21-year-old Safoora Bibi, a teacher in Dera Ismail Khan, was murdered by three women—two students and one coworker—after one of the murderers' relatives, aged 13, dreamt of Safoora committing blasphemy.
Safoora Bibi was a teacher at a religious girls' school in Dera Ismail Khan in Pakistan. She was 21 years old when she was murdered over suspected blasphemy.
Safoora had not been directly accused of doing anything blasphemous. Rather, in March 2022, a 13-year-old girl dreamt of Safoora committing blasphemy and claimed that in the dream, the Prophet Muhammad spoke and demanded Safoora's death. A relative of this girl, along with two other women, proceeded to kill Safoora, attacking her at the school's front gate "with a knife and a stick." Police found her "lying in a pool of blood."
"She died after her throat was slit." - Saghir Ahmed, police official
The perpetrators were aged 24, 21, and 17; one, the main suspect, was a fellow teacher while the others, nieces of the main suspect, were Safoora's students.
Whether additional motivations influenced the attack is unclear. Reporting at the time of the attack indicated that police were investigating whether the main suspect planned the crime because of a personal grudge. Safoora was also reportedly a "follower" of a religious scholar whom the suspects disliked.

Pakistan is one of the most repressive countries in the world with regard to freedom of expression, including and especially religious freedom. Blasphemy (i.e. insults) against religion in general can result in imprisonment, while blasphemy against Islam carries the much harsher punishment of death. Both in terms of the aggressiveness with which the Islamic-conservative government prosecutes such cases, as well as the harshness of punishment, Pakistan remains one of the worst places on the planet to speak out against religion or religious fundamentalism.