14-year-old pregnant Afghanistan girl burnt alive blame by her in-laws

The family and in-laws of the Afghan minor, who died on Saturday (16
July), have started blaming each other for the incident. Zahra, 14, from
the western Afghan province of Ghor was allegedly burnt alive by her
in-laws. She was four months pregnant.

Zahra died a week after suffering grievous burn injuries. According to her father Muhammad Azam, Zahra had been a victim of abuse
at her in-law’s house. Her husband’s family repeatedly beat and stabbed
her when she refused to work in the opium fields after she got
pregnant, her father said. However, Zahra’s in-laws say she committed
suicide.

“Our investigative team has been sent to the area
and has started a probe into the incident. Zahra’s father-in-law has
been brought before the court,” Zaman Azimi, acting police chief of
Ghor, said.

Zahra was reportedly a victim of “bad dadan”,
a practice in which girls or women are used as barter to settle
disputes between families. She was used as exchange when her father
eloped with her step-mother, Taza Gul, and married off at 11 to one of
Gul’s close relatives to settle the matter.


The Afghanistan
Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) has urged the government to
look into the incident and take action against the guilty.

However,
according to Zahra’s father, her in-laws are influential people. “The
court works in their favour. The police headquarters and the provincial
council office also are in their favour. Whatever they say, will be done
by the judicial organs,” Azam said.

The incident comes more than four years after 15-year-old Sahar Gul
was rescued from her in-law’s house after she refused to engage in
prostitution. The incident had drawn attention from President Hamid
Karzai after getting international coverage.

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