Ghazals javed biography

Ghazala Javed

Ghazala Javed (en pachto : غزاله جاوېد), née le à Mingora dans le district de Swat et morte assassinée le à Peshawar, est une chanteusepakistanaisepachtoune[1].

Biographie

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Elle fuit sa région natale avec sa famille en 2009, à l'occasion d'une offensive militaire contre les Talibans, maîtres du district de Swat depuis 2007, et s'installe à Peshawar. Elle y commence sa carrière de chanteuse et enregistre plusieurs disques en pachto. Elle devient très populaire parmi les jeunes Pachtounes du Pakistan, de l'Afghanistan et de la diaspora[1].

Mort

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Elle est tuée par arme à feu avec son père[2]. L'enquête conclut à la culpabilité de son ex-mari, l'homme d'affaires Jehangir Khan, dont elle avait divorcé quelques mois auparavant après avoir découvert qu'il avait déjà au moins une autre femme[3]. Le , Jehangir Khan est condamné à mort[4], mais le , la sentence est renversée après un accord financier entre Khan et les héritiers des victimes[5].

Références

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Ghazala Javed’s Inspirational Journey As Single Mother

Ghazala Javed is a famous Pakistani television actor who rose to fame through hit PTV drama serials. She has also appeared in numerous famous sitcoms. She also made a popular on-screen pairing with ace Pakistani comedian and actor Moin Akhtar in PTV’s hit sitcom Such Much. Recently, Ghazala Javed made an appearance in Samaa Tv’s morning show, hosted by Madeha Naqvi. In the show, she opened up about her inspirational life journey as a single mother.

Talking about becoming a widow at a young age, Ghazala Javed said, “it becomes tough when the bread earner of a family dies, my husband passed away in my young age, my son was in class one when my husband passed away, I decided to raise my kids on my own, I had a good family support but I didn’t accept any support, I wanted my kids to be confident in life. I shifted to a small house, I rented out my big house, I took stand for my kids because I didn’t want them to hear taunts of others”. She also said that life becomes tough for a single

Ghazala Javed wasn't her usual lighthearted self when she and her sister, Farhat, arrived at the hairdresser's that Monday evening in June. "Usually she'd start sing-ing her latest soundtrack," recalls Saima Khan, owner of the Baba Beauty Parlor in Peshawar's bohemian Dabgari Garden neighborhood. "But that night she was very quiet." The Pakistani singing sensation was taking a break from the recording studio to get her hair done before going back to wrap up the day's session. Her musical career had skyrocketed in the six months since her divorce, but Khan says something seemed to be bothering her that evening. "Today I've been feeling very upset," she remembers Ghazala saying. "I sense some unforeseen sorrow."

Then Farhat's phone rang. The two sisters' father, waiting outside in his car with their 5-year-old nephew, Naveed, told them to leave the shop immediately. Muhammed Javed had seen Ghazala's ex-husband driving by repeatedly and called his wife to let her know. "I told my husband to get Ghazala and Farhat out of there fast," Nishat Bibi tells Newsweek. Ever since Ghazala f

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