Mysterious deaths of 2 Pak-origin British girls raise ‘honour killing’ questions

Lahore: Police in Pakistan’s Punjab province Monday did not rule out a ‘foul play’ in the mysterious deaths of two Pakistani-origin British girls who were found lying unconscious in the bathroom at their home, raising questions over whether they were victims of ‘honour’ killings. Maria, 24, and Nadia, 17, were found dead in Gujrat city, some 150 kilometers here, last Thursday.

The girls’ father Abdul Rehman told police that his daughters went to take a shower Thursday evening but when they did not come out of the bathroom after a lengthy period, their mother knocked on the door and called them but received no response.

When the door was broken, the girls were found lying unconscious. They were shifted to a local hospital where they were pronounced dead on arrival. Rehman said a leak in the gas heater in the bathroom resulted in the death of the girls.

Tauseef Haider, a senior police officer in Gujrat, told reporters Monday that the police had sent the bodies for autopsy. The exact cause of the girls’ death would be determined by the post-mortem findings. Haider stated that the girls had recently returned from London to attend the death anniversary of their grandfather along with their parents.

Asked if it was a case of honour killing, Haider said, ‘We have examined the crime scene and collected certain evidence. But at this stage we cannot form our opinion and also not rule out any foul play… let the autopsy report come.”

Police are also examining as to how both the girls went together into a ‘small bathroom’ for a shower and how both could not realise the leak in the gas heater.

Police have also recorded the statements of Rehman’s neighbours. Rehman insisted that his daughters died because of gas leakage and there was no foul play involved. “I loved my daughters,” he said, rubbishing the question of honour killing.

Honour killings are not uncommon in Pakistan. Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif termed it a ‘stain’ on the society while meeting the country’s first Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy in 2016.

The shocking murder of social media star Qandeel Baloch by her brother in 2016 had turned the spotlight on the so-called honour killings in Pakistan.

PTI

 

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