Qandeel Baloch: Victim of nation’s clash between tradition and modernity
SHAH SADDARUDDIN: In this Punjab village where a family's worth is tallied in the number of males it can produce, Muhammed Azeem was different.
He valued his daughters as much as his sons. He raised the three girls to be independent young women.
When one of them married, she refused to take her husband's name. Another changed hers to Qandeel Baloch and became famous, shocking this country with risqué videos that showed her in skin-tight clothing grinding against men.
Azeem didn't care. He loved Qandeel — whose new name meant “torch” in their native language.
“I supported everything she did,” Azeem says. “I liked everything she did.” Her father's love helped make Qandeel a role model to a generation of young Pakistani women. But it may have also planted the seeds of her destruction.
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Her younger brother Muhammed Wazeem seethed. Villagers would constantly show him her Facebook posts and criticise his family for allowing her to make the videos. He decided he had to save the family's “honour.”
Last month, he drugged Qandeel and then, as their parents slept downstairs, strangled her.
In most so-called honour killings, families close ranks around the killer. Not this time. “My son was wrong,” Azeem says. “I will not forgive him.”