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Honor killing

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Honor killing is the practice of males killing their female relatives or spouses when the female relative or spouse is considered to have damaged the family honor through unwarranted sexual activity. The males involved in the sexual activity, which might have been a rape, are not adversely affected, in general. The murder is considered to be private matter within the affected family, rarely do non-family members or the courts become involved. Honor killings are viewed as murder by most people.

Table of contents
1 Definitions
2 History
3 Locations
4 Honor killing in Islam
5 Honor killing as a cultural practice
6 Honor killing in national legal codes
7 Hamas and honor killing
8 See also
9 References and further reading
10 External links

Definitions

Human Rights Watch defines "honor killings" as follows:

Honor crimes are acts of violence, usually murder, committed by male family members against female family members who are perceived to have brought dishonor upon the family. A woman can be targeted by her family for a variety of reasons including, refusing to enter into an arranged marriage, being the victim of a sexual assault, seeking a divorce—even from an abusive husband—or committing adultery. The mere perception that a woman has acted in a manner to bring "dishonor" to the family is sufficient to trigger an attack. [1]

History

Similar practices have been known since
ancient Roman times, when the paterfamilias retained the right to kill an unmarried but sexually-active daughter or an adulterous wife. It is not known when, or indeed if, the practice ended in Europe.

Crimes of passion, which are similar to honor killings, persist in Europe and Western countries. Such acts often have special status under the law. Until 1975, the French Penal Code commuted the sentence of a husband who found his wife in flagrante delicto and killed her [1]; this law passed into the legal frameworks of the many nations who based their modern legal codes on the Napoleonic Code, and in some of them it has yet to be abrogated.

Locations

As of 2004, honor killings have occurred in numerous countries, including: Bangladesh, Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Italy, Jordan, Morocco, Pakistan, Palestine, Sweden, Turkey, Uganda and the United Kingdom. In Europe, honor killings have been reported within the Muslim and Sikh communities. Many cases of honor killing have been reported in Pakistan, where it is known as KaroKari; it is also reported among Sikhs in the adjacent Indian Punjab[1].

Honor killing in Islam

Islamic law prescribes severe punishments for zina' (extramarital sex) by both men and women; premarital sex may be punished by up to 100 lashes, while adultery is punishable by stoning. The act must however be attested by at least four witnesses of good character, punishments are reserved to the legal authorities, and false accusations are themselves punished severely. The term "honor killing" refers specifically to extra-legal punishment by the family against the woman, and as such is forbidden by the sharia.

Interpretations of these rules vary. Some Arabs regard it as their right under both tradition and sharia (by the process of al-urf), though this contradicts the views of the vast majority of Islamic scholars (fuqaha.) Ayatollah Ali Khamenei of Iran has condemned the practice as "un-Islamic", though the punishment under Iranian law remains lenient. In Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim country, honor killings are unknown, as also in Muslim parts of West Africa. According to Sheikh Atiyyah Saqr, former head of the al-Azhar University Fatwa Committee (one of the oldest and most prestigious in the Muslim world):

"Like all other religions, Islam strictly prohibits murder and killing without legal justification. Allah, Most High, says, “Whoso slayeth a believer of set purpose, his reward is Hell for ever. Allah is wroth against him and He hath cursed him and prepared for him an awful doom.” (An-Nisa’: 93) The so-called “honor killing” is based on ignorance and disregard of morals and laws, which cannot be abolished except by disciplinary punishments."[1]

Honor killing as a cultural practice

Sharif Kanaana, professor of anthropology at Birzeit University states that honor killing is

a complicated issue that cuts deep into the history of Arab society...What the men of the family, clan, or tribe seek control of in a patrilineal society is reproductive power. Women for the tribe were considered a factory for making men. The honor killing is not a means to control sexual power or behavior. What's behind it is the issue of fertility, or reproductive power.

Amnesty International adds:
"The mere perception that a woman has contravened the code of sexual behavior damages honor. The regime of honor is unforgiving: women on whom suspicion has fallen are not given an opportunity to defend themselves, and family members have no socially acceptable alternative but to remove the stain on their honor by attacking the woman". Anmesty International.

Honor killing in national legal codes

Countries where the law can be interpreted to allow men to kill female relatives in cold blood as well as in flagrante delicto include:

Countries that allow men to kill female relatives in flagrante delicto (but not in cold blood) include: Countries that allow husbands to kill only their wives in flagrante delicto (based upon the Napoleonic Code) include: In two Latin American countries, similar laws were struck down over the past two decades: according to human rights lawyer Julie Mertus "in Brazil, until 1991 wife killings were considered to be noncriminal "honor killings"; in just one year, nearly eight hundred husbands killed their wives. Similarly, in Colombia, until 1980, a husband legally could kill his wife for committing adultery." [1]

The United Nations Population Fund estimates as many as 5000 females are anually killed worldwide as a result of honor killing.

Hamas and honor killing

Anonymous Israeli military sources have stated that two female Hamas suicide bombers, a mother of six and a mother of two children under the age of 10, were allowed by Hamas to undertake their missions in place of becoming victims of an honor killing. Hamas denies this claim.

According to military sources, the terrorist paid a cruel price for being involved in an illicit love affair and was forced to sacrifice herself in order to clear her name and the honor of her family.—[1]

Hamas has denied reports in the Israeli press that Mrs Riyashi was coerced into becoming a human bomb to restore her family honour and atone for an extramarital affair.—[1]

See also

References and further reading

External links