• Family events of the young women from Terrassa confirm that they were murdered after laying a "trap" for them to travel to Pakistan

  • Pakistan They investigate as an "honor crime" the murder of two Pakistani-Spanish sisters by their family

The death of the sisters

Anisa

and

Arooj Abbas

, aged 24 and 21, residents of

Terrassa (Barcelona)

and allegedly murdered in Pakistan by their brother and their husbands, among other relatives, is being investigated by the Pakistani Police as a

crime of honor

, a practice still in force in Pakistan and socially tolerated in many sectors of the country.

The organization

Human Rights Watch

defines

honor crimes

as acts of violence, generally murder, committed by men against women in the family, considering that they have dishonored the clan, and estimates the number of women murdered in Pakistan at 1,000 each year. .

The victims are fundamentally women and girls convicted by their parents or brothers, and several people usually participate in the murders, since on many occasions the crimes are agreed upon in the family.

The cause may be having sex with someone your parents or siblings don't approve of, asking for a divorce, having sex, or simply dressing inappropriately.

Human rights organizations believe that the real number of deaths is even higher, because many of the murders, because they occur within the same family, go unreported.

This is the case of the young women of Terrassa.

Their mother, who, according to reports, tried unsuccessfully to protect her daughters and had to listen from a nearby room as they died, refused to denounce the aggressors (her own son, among them) and it has been the Pakistani police who undertake Actions.

The causes range from adultery to simply the way of dressing

According to a

Pew Research

study , in 2011 four out of ten Pakistanis supported

honor

killings, they saw fit to kill a woman to restore family honor.

Pressure from human rights and women's defense associations and from other sectors led to an important legislative change in 2016: a sentence of 25 years in prison was imposed for anyone who murdered a woman and it was prohibited for murderers to they could be released if they received forgiveness from the victim's relatives, something that was usual.

Until 2005, the law allowed those responsible for

honor

killings to evade justice by pardoning themselves as family members of the victim.

Despite tougher laws, many cases continue to go unpunished.

The most notorious was that of

Qandeel Balonch

, 26, an internet celebrity, known as the

Kardashian

of Pakistan.

Her brother

De Ella Waseem Azeem

considered her poses on her Facebook "shameful" and on July 15, 2016 he killed her by suffocating her in her sleep.

Azeem was sentenced to life in prison in 2019, but was released a couple of months ago after, according to local and international media reports, receiving a pardon from his parents.

Honor

killings

are especially common in certain regions of Pakistan, such as

Balochistan

, in the south-west of the country.

Last February, the Europa Press agency echoed the death of a dozen people for

honor crimes

in just two weeks in the city of

Dera Murad Jamalí

.

The latest victim, the information explained, was an 18-year-old married woman murdered by her father-in-law as punishment for an extramarital affair.

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