in Pakistan were not enough, helping a friend marry the man she loves has become the latest sin in the list of transgressions that seal a woman’s fate.
Killing a woman for marrying out of her free will, talking to a boy or just for dressing as she pleases will no longer satisfy the bloodlust of self-appointed judges. Even a woman who dares to help her friend escape her village will meet a cruel end.
The ambit of what triggers a community to kill one of its members is getting wider and ghastlier. And such communities become abusive in attempts to establish that their so-called reputations are not to be taken lightly. More often than not, the crimes these communities commit go unpunished because rule of law and the safeguards offered by a caring state are absent.
The murder of 16-year-old Ambreen in Abbottabad is yet another indication of the fact that rule of law is in this region is on a downward slide.
Ordinary young women of Ambreen’s age often prank call guys they have a crush on. They send them love notes if they are bolder. But mostly, they just look outside a window and daydream an ever-after fantasy with them. It’s a natural part of their biology and hormonal flux.
See: No justice for the Tahiras' of Sindh
Ambreen perhaps vicariously lived out hers for her friend Saima. She helped Saima, and the boy who her friend loved, escape the Makol village to marry.
In tribal communities like Makol, a woman exercising her right to determine the course of her love life is viewed as anathema. And so, as long as women hand over the reigns of their womanhood and sexuality to a male guardian and a broader community, no one gets killed. But when they choose to command it, they risk their lives.
The hideousness of Ambreen’s murder has a stickiness factor. The image of her charred body at the back of the van she was set ablaze in, is too horrifying to fathom.
Blackened eye sockets where her eyes once were — with which she may have dreamt and wished her friend a better life. She was drugged and tied to a van, possibly unconscious when she was set alight.