Outcry in Pakistan over beheading of former ambassador’s daughter
The name Noor Mukadam has ricocheted through Pakistani
news and social media since the 27-year-old daughter of a former Pakistani
diplomat was found beheaded at home in an upscale part of Islamabad, renewing
attention on the country’s paltry record of addressing violence against women.
Police arrested suspect Zahir Zakir Jaffer at the site
the night of the attack on July 20. Police on Saturday jailed his mother and
father, reportedly a wealthy businessman, as well as two household staff
members, who are accused of serving as accomplices and trying to hide evidence,
according to Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper.
The shocking details of Mukadam’s killing, her
beheaded body showed signs of torture and stabs, has stirred anger in Pakistan
and diaspora communities, which have held vigils and rallied around her online.
Her death has also renewed calls for police and
politicians to prioritize pursuing justice for victims like Mukadam, notably by
strengthening the country’s limited domestic violence laws, the first of which
was passed in 2013.
“Another day. Another woman brutally killed.
Another hashtag. Another trauma. Another (likely) unsolved case. Another
trigger. Another fear fest,” Meesha Shafi, a Pakistani actress and singer,
wrote on Twitter after Mukadam’s death.
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While police acted swiftly in arresting a suspect,
some have questioned whether, without Mukadam’s social capital as a former
diplomat’s daughter in an upscale neighborhood, her plight would have reached
the public’s radar.
“Noor’s horrific murder is a test for a system
that too easily bends to power and influence,” columnist Fatima Bhutto, the
niece and granddaughter of two former Pakistani prime ministers, wrote on
Twitter. “But it must also be a test for us, imagine the number of men who
inflict such brutality on women everyday without being seen, without being
noticed, because the victims are poor & unknown.”
Legislation to tighten protections for women against
violence has frequently faced pushback from religious and community leaders in
the socially conservative country, which is governed in part by a strict
interpretation of Islamic law.
Pakistan ranked 164th out of 167 countries in
Georgetown University’s Women, Peace, and Security Index in 2019, the latest
year for which statistics are available.
In 2016, following the killing of social media star
Qandeel Baloch by her brother, Pakistan’s Parliament passed a law closing a
loophole concerning so-called honor killings, or the murder of females by
family members for allegedly shameful acts. The law previously allowed the
victim’s family to pardon the assailant.
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Jaffer, a dual Pakistani-U.S. citizen, was reportedly
an acquaintance of Mukadam. The exact motive for and circumstances of his
alleged attack remain unclear.
Jaffer had previously been deported from Britain for
involvement in a rape and sexual harassment case, Pakistani police told Dawn.
Mukadam’s father, Shaukat Ali Mukadam, served as
Pakistan’s ambassador to South Korea and Kazakhstan. The family also lived for
a time in Dublin, where acquaintances fondly remembered and paid tribute to
Mukadam after her death, the Irish Times reported.
On Tuesday, British actress Jameela Jamil, who is of
Pakistani heritage, posted a story on Instagram about Mukadam’s killing after a
fan inquired.
“I am disgusted to learn the details of what
happened to Noor Mukadam,” she wrote. Jamil added “that this level of violence
no longer surprises me considering the ongoing violence against women in
Pakistan and India.” She urged “men in the public eye to speak out about this.”
Despite the uproar over Mukadam’s killing, journalist
Arifa Noor, writing in Dawn, said she doubted that any major overhaul of police
work and other protections for women would follow. Already, she said, there are
questions about whether police collected sufficient evidence from the crime
scene, which would be crucial in any subsequent trial.