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Teen's murder sparks reckoning

Teen's murder sparks reckoning

The Star3 days ago
Sana Yousaf, a 17-year-old medical student and popular TikTok creator from Chitral, was shot dead inside her home in ­Isla­mabad – a murder that has shaken many across the country.
The teenager, who had recently celebrated her birthday, was gunned down in front of her mother and aunt by an uniden­tified man who fled the scene on June 9, according to an FIR.
The next day, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi confirmed that the Islamabad police had arrested the prime suspect in the case.
Mohsin said the police had reco­vered the pistol from the man as well as Sana's mobile phone.
The suspect also confessed to the murder, he added.
During a press conference on June 10, Islamabad Inspec­tor-General Syed Ali Nasir Rizvi said the suspect is a 22-year-old who they believe murdered Sana because she repeatedly refused his advances.
The news sparked a wave of heartbreak and fury online.
Many are mourning the loss of a bright, young girl – not just a social media personality with thousands of followers.
Others are expressing frustration at how her identity as a TikToker is being used to dehumanise her, even in death.
A quick scroll through Sana's TikTok and Instagram accounts shows a regular young girl posting about everyday life events, videos of her lip-synching to funny dialogues from movies, restaurant visits, travel content, promotional posts and celebrations.
Users are unfortunately having to highlight that the problem isn't TikTok or that Sana was a 'Tik­Toker' – it's a culture of impunity and a mindset that continues to excuse or even celebrate violence against women.
'A child, full of dreams, silenced before life could even unfold,' an X user wrote.
'What kind of world are we creating – where innocence is stolen before it even has a chance to shine?'
'Another day, another cold-bloo­ded murder in the federal capital,' a user lamented.
'Disgusted to the core,' wrote Mahira Khan.
Netizens called attention to the broader epidemic of femicide in Pakistan – where women, girls and gender minorities are routinely subjected to violence, often under the guise of honour, morali­ty or public decency.
'She celebrated her birthday earlier today. She was a first-year medical student. Femicide is rampant in Pakistan,' a user pointed out.
'Fragile male ego at work again,' a user remarked.
'A beautiful, 17-year-old girl was probably too much for their Herculean masculinity to handle that she was a TikToker! So what they did do? Shot her dead! Sana Yousaf, I am sorry. May your soul find peace!'
While many expressed heartbreak over the loss of a young life, in Facebook comments and Tik­Tok reposts, some users were seen celebrating Sana's death, implying that her online presence somehow warranted a violent end.
And while news of Sana's killing made headlines, much of the focus zoomed in on her identity as a TikTok star – as if her being a 'TikToker' made her less of a person and more of a target.
'I was browsing Facebook and only checked the comments – people were expressing joy,' one user wrote.
'It makes me feel ashamed that I belong to a nation where some take pleasure in the suffering of innocent girls,' a user wrote.
Others also shared screenshots of similar celebratory comments, calling on the authorities to do something.
Users also pushed back against labelling Sana a 'TikToker', arguing that reducing her to her online identity distracted from the crime committed against her.
'TikToker isn't a tribe, caste or crime,' one user argued.
'Why not say 'a teenage girl' or 'student' was killed? Why fixate on the platform she used?'
'I strongly condemn the brutal killing of Sana Yousaf,' another user posted.
'Uploading videos on TikTok is not a crime.'
The backlash has reignited calls to term this phenomenon what it is – not just misogyny, not just cyberbullying, but a society-wide normalisation of violence against women.
'The comments saying that this is good because she's on TikTok seem to primarily be coming from young men. Pakistan has a big problem and it's not feminism or women posting TikToks – it's rabid, frothing-at-the-mouth, enra­ged lunatic men who believe all women are their property,' wrote RJ Sabah Bano Malik.
'Men have a men problem,' she added.
'Men keep murdering girls and women and trans people and guess what? Other men. So are men going to do something about men? Or will we continue to act like men murdering women is a woman's problem to solve?'
Calls for justice have flooded social media timelines.
'This can't become normal,' journalist Ihtisham-ul-Haq posted.
'Justice must be swift and firm. The killers must be made an example of.'
And while justice should of course be served, nothing can bring Sana back.
She was a young girl – one who should have been studying for her next exam, making another funny video or celebrating her birthday with family.
Instead, she was murdered – and people are celebrating it.
Let's be clear: the problem is not TikTok. The problem is not a young girl posting videos.
The problem is that a girl was murdered, and instead of grieving the tragic loss of a young life, some people are celebrating it.
If that isn't reflective of the rot in our society, what is? — Dawn/ANN
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