A family member holds pictures of singer and Internet celebrity Qandeel Baloch, who was killed in July in an honor killing allegedly committed by her brother.

NEWS BRIEF Pakistani lawmakers unanimously approved Thursday legislation to stiffen the penalty for honor killings by removing a loophole that previously allowed those convicted to walk free.

“Laws are supposed to guide better behavior, not allow destructive behavior to continue with impunity,” Sughra Imam, a former senator and author of the bill, said of the law.

Pakistani law previously allowed those convicted of honor killings to walk free if they are pardoned by the victim’s family. Under the new legislation, which first passed the senate in March, those convicted who are also facing the death penalty may be pardoned by the victim’s loved ones, though they will still face a mandatory life sentence in prison, which in Pakistan is 12 ½ years.

The country’s parliament also passed a law on rape that would enforce a mandatory 25-year prison sentence to those convicted.

The law’s passage follows the high-profile killing in July of Qandeel Baloch, a singer and Internet star who gained fame for her outspoken presence on social media, where she often challenged conservative elements of Pakistani society and urged women to combat cultural norms. Baloch’s death is being investigated as an honor killing and her brother has been arrested in connection with the crime.