It was her wedding anniversary. She was the mother of two. She was elected to office in 2002. In April 2005, she was helped organize an all-woman mini-marathon in Gujranwala. The women were attacked by MMA with batons and petrol bombs. She received death threats as a result of her involvement in the event. She became a provincial minister on December 1, 2006.
On Feb 20th, she arrived at the Muslim League House to hold an open session with her constituents. Around a hundred men and women were waiting for her. There had been an electricity shutdown, so she proposed that the gathering be moved to the lawns outside the building and started leading everyone outside.
As she was walking, some women started showering her with rose-petals.
A man walking next to her, Ghulam Sarwar, put a 30 bore revolver next to her temple and pulled the trigger. She was rushed to the Divisional HeadQuarters and later to General Hospital, Lahore but she did not survive the trauma to her brain.
Translated from Daily Jang:
From Daily Times editorial, Demise of Gujranwala:
If our universities had not already been ‘conquered’ by the religious parties they could have done a sociological profile of Gujranwala as a city without a soul and a dangerous tendency towards punishing all kinds of ‘entertainers’, often with death. No one could imagine a decade ago that Gujranwala would become so violently Islamist in the future. No doubt it was becoming a wayside city that was growing by accretion without an intellectual mooring, more or less like Faisalabad that began well under the British but declined spiritually afterwards.
After General Zia ul Haq’s Islamisation, Gujranwala began to produce jihadis and turned inward, scrutinising its citizens for moral backslidings. It first turned on the minorities and produced the famous Salamat Masih Case, accusing an under-age Christian child of insulting the Holy Prophet (PBUH). A religious party attacked him and his co-accused in Lahore when they were coming to attend the High Court, killing one. Salamat Masih had to be sent out of Pakistan to save his life.
From Nawa-i Waqt editorial, The Murder of a Provisional Minister:
In this matter, it is essential for those associated with the government, state machinery, law-enforcing agencies and the judicial system; as well as religious scholars of every school of thought, to work for the creation of a tolerant and compassionate society and make certain that those who pose such dangers for our society are not allowed such freedoms. Because, when mistakes in the law allow crazed individuals like Ghulam Sarwar to escape, the task of keeping balance in society gets harder and this society will transform into the laws of Jungle where no ones life, property or repute is safe. Just as the atheistic open-mindedness, being promoted at the behest of the West, is a poison for our Islamic Republic, this extremism can also destroy the balance of our society.
saddening….where are these maulvi’s taking us???……???….??
I really feel sorry for her.may her soul rest in peace.
Its truly heart breaking,Really hope her family gets justice. god bless her soul
I dont know why but i am really moved on this event.I’ve never heard about her b4 she was assasinated.But now when she’s not among us i feel lonely i know it sounds funny but when i think of her kids i am very sad because i know there feelings.I myself cant live without my mum and those innocent kids have been snatched of there mum for the whole life.This event makes me remember of my mother I dont want to lose hers.And I pray that everyone’s mother live long.
I am appaled at the murder of the provincial minister Zile Huma. It is a message to all us Pakistani working women and women who aspire to take leadership position in any field in our country.
Zile Huma is a martyr. women of Pakistan let us not allow these radical extremists to turn our country into Afghanistan!
My condolences to Zile Huma’s children.
Zile Huma baji was my first cousin. She was my Mom’s sisters daughter. I was very close with her, as was the rest of our family. It was such a un-expected and saddening event. I was born and raised in america, but visited pakistan numerous times. It saddens me our country is falling to such ignorance and extremism. May god rest her soul.
Where is MMA and the maulvis? I didn’t get to read any of their comments on this brutal murder. Pakistan has got to find a way out of this vicious malice of religious extremism.
We used to have human trash similar to your islamic extremists here in the American South. They were called The Ku Klux Klan and they persecuted anyone who wasn’t Caucasian. It required the enforcement of the law and a more frequent emphasis on the rights of all people in order to minimize their influence. Schools were forbidden to discriminate against non-white persons and many other reforms were put into place. Today, the KKK is hardly more than a joke. If you really want to change your country, you have to get rid of schools that teach this strict, intolerant crap. And I take issue with the generalization that “atheistic open-mindedness” is “being promoted at the behest of the West”. There’s nothing aetheistic about open-mindededness. It’s also known as tolerance (No, I’m not an aetheist). If you keep blaming all your troubles on the West, you’re refusing to face reality and you’ll continue to be infested with islamic terrorist trash.
A sad story, i guess the killer is a big psycho…. Isalm has been ruined by such illiterate mullas…islam which forbids killing and specially women are given more respect and protection…why such coward act happend…it is totally a mistake of government and judiciary in pakistan…once know that the murdrer is a killer to the law agencies why that man was freed who is already known to kill many women…surprised and shame of the government and concerned departments