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celina
05-17-2007, 05:07 PM
An "honor killing" in Iraq, captured by cellphone

Perhaps videos of the murder of Du'a Khalil Aswad, a 17-year-old girl who was stoned to death in Iraq, can help put an end to this barbaric custom.
Catherine Price

May. 08, 2007 | Several readers have brought to our attention a truly horrible story: Last month, Du'a Khalil Aswad, a 17-year-old Kurdish girl in Iraq, was stoned to death in an "honor killing" for presumably having a relationship with a Sunni Muslim boy. (She was a member of a minority Kurdish religious group called Yezidi.) Unfortunately, the fact that a girl was murdered for "honor" isn't the news here. The story has recently garnered attention because cellphone videos of the killing have surfaced.

Many of the stories about these videos are accompanied by still shots captured from the videos: a longhaired girl sprawled on the ground, naked from the waist down (she was presumably stripped by her assailants), wearing a red track suit top. For anyone, like me, who doesn't want to watch the videos themselves, here is a description from the Assyrian National News Agency:

"In a short mobile video clip which appears to have been taken by locals at [the scene] of the murder, the girl is seen being ambushed on her way home by a group of up to 1000 men who were waiting for her to return; the men killed her in the most brutal way possible, by throwing large stones on her head. The following clips show that while she is alive and crying for help she is taunted and kicked in her stomach until someone finishes her off by throwing a large stone on her face. From the clips it appears that the girl was first stripped naked to symbolize that she had dishonored her family and her Yezidi religion. She is lying on the road naked while her smashed face is covered with blood and still breathing."

There are so many horrible aspects of the story to comment on: that, in 2007, such stupid brutality still exists; that no one, including police, stepped in to help the girl; that religious differences can lead to such violence; that according to a different news report, men can be heard laughing in the background. But the important thing to remember is that this is not an isolated incident. The video provides particularly gruesome evidence of a practice that is more widespread than any of us would like to even think about.

What's more, this particular killing may have resulted in the deaths of more people than just Aswad. According to the Daily Mail, last week "23 Yezidi workmen were forced off a bus traveling from Mosulto Bashika by a group of Sunni gunmen and summarily shot dead" -- an event that several news sources hypothesize may have been inspired by this "honor killing."

I think one of the most frustrating parts of reading news accounts like this is that they get you upset and leave you wishing that there were actually something you could do, so I've tried to find a few organizations that are working to stop this sort of violence against women. Feel free to mention more in the comments section -- perhaps that way, these horrible videos can at least do something good by inspiring people to take action against this barbaric custom.

Together with the Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq, Madre runs a program called the Underground Railroad for Iraqi Women, modeled after the underground railroad in the United States that helped slaves escape to freedom. It's specifically devoted to helping prevent "honor killings."

Amnesty International runs a "Stop Violence Against Women" campaign.

While not specifically focused on honor killings, Women for Women has a branch specifically devoted to helping women in Iraq.

The United Nations Development Fund for Women runs a branch that aims to stop violence against women.

Also check out Human Rights Watch and Vital Voices.

So there's a starting point. Feel free to add on.

http://www.salon.com/mwt/broadsheet/2007/05/08/honor_killing_on_cellphone/print.html


Video (http://girlinshortshorts.blogspot.com/2007/05/just-another-honor-killing-in-iraq.html)

warrior1972
05-17-2007, 05:10 PM
yes I know it makes me very upset especiall that there was police right there watching and condoning it happening. I think the whole village needs to be put to death by stoning but a bunch of feminist.

Another reason why I hate religion! fucking sick!!

Jester
05-17-2007, 06:22 PM
I think the whole village needs to be put to death by stoning but a bunch of feminist.The whole village? A little harsh, don't you think? But if it makes you feel any better, 23 Yazidis from that town were killed in a reprisal attack.

Phyrex
05-17-2007, 08:52 PM
That is fucked up....

Sparky2
05-18-2007, 03:17 PM
That is one of the saddest and most sickening things I've ever seen.

Don't blame that on 'religion', sister warrior1972. Blame that on equal parts religious fanaticism and a horribly-inbred gene pool.

There are angry, ignorant, inbred fanatics, cut from every conceivable color of cloth, in nearly every corner of the world. The source of the fanaticism may be politics, religion, street justice, money, bling-bling, cultural bias, or drugs. There are violent and ignorant people in Chicago or Timbuktu, and all equally capable of committing violent crimes just as sick and horrible as what happened to that Kurdish girl. Just pick your street corner on continent, on any given day.

Sad.

warrior1972
05-18-2007, 06:20 PM
The whole village? A little harsh, don't you think? But if it makes you feel any better, 23 Yazidis from that town were killed in a reprisal attack.

yes and I heard many of the family members got arrested.

Yes that does make me feel better. I would prefer them to be killed by a bunch of feminist...to humiliate them.

Jester
05-18-2007, 08:40 PM
Yes that does make me feel better. I would prefer them to be killed by a bunch of feminist...to humiliate them.
Perhaps I should have mentioned that the people killed in the reprisal attack had nothing to do with the girl's stoning. But if that still makes you feel better then I have nothing to say.

es347fan
05-18-2007, 09:07 PM
That is one of the saddest and most sickening things I've ever seen.

Don't blame that on 'religion', sister warrior1972. Blame that on equal parts religious fanaticism and a horribly-inbred gene pool.

There are angry, ignorant, inbred fanatics, cut from every conceivable color of cloth, in nearly every corner of the world. The source of the fanaticism may be politics, religion, street justice, money, bling-bling, cultural bias, or drugs. There are violent and ignorant people in Chicago or Timbuktu, and all equally capable of committing violent crimes just as sick and horrible as what happened to that Kurdish girl. Just pick your street corner on continent, on any given day.

Sad.

Agreed. A few days ago here, the news was all about a crowd watching a 91 yr old veteran punched 20+ times during a car jacking. The ones caught on this video happen to justify their behavior in some sense of honor. Doesn't make it any better than a lynching.

Decka
05-19-2007, 01:17 PM
That is one of the saddest and most sickening things I've ever seen.

Don't blame that on 'religion', sister warrior1972. Blame that on equal parts religious fanaticism and a horribly-inbred gene pool.

There are angry, ignorant, inbred fanatics, cut from every conceivable color of cloth, in nearly every corner of the world. The source of the fanaticism may be politics, religion, street justice, money, bling-bling, cultural bias, or drugs. There are violent and ignorant people in Chicago or Timbuktu, and all equally capable of committing violent crimes just as sick and horrible as what happened to that Kurdish girl. Just pick your street corner on continent, on any given day.

Sad.

good post..

very sad... so many people just sat there and watched, taping it, yelling in approval...

extremists suck