Muhammad
Iqbal said police did nothing to stop the stoning
Pakistani Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif has described the stoning to death of a woman by her family in
front of a Lahore court as "totally unacceptable".
Farzana Parveen, who was three months pregnant, was pelted
with bricks and bludgeoned by relatives furious because she married against
their wishes.
Her husband told the BBC that police simply stood by
during the attack.
Lahore's police chief has denied this and said Ms Parveen
had been killed by the time police arrived at the scene.
There are hundreds of so-called "honour
killings" in Pakistan each year.
This incident has prompted particular outrage as it took
place in daylight while police and members of the public reportedly stood by
and did nothing to save her.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has ordered the chief minister
of Punjab province to take "immediate action" and submit a report by
Thursday evening.
'Inhuman'
"They watched Farzana being killed and did
nothing," her husband, Muhammad Iqbal, told the BBC.
Mr Iqbal described the police as "shameful" and
"inhuman" for their failure to stop the attack.
Police questioned
witnesses as Ms Parveen's bloodied body lay on the pavement
"We were shouting for help, but nobody listened. One
of my relatives took off his clothes to capture police attention but they
didn't intervene," he added.
Another witness told Reuters news agency that police
ignored the attack.
"Policemen were standing outside the High Court, but
no policeman came forward. In spite of the noise, no policeman took the trouble
of coming forward to save her," the witness, who was not named, said.
However, Lahore police chief Shafique Ahmad questioned Mr
Iqbal's credibility, and told the BBC that police did not stand by while the
attack occurred.
Police were a distance away, and were told by a member of
the public that a scuffle was taking place outside the court, Mr Ahmad said.
By the time police arrived, Ms Parveen had been killed
after being hit on the head with a brick, he added.
Arranged marriages are the norm in Pakistan, and to marry
against the wishes of the family is unthinkable in many deeply conservative
communities.
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