Fed up with Islam Yet???

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'I severed your son's head': Terrorist calls mother of soldier he just beheaded
Postmedia Network
First posted: Friday, August 26, 2016 02:59 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, August 26, 2016 03:07 PM EDT
A deranged al Qaida terrorist in Syria called the mother of an enemy soldier he just beheaded to boast of his evil deed.
"I severed your son's head, you traitorous bitch," the man told the woman after picking the victim's cellphone out of his pocket, according to the Daily Mail.
According to the transcript obtained by the newspaper, the al Qaida thug introduced himself as a fellow soldier who had found the phone and was trying to locate its owner.
The mother had told him the last she'd heard about the location of her son was that he was on the front lines of Allepo -- a city that continues to be under siege in Syria's bloody civil war.
That's when the terrorist re-introduced himself as Saqr Rahman Al-Ansari of Jabhat Al-Nusra -- an affiliate al Qaida group fighting in Syria. And he bragged he just cut her son's head off.
"I beheaded your son today and this is his mobile, and I wanted to call and let you know, and we're coming to get you, God willing, you dogs of Aleppo. You who betrayed the Syrian people," he said, according to the transcript.
'I severed your son's head': Terrorist calls mother of soldier he just beheaded
 

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Canadian and his wife, hostages in Afghanistan, plead for lives in video
THE CANADIAN PRESS
First posted: Tuesday, August 30, 2016 05:35 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, August 30, 2016 05:40 PM EDT
OTTAWA -- A newly released video shows a Canadian man and his American wife, held captive in Afghanistan for almost four years, pleading for government help to save their lives.
In the video, Joshua Boyle and Caitlan Coleman sombrely warn they will be killed by their captors unless Kabul abandons its policy of executing captured prisoners.
They call on Canada and the United States to pressure Afghanistan into changing its policy, saying their kidnappers are terrified of being executed by the state.
The video, uploaded to YouTube, came to public attention through the Maryland-based Site Intelligence Group, which monitors extremist activity online.
Boyle and Coleman were seized in 2012 during a trip that took them to several central Asian countries.
In October that year, just before the pair went missing, Joshua sent Coleman's family a message from an Internet cafe in what he described as an "unsafe" part of Afghanistan.
In 2013, the couple appeared in two videos asking the U.S. government to free them from the Taliban.
The Colemans received a letter last November in which their daughter said she had given birth to a second child in captivity.
In a statement Tuesday, Global Affairs Canada spokesman Michael O'Shaughnessy said Canada was aware of the latest video.
The government will not comment further or release any information that might risk endangering the safety of Canadian citizens abroad, he added.
In the video, Boyle says the couple's captors "are terrified of the thought of their own mortality approaching, and are saying that they will take reprisals on our family."
"They will execute us, women and children included, if the policies of the Afghan government are not overturned, either by the Afghan government or by Canada, somehow, or the United States."
Adds Coleman: "I know that this must be very terrifying and horrifying for my family to hear that these men are willing to go to these lengths, but they are."
With files from the Associated Press
In a video, Joshua Boyle and Caitlan Coleman warn they will be killed by their captors unless Kabul abandons its policy of executing captured prisoners. (Screen Capture)

