The brother of Pakistani social media celebrity Qandeel Baloch has been arrested for her murder.
The brother, Waseem, 25, was arrested in Dera Ghazi Khan in central Pakistan on Saturday night.
The Dawn newspaper said he had confessed to the murder, saying he drugged and strangled her "for dishonouring the Baloch name".
Qandeel Baloch, 26, became a household name for posting sometimes raunchy photographs, comments and videos.
She recently caused controversy by posting pictures of herself alongside a Muslim cleric.
How the murder reflects a divided country
Speaking after his arrest, he said: "I am not ashamed. We are Baloch and as Baloch we cannot tolerate [this]".
He pointed to videos his sister had made, and specifically the images taken with the cleric, Mufti Abdul Qavi.
Police
said the brother had escaped to Dera Ghazi Khan after the killing in
the Karimabad area of Multan early on Saturday morning.
They said he fled with two friends who were still being sought.
Ms
Baloch, whose real name was Fouzia Azeem, was buried on Sunday morning
in her ancestral village near Dera Ghazi Khan in Punjab province.
Images from the scene showed scores of people attending the services.
Mufti Qavi, who said he had forgiven Ms Baloch for her actions, had offered to lead the funeral prayers, reports said.
Ms Baloch had built up a large social media fan-base, with 43,000 Twitter followers and more than 700,000 on Facebook.
She
was well aware of the opposition she faced but continued to post
defiant tweets. One on Thursday read: "I will not give up. I will reach
for my goal & absolutely nothing will stop me."
Ms Baloch rose to fame in 2014 when a video of her pouting at the camera and asking "How em looking?" went viral.
In
a recent interview she was bitterly critical of Pakistan's patriarchal
society and described herself as a leading exponent of girl power.
While
many younger people saw her as a cultural icon and hailed her liberal
views, she was also subjected to frequent misogynist abuse online.
Ms Baloch had gone to Punjab from Karachi because of the threat to her security, police say.
Her request for better security was ignored by the government, Dawn reported, despite pleas made three weeks ago to the interior minister and other senior officials.
Hundreds of women are murdered every year in Pakistan in so-called honour killing cases.
Why some say death is 'good news',
Qandeel
Baloch used social media to find fame and the reactions there showed
the feelings she inspired, from admiration to disgust.
Some
called her death "good news" and even praised her suspected killer.
Others said it was wrong to condone her murder, even if she was flawed.
Some showed outright support.
Qandeel Baloch has been dubbed
Pakistan's Kim Kardashian. There are comparisons: the provocative
selfies, the pursuit of celebrity, the controversial rise to notoriety.
But
in Pakistan, women, especially poor ones, still lack basic rights, from
schooling to choosing a husband and violence against them is rife. The
country struggles with sexuality and especially with "immodest" women.
The
fact that many of her videos went viral suggests a titillating
fascination with confident female sexuality - along with fear of its
power and of her assertion of independence. However she lived her life,
tweeted one, it was her life.
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PLEASE BE POLITE