http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/honour-killing-britons-refused-to-let-daughters-marry-nephews-2048114.html

Honour killing Britons refused to let daughters marry nephews
By Theo Usherwood


Tuesday, 10 August 2010

A British couple were shot dead in an apparent honour killing in Pakistan after 
they refused to let their two daughters marry their nephews, a friend said 
yesterday.

Gul Wazir and his wife, Niaz Begum, were visiting relatives in Salehana, a 
remote village in Nowshera province, with their 28-year-old son Mehboob Alam 
when three men burst into the house and carried out the "revenge" attack. 

Earlier in their visit, a row had erupted when Mr Wazir, a taxi driver, was 
asked by his Pakistan-based brother Noor if he would allow his daughters to 
marry his sons Awal Zamir and Rehman. The daughters, who had stayed at home in 
Alum Rock, Birmingham, rejected the proposals.

Hassan Ahmed, a friend of the family, said yesterday that Mr Wazir had refused 
the offer because his daughters were worried about the language barrier and 
cultural differences. As a result, a meeting of four village elders was called, 
who sided with Mr Wazir.

The family had thought the matter was closed, but on Friday three men sprayed 
bullets at the couple as they chatted over breakfast, Mr Ahmed said. Their son 
was upstairs taking a shower. Hearing the gunfire, he rushed downstairs to find 
his parents dead.

According to reports, the shooting came two days after the Wazirs had agreed to 
pay the equivalent of £18,800 in compensation.

"This was a revenge killing," Mr Ahmed said. "Everybody has arms on them in 
this particular area. It's terrible. I think the family are after justice now. 
Their mum and dad have been murdered in cold blood for no real sensible reason 
and it is very important that the British Government put pressure on the 
Pakistani police and government to do something about it."

West Midlands Police said it was investigating a threat made against one of Mr 
Wazir's relatives, believed to be another one of his sons, in Birmingham on 
Friday. Mehboob Alam has since returned to the UK, while his sisters are 
described as being safe.

The killings come just a few months after Mohammad and Pervaze Yousaf, from 
Nelson, Lancashire, were gunned down in a graveyard in north-east Pakistan. 
They were shot in May after the arranged marriage of their son Kamar to his 
cousin broke down, sparking a family dispute.

Yesterday, the Birmingham MP Khalid Mahmood referred to the murder of the 
Wazirs as an "honour killing". He added: "The message to people here is they 
need to take it very seriously, when they make these kind of arrangements, that 
their children are happy with that and that they have a proper dialogue with 
their family. If the child refuses the marriage it's seen as an insult."

The Foreign Office said its dedicated forced marriages unit dealt with 1,700 
cases a year



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