http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/ISL185843.htmMULTAN, Pakistan, Jan 4 (Reuters) - Five family members were murdered in a suspected honour killing in Pakistan on Tuesday, police said, shortly before a law took effect making such crimes a capital offence.
Gunmen broke into the home of Munnawar Mai and opened fire, killing Mai, her husband Mukhtar and their two-year-old son as well as the mother and a brother of Mukhtar, police said.
Mai and Mukhtar eloped and married in 2002, defying her parents wish that she wed a cousin. Mai's family was still angry over her marriage, police chief Mohammad Jamil said.
Hundreds of women are murdered each year in rural Pakistan for adultery, choosing partners without family permission or failing to fetch an adequate dowry.
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PAKISTAN: Activists sceptical about new law designed to reduce honour killings
ISLAMABAD, 5 January (IRIN) - Pakistani President General Musharraf on Tuesday gave his assent to a bill setting out enhanced punishment for honour crimes - usually carried out against women and girls who "offend the honour of the family". But women's rights activists are not convinced the law will have any impact on the widespread problem.
"It won't make any difference. It has just increased the punishment to 25 years in prison, but that remains discretionary," Sadia Mumtaz, coordinator of the Legislative Watch Programme (LWP) of the women's rights body, Aurat Foundation, told IRIN in the capital Islamabad.
"In most of honour-killing cases, the killer is from the same family, often an immediate blood relative, but with discretionary powers and the option of financial settlement with the guardian of the female murdered, this is like giving a licence to kill," Mumtaz said.
Musharraf had earlier called for a law banning honour killings "to lend more strength to Pakistan's efforts to do away with this intolerable practice", he said at the time.
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