[guide.chat] news honour violence is acceptable

  • From: vanessa <qwerty1234567a@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "GUIDE CHAT" <guide.chat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 19 Mar 2012 13:55:22 -0000

'Honour' violence is acceptable, say one in five young British Asians
PUBLISHED: 06:30, 19 March 2012 | UPDATED: 13:05, 19 March 2012
  
A large number of young British Asians support violence against women who 
'dishonour' their families, a Panorama investigation will claim today.
The hard-hitting BBC documentary reveals more than two thirds of Asians between 
the ages of 16 and 34 say communities should live according to 'honour' or 
'izzat'.
Research carried out for the show found nearly one in five ? 18 per cent ? said 
certain acts thought to shame families were justification for violence.


(Pictured right) Banaz Mahmod left her violent husband to be with her 
boyfriend, but was killed by relatives in 2006. Jasvinder Sanghera (left) has 
set up a helpline for victims and fields around 500 calls a month
The possible reasons included disobeying a father, marrying someone 
unacceptable or wanting to end a marriage.
Honour-related violence can include acid attacks, abduction, mutilations, 
beatings, and death. But 94 per cent of those questioned said there was 'never 
a justification' for murder.

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BBC1's Panorama programme on honour killings will be screened tonight at 8.30pm.
A study of police data by the Iranian and Kurdish Women's Rights Organisation 
recorded over 2,800 honour crimes a year.
Nazir Afzal, lead prosecutor on the crimes for the Crown Prosecution Service, 
said: 'We don't know the true figure of honour killings. It's anything between 
10 and 12 a year in this country.'
 
Honour attacks are punishments usually carried out against Muslim women who 
have been accused of bringing shame on their family (file picture)
Jasvinder Sanghera, of the charity Karma Nirvana, set up a helpline for women 
at risk. It receives around 500 calls a month but she says this is the tip of 
the iceberg.
Of 500 Asians interviewed for the Panorama poll, 75 per cent of young men and 
63 per cent of young women said families should live according to 'honour'.
In 2006, Banaz Mahmod, from Mitcham, south London, was strangled on the orders 
of her father and uncle because they thought her boyfriend was unsuitable. 
Cousins Mohammed Saleh Ali and Omar hussain, both 28, were jailed for a minimum 
of 22 and 21 years respectively for the honour killing of the 20-year-old Iraqi 
Kurd. 
The victim's father Mahmod Mahmod and uncle Ari Mahmod were jailed for life at 
the Old Bailey in 2007.
A Home Office spokesman said: 'We are determined to end honour violence.'



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