Prosecutors say they have appealed to the country’s top court after Muhammad Waseem was acquitted of killing his celebrity sister.
Pakistani prosecutors say they have appealed to the country’s top court after a man was acquitted of murder his celebrity sister over what he called her “intolerable” behavior on social media.
Qandeel Baloch – who was dubbed the Kim Kardashian of Pakistan – was strangled to death in 2016 by her brother Muhammad Waseem.
He had brazenly told local media that he had no remorse for the killing and was initially sentenced to life in prison.

After six years, Waseem was freed on a legal technicality that allows a victim’s mother to pardon the crime.
The case was considered the most high-profile “honor killing” of recent years, where women are murdered by male relatives for purportedly bringing “shame” to the reputation of a family.
Pakistan had passed legislation in 2016 mandating life in prison for honor killings, supposedly closing a loophole that allowed families to pardon the crime.
But Waseem, 38, was acquitted after a judge ruled the crime was not an honor killing and so, in line with Pakistan’s other laws on murder, their mother was still allowed to grant his freedom.
“We have challenged his acquittal, which was granted to him on more assumptions and technical grounds,” state prosecutor Khurram Khan told the AFP news agency on Sunday.
The appeal was filed on Friday, Khan added, but the top court has yet to fix a date for the hearing.
Pakistani MP Maleeka Bokhari said the Supreme Court has an opportunity to set an important precedent when the case reaches its doors.