Nənawā́te can typically be used to force a victim, or victim's family, to forgive a transgressor and offer their protection to the repentant aggressor. However, in cases of
rape and
adultery, the guilty party cannot request sanctuary, and must flee or submit willingly to the prescribed punishment. Sources are divided on whether those who
elope can request such protection. In one example, a woman was sheltering two robbers when their pursuers came to her and told her that the men she was sheltering had killed her son. She replied "That may be so, but they have come Nənawā́te to my house and I cannot see any one laying his hands on them so long as they are under my roof". Deputy Minister for Tribal Affairs
Mohammed Omar Barakzai recounted the time that another woman was greeted at her door in
Saidkhail by a transient student who had just stabbed her son and requested sanctuary; and she told her husband and brothers that he must be given refuge, and taken to safety outside the city. In a counter-example, the
Utmanzai tribe decided to pay a visit to the house of the
Governor of the North-West Frontier Province,
Owais Ahmed Ghani. Once they arrived, they impressed upon him a Nənawā́te obligation to give them anything they demanded, and he acquiesced to re-instate the salaries of 5,000 local tribal police whose payments he had suspended ten months earlier following a refusal to work after
Taliban threats. ==In popular culture==