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"We sat together and decided after conferring with the clerics that Tarzina would have to stay all by herself for three months and then marry a different person and spend at least one night with him. According to the shariat, she could then divorce the new husband and remarry Motiur. But she refused," Bablu said.
Tarzina had also approached the Chanchol police and in a written complaint said she was not willing to marry anyone else except her former husband.
Police sources said they had gone to the village and sat with the couple's families, asking them to sort out the matter amicably. Both families then decided that the shariat had to be followed.
"No Muslim can shun the religious law and Tarzina had to abide by it," said Farizuddin Ahmed, a resident of Imampur.
Bablu said his family had even convinced a youth from the village to marry Tarzina for a day. "All she had to do was spend one night with him and divorce him the next day. But my sister refused to consider the proposal and killed herself," an inconsolable Bablu said.
This morning Tarzina's body was found in a room in her parents' house. She had consumed pesticide meant for eggplants.