Main content

Remembering my Daughter Sabeen, Murdered for her Beliefs

Mahenaz Mahmud talks about the night daughter Sabeen was killed in Karachi for being a supporter of free speech.

Mahenaz Mahmud is a teacher from Pakistan, and less than a month ago, she saw her daughter, Sabeen, murdered in front of her. Forty-year-old Sabeen was a passionate supporter of free speech, and ran a café in Karachi called T2F where people would meet to discuss politics, society, issues, and rights. She had just finished chairing a panel discussion about Balochistan, a province where separatists have fought a bitter insurgency for years, and it was as Sabeen and Mahenaz were driving home when a gunman fired several shots at Sabeen. Her murder was the latest in a series of attacks on liberal activists, and outraged many. Mahenaz speaks publicly for the first time about her daughter's murder, Sabeen's more private side - and her unusual take on life.

We speak to Sarah Woods, a British travel writer, about her eight year quest in the jungles of Central and Southern America to track down a rare harpy eagle.

From Yemen, Jamal in Sana'a talks about how months of war have affected him and his family - and what it was like, after experiencing constant shelling, to be able to go outside for the first time in days.

Also, Canadian singer Kiesza talks about going from a career in the navy to becoming a chart topping performer and song writer.

(Photo: Sabeen Mahmud. Credit: EPA)

Available now

55 minutes

Last on

Wed 20 May 201501:05GMT

Broadcasts

  • Tue 19 May 201511:05GMT
  • Tue 19 May 201519:05GMT
  • Wed 20 May 201501:05GMT

Watch Lives Less Ordinary on YouTube

Watch Lives Less Ordinary on YouTube

Videos from our extraordinary podcast Lives Less Ordinary.

Contact Outlook

Contact Outlook

Info on how we might use your contribution on air

Podcast: Lives Less Ordinary

Podcast: Lives Less Ordinary

Step into someone else’s life and expect the unexpected