(Reuters) - A
Pakistani man whose pregnant wife was bludgeoned to death by angry
family members who did not approve of the marriage fondly recalled a
brief life together with the woman he fell in love with at first sight. Farzana Iqbal, 25, was
murdered by a group of assailants including her father on Tuesday,
witnesses and police said, because she fell in love with and married
Muhammed Iqbal in January instead of a cousin they had selected for her. "She
was a very happy person. And she was the best wife anyone could ask
for," Iqbal, 45, told Reuters in his mud-brick home in the village of
Moza Sial in central Pakistan, 240 km (150 miles) west of Lahore. "She
never lied. She never broke her promises. That's what I loved and
respected the most about her. She never let me down. But I let her down.
It was my duty to save her and I let her down." The dark tale of love, betrayal and murder has stunned people around the world, with the United Nations
condemning Farzana's killing and a major international newspaper
running a Reuters photograph of the grisly aftermath of the attack on
its front page. In Pakistan, a Muslim country of some 180 million people, the reaction has been more muted. Many
conservative families consider it shameful for a woman to fall in love
and choose her own husband. Refusal to accept arranged marriages
frequently results in "honor killings". In
2013, 869 such cases were reported in the media, according to the Human
Rights Commission of Pakistan, and the true figure is probably higher
since many cases go unreported. News
traveled further afield in this case partly because it took place in
broad daylight outside the High Court in the city of Lahore, Pakistan's
cultural capital. MURDER, MARRIAGE, MURDER The
couple's relationship was itself born of a shockingly violent act, one
perpetrated by Iqbal himself. In a blunt admission, he said he killed
his first wife in a fight over Farzana in 2009. "I
got angry. We were fighting, the kind of fights husband and wife often
have. But I held her by the neck and just meant to push her but she
died," he said. "I was
going to see Farzana and she stood in my way and said she wouldn't let
me go. So I pushed her. There was a murder case against me for three to
four years but then my sons forgave me, so I went free. Then I married
Farzana." Under Islamic law, which is accepted by Pakistani courts, victims' families can decide the fate of convicted criminals. On
Tuesday, Farzana, her husband and other family members were attacked on
their way to Lahore High Court, where they had planned to argue that
their marriage was genuine in response to a charge of kidnapping brought
by Farzana's family. "During
the scuffle, one unknown accused brought out a pistol and fired a shot
which reportedly ... hit Farzana near the ankle," said a Lahore police
source. "At the same time,
the father, Muhammad Azeem, hit Farzana with a brick taken from the
roadside, while Zahid, the brother, and Mazhar Iqbal, the cousin, also
joined in. Farzana died on the spot." Umer
Cheema, a police official in Lahore, told Reuters her autopsy showed
that Farzana was shot in the shin, adding that police had arrested four
people including her uncle Attaullah and her father. A
police source said Farzana had actually been married at the time of her
wedding to Iqbal, but told the families she was engaged. Iqbal denied
the previous marriage, saying his late wife's family used the accusation
to build a case against him. WEDDED BLISS Iqbal,
a farmer, cried as he prayed at the freshly dug grave of his wife.
Leaves and rose petals were strewn over the earth, and the petals
stained the back of his white shirt red.He said he and his wife had been
threatened by her family several times after he told the father he was
unable to pay more than $800 to win approval for the relationship. Attempts
in Lahore to contact representatives of the four arrested people were
not immediately successful, and it was not clear whether they had
lawyers. Iqbal described his friendship and short-lived marriage with Farzana as blissful. "Our
lands are side-by-side and I used to see her when she came to her
lands," he said. "I found her very beautiful and I fell in love with
her. I asked for her hand in marriage and her family agreed at first." "She
used to love singing this song to me: 'Don't talk ill of the lover who
is gone, Don't think bad of the one you love'. She would always sing
this to me," Iqbal added, fighting back tears. Muhammed Iqbal, 45, shows belongings of his
late wife Farzana Iqbal, at his residence in a village in Moza Sial,
west of Lahore May 30, 2014. "When
I took a shower, she would wait outside with my clothes. And she would
sit me in front of the mirror and comb my hair. When I went to work on
the fields, she often came along. I would tell her to go back home but
she said she wanted to stay there with me."Her stepchildren from Iqbal's
previous marriage said they loved her as their own mother. "She
was my mother," said stepson Aurangzeb, 22, sitting alongside his
father. "She would do anything for me. She was a beautiful person. I
forgave my father for killing my real mother and then god gave me a
second mother. Now she is also gone." Farzana
lived in the mud-brick home with Iqbal and his three sons. On the day
she was murdered, she kissed the children good-bye before leaving for
Lahore. "We had to leave
for the hearing. I can still see her walking around this room, getting
ready. She changed her clothes, put on some cream, combed her hair in
front of the mirror," Iqbal said. "Then
she sat down and put on her shoes. She kissed her stepsons and told
them: 'I'm going away. If life remains, I will see you again'."
Dark tale of love and murder in Pakistan's rural heartland
Reuters
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