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Pakistan: No Country for Bold Women - A public petition after the murder of Qandeel Baloch

17 July 2016

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Petition at Action for Progressive Pakistan - July 16, 2016

We, the undersigned, condemn the murder of Qandeel Baloch by her brother, Waseem, and demand that the government put the alleged killer on trial.

Qandeel, born Fouzia Azeem, was a rebel, an artist, and a gutsy feminist provocateur. Her sensual social media videos cajoling, mocking and subtly lampooning male politicians, sports stars, and the clergy brilliantly exposed the hypocrisies of a patriarchal society dominated by a narrow-minded, self-righteous moral police.

In the month prior to her death, Pakistani media attacked her after after selfies of her with Mufti Qavi, a senior cleric, went viral on social media. Qavi had previously attacked another female actress, Veena Malik, for her alleged lack of respectability on television. The photos, taken in Qavi’s hotel room, show Qandeel playfully wearing the mufti’s cap. As Qavi attempted to salvage his reputation as a righteous religious cleric by shifting blame, Qandeel fired back in characteristic fashion: she declared that the cleric was in love with her and that he was the “Qandeel Baloch of maulvis.†The sarcastic remark cut right to the heart of the cleric’s — and by extension, the religious establishment’s — hypocrisy. After her death, Qavi threateningly declared that her murder will serve as an example to all who attempt to disgrace the clergy.

Today, we hold the Pakistani media complicit in her death. We hold those journalists, editors, directors and owners responsible who leaked private details of her life. They publicized her marriage, her child, knowing the dangerously sexist conditions in this country. They berated her and thereby prepared the way for her to be killed.

We also hold the politicians and security services accountable who failed to protect her even as she publicly pleaded to them for protection. She wrote to the Interior Ministry, to the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) and to the Senior Superintendent of Islamabad — to no avail.

We demand accountability. We demand that the state and judiciary be especially vigilant and not allow her killer to be forgiven under the country’s misogynist blood-money qisas and diyat laws.

We also want to make two things clear:

Qandeel was not Kim Kardashian, as some media accounts have erroneously noted. She was our Qandeel: a working class woman, a Third World feminist, a disrupter, and firebrand who dared to do as she pleased, despite threats to her life.

Qandeel was not killed for “honor.†She was killed because an inordinately fragile, male ego couldn’t handle her flame. She was killed because a pervasive misogynistic culture cultivates and protects a toxic masculinity. She was killed because patriarchal structures sustain unequal gender relations with both men and women believing that violence against women is unremarkable, ordinary, and even deserved.

In that context, women can be killed for economic gain, for ego or for any number of reasons, and all of it is justified because, in the final calculation, the female body count does not seem to matter.

We bury Qandeel Baloch alongside 16-year-old Ambreen burned to death in Abbottabad, Pakistan as punishment for helping a friend escape to marry her beloved; 31-year-old Maria Nemeth disemboweled by her boyfriend Fidel Lopez in Florida, United States; 27-year-old Farkhunda beaten to death by a mob in Kabul, Afghanistan; 37-year-old Miriam Nyazema stabbed 26 times by her British soldier Josphat Mutekedza; the multiple victims of Elliot Rodger a violent, anti-woman killer with a manifesto in California, United States.

We bury our sister and comrade Qandeel Baloch alongside thousands of our sisters who have been murdered to protect misogyny, patriarchy and male fragility.

Just three days prior to her murder Qandeel wrote:

“As a women (sic) we must stand up for ourselves. As a women we must stand up for each other…As a women we must stand up for justice. I believe that I am a modern day feminist. I believe in equality. I need not to choose what type of women should be. I don’t think there is any need to label ourselves just for sake of society. I am just a women with free thoughts free mindset and I LOVE THE WAY I AM. :)â€

We love the way you are too, Qandeel.

Rest in Power.

Signed:

1 Madiha Tahir, feminist & co-founder Tanqeed
2 Nighat Dad, Founder Digital Rights Foundation
3 Zahra Malkani, Artist
4 Nida Mushtaq, The Fearless Collective
5 Abira Ashfaq, Lawyer
6 Mehlab Jameel, Researcher, Activist
7 Sidra Kamran, Graduate Student
8 Sonia Qadir, The Feminist Collective
9 Ushbah Al-Ain, The Digital Rights Foundation
10 Maria Rashid, Researcher, Activist
11 Zahra Mirza, Human
12 Natasha Ansari, Girls at Dhabas
13 Arooj Aurangzeb, feminist
14 Hadiqa Khan, feminist
15 Saadia Toor, feminist
16 Rabia Mehmood, Journalist & researcher
17 Miranda Husain, journalist
18 Ghausia Rashid Salam, researcher
19 Sarah N. Ahmad, human
20 Nabiha Meher Shaikh, educator, co-founder, Pakistan Feminist Watch
21 Erum Haider, Graduate Student, Feminist
22 Sarah Eleazar, journalist
[. . .]
and several hundred signatories.

You can add your name to the petition at: https://progpak.wordpress.com/2016/07/16/no-country-for-bold-women/

P.S.

The above material from Action for a Progressive Pakistan is reproduced here for educational and non commercial use