Nine-year-old Hania’s life ended on a roadside in Chakwal, a victim of a stray bullet that has now ignited a fierce demand for accountability. Her family, joined by local community leaders, is calling for a high-level judicial inquiry, rejecting the initial police investigation as little more than a formality.
The incident occurred during a celebratory firing event, a practice that remains a persistent, lethal plague in Punjab’s rural districts. Hania was not the target; she was simply in the wrong place when the gunfire erupted.
“My daughter didn’t die of natural causes; she was murdered by negligence,” her father told reporters outside the district court on Wednesday. He spent the morning filing petitions, demanding that the authorities look beyond the immediate suspects and investigate the systemic failure to curb illegal arms in the region.
The local police have registered a case against unidentified individuals, but arrests remain elusive. Critics argue that such cases often stall because of the influence wielded by those behind the celebratory gunfire. By treating these incidents as isolated accidents rather than criminal negligence, the legal system effectively shields the perpetrators.
For the residents of Chakwal, Hania is the latest victim in a grim timeline of casualties from reckless displays of power. The demand for a judicial probe is an attempt to break that cycle.
The provincial government has yet to issue a formal response to the family’s petition. Until a judge is appointed to oversee the investigation, the family says they will continue their protests. They aren’t looking for compensation; they are looking for a precedent that might stop the next stray bullet from finding a child.
