Mumtaz Qadri: Pakistan governor's bodyguard and killer
Mumtaz Qadri, 26, turned into a legend to numerous Pakistanis on 4 January when he killed Punjab Governor Salman Taseer - the person for whom he filled in as a guardian.
Mr Qadri says he was incensed by the lead representative's support for proposed corrections to the country's impiety laws.
Police authorities say he had decided to kill somebody five days sooner, when he heard an incendiary discourse by a minister at a strict social occasion in Rawalpindi.
Lead representative Taseer just turned into his most effortless objective.
Be that as it may, analysts say the story more likely than not began before.
A few years prior, Mr Qadri, who had quite recently completed secondary school and prepared as a tip top police commando, was relegated to the security detail of a United Nations mission.
On one event, individuals from the mission expected to stop a taxi, yet the taxi they flagged down to didn't stop.
Mr Qadri got upset and begun shooting his authority weapon.
Fortunately, nobody was harmed. Be that as it may, the occurrence set up Mr Qadri as what the police official who portrayed the scene called a "combative" person.
"These kinds of individuals hold their feelings or confidence as the most elevated worth, and they never atone," says Dr Zahid Mehmood, who heads the Department of Clinical Psychology at Government College, Lahore.
A police video of Mr Qadri's cross examination shows him demanding: "Indeed, Salman Taseer got what he merited for offending the Prophet."
'Security risk'
Mr Qadri's sibling, Dilpazeer Awan, portrays him as a "delicate, warm and submissive" individual who asked five times each day, as Muslims are obliged to do.
"He was more youthful than every one of his siblings, however he was definitely more strict than us," Mr Awan told the BBC.
However, cops researching the case suspect something.
"It isn't right to say that he was profoundly strict," says Bin Yameen, the head of police activities in Islamabad.
"His profile demonstrates him to be a common individual, somebody who might grow a facial hair growth, then, at that point shave it off and develop long hair. Furthermore, he frequently became hopelessly enamored with various ladies.
"In case he were such an admirer of the Prophet, he would have submitted a homicide quite a while past - as he has regularly been on security subtleties doled out to take guilty parties booked under the disrespect law from prison to the court and back."
Mr Yameen affirmed that Mr Qadri, alongside 11 other tip top police watches, had been proclaimed a "security hazard".
"We have requested that the mindful authorities clarify their situation, as Mumtaz Qadri ought not have been alloted to Governor Taseer's security," he said.
Many police authorities accept mental profiling might help in such matters, in spite of the fact that it isn't idiot proof.
"Mental profiling is fundamental to decide the attitude of agents who are alloted to touchy obligations," says the top of the National Police Academy, Chaudhry Yaqoob.
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