Hundreds
of women are killed every year in Muslim-majority Pakistan in so-called
'honour killings' carried out by husbands or relatives as a punishment
for alleged adultery or other illicit sexual behavior.
Kharal said Parveen's relatives waited outside the court, which is located on a main downtown thoroughfare.
As
the couple walked up to the court's main gate, the family members fired
shots in the air and tried to snatch her from Iqbal, he said.
When she
resisted, her father, brothers and other relatives started beating her,
eventually pelting her with bricks from a nearby construction site,
Iqbal said.
Iqbal, 45, said he started seeing Parveen after the death of his first wife, with whom he had five children.
'We were in love,' he told reporters.
He alleged that the woman's family wanted to fleece money from him before marrying her off.
'I simply took her to court and registered a marriage,' he said.
Butt, the police official, said Parveen's father surrendered after the incident and called the murder an 'honor killing.'
The Human
Rights Commission of Pakistan, a private organisation, said in a report
last month that some 869 women were murdered in so-called honour
killings in 2013.
But
the Pakistani rights group, The Aurat Foundation, has said the figure
could be closer to a thousand and some estimate the true number could be
higher still.
Campaigners say few cases come to court, and those that do can take years to be heard.
Even
those that do result in a conviction may end with the killers walking
free. Pakistani law allows a victim's family to forgive their killer.
But in honour killings, most of the time the women's killers are her family, said Wasim Wagha of the Aurat Foundation.
The law allows them to nominate someone to do the murder, then forgive him.
'This is a huge flaw in the law,' he said. 'We are really struggling on this issue.'
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