Canadian and his wife, hostages in Afghanistan, plead for lives in video | World
 

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'Premeditated, cold-blooded murder'; U.K. woman’s dad allegedly stood guard as ex-husband raped her before they killed her together
Asif Shahzad, The Associated Press
First posted: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 09:53 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 02:24 PM EDT
ISLAMABAD — The Pakistani police are recommending that the ex-husband and the father of a British woman who was killed while on a family visit to Pakistan be tried on rape and murder charges, according to a report shared exclusively with The Associated Press on Tuesday.
The report, which followed a weeks-long police inquiry, describes the killing of 28-year-old Samia Shahid as a “premeditated, cold-blooded murder.”
The case is suspected to be the latest reported incident of so-called “honour killings.” Nearly 1,000 women are murdered in Pakistan each year for violating conservative norms on love, marriage and public behaviour.
Shahid’s father and ex-husband were arrested last month but have not been formally charged. The 28-year-old beautician of Pakistani origin was found dead in July in eastern Pakistan where her family buried her after declaring that she had died of a heart attack.
Shahid’s second husband, Mukhtar Kazim, had raised the alarm, which resulted in the arrests and the subsequent inquiry. Kazim claims his wife was lured back by her family to visit Pakistan under the pretext of her father’s illness.
The father and the ex-husband appeared in a court on Monday in the eastern Pakistani city of Jhelum, after the police investigation was completed, and were ordered held for 14 days pending charges and trial.
The Pakistani police report concluded that Shahid was strangled to death. It says that Shahid’s father, Muhammad Shahid, stood guard while her ex-husband, Muhammad Shakeel, raped her. After that, they killed her together.
The report also is seeking the extradition of Shahid’s mother, Imtiaz Bibi, and sister Madiha Shahid from the U.K., both British nationals.
Police Deputy Inspector General Abu Bakar Khuda Bux, the chief investigator in the case, said the evidence was strong. Forensic and DNA tests confirmed the rape by the ex-husband, who apparently had never accepted that Shahid divorced him, he said.
“The result indicated a perfect match, thereby establishing that the victim was raped by accused Shakeel before she was murdered,” the report said.
Shahid married her first husband in February 2012 but stayed only briefly in Pakistan before returning to England where she obtained a divorce two years later. After that, she married her second husband and moved with him to Dubai where Kazim works.
In 2015, the report said, Kazim said there were indications that he and his wife could be reconciled with her parents and family.
Earlier this summer, Shahid’s mother and younger sister got her to agree to come for a week-long visit to Pakistan, claiming her father was gravely ill, but Kazim reported that his wife was apprehensive about the trip. The police inquiry found that Shahid had sent a text message to one of her friends, saying: “Pray I come back alive.”
During her trip, the family and the ex-husband unsuccessfully tried to persuade Shahid to leave Kazim, the police report says. A day before her scheduled flight back to Dubai they went ahead with their plan to kill her, the report says and describes the killing in great detail, including that it was her husband who strangled Shahid with her scarf while the father held her legs.
Shahid’s case surfaced less than two weeks after taboo-defying Pakistani social media celebrity Qandeel Baloch was strangled by her brother for posting racy photographs that were deemed shameful in Pakistan.
This photograph taken on July 28, 2016 shows Mukhtar Kazam, the husband of late British woman Samia Shahid, as he displays her post-mortem report during a press conference in Rawalpindi. Kazam has called for the U.K. and Pakistani governments to ensure his wife received justice, as he sought to keep the spotlight on so-called "honour" killings. (HABIB SHAIKH/AFP/Getty Images)

'Premeditated, cold-blooded murder'; U.K. woman’s dad allegedly stood guard as e

Allegation of ‘Islamophobia’ seems silly

By Tarek Fatah, Toronto Sun
First posted: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 06:34 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 06:45 PM EDT
As if Islamist propaganda in our schools wasn’t enough, the York Region School Board is now investigating allegations by one unidentified “community member” that an elementary school principal put “anti-Muslim” posts on her Facebook page.
The story was flashed across the Toronto Star as its main online headline Tuesday.
In much of urban Canada, schools permit Muslim Brotherhood-inspired Islamist student groups to push their agenda among students.
But instead of cracking down on Islamism within our schools, we seem to be concerned about those who stand up to these purveyors of an ideology that creates the pool from which jihadis of the future are recruited.
Let us see what school principal in question, Ghada Sadaka, reportedly posted on her Facebook page that triggered this controversy.
According to Toronto Star reporter Noor Javed, the school principal shared and commented on:
•Videos purportedly showing violent “Muslim takeovers” of Paris and London;
•Articles expressing concerns around bringing refugees to Canada, given their “terrorist sympathies”; and another headlined:
•Video of a Dutch Muslim mayor telling fellow Muslims, they can “f------” if they don’t like freedom.
Nowhere does the report say Sadaka denounced all Muslims or peaceful followers of Islam, yet a single, unnamed individual told Star reporter Noor Javed, she felt the Facebook posts were “blatantly spreading hate” and so complained to the school board.
This individual claimed, “It is obvious” the person putting up the posts “has a dislike towards Muslims.”
I’m a Muslim and it is not obvious to me, nor does everyone share this anonymous complainant’s views.
Mumtaz Khan of Markham, a father of two boys in the York Region school system, tweeted early Tuesday:
“#GhadSadaka, how (is it) anti-Muslim post? How long Islamophobia will b used to silence reasoned voices.”
Elaborating on his tweet, Khan told me, “At a time when almost every school in the Greater Toronto Area, including Markham, has Islamists operating under various names, it is unfortunate that Toronto Star would target an Arab school principal who was standing up to worldwide Islamic extremism.”
His views were echoed by Intizar Zaidi of Richmond Hill who tweeted:
“Why is @TorontoStar painting schoolprincipal #GhadaSadaka as ‘Islamophobic’? She is against radicalism by Muslims. She is not against Islam.”
I asked Zaidi, a retired father of three adult children, to elaborate on his tweet.
“I am shocked that anyone would read school principal Ghada Sadaka’s social media posts and conclude that she is ‘Islamophobic’.” he said.
Newmarket father of two, Amer Schezad, was also confounded by the Star report. He tweeted:
“What a shame @TorontoStar @njaved does a bad job on a school principal #GhadaSadaka who was against Islamic extremism and radicalism.”
This is not the first time the Star appears to have acted as the voice of outrage by a small minority — in this case, one person — at the expense of the broader Muslim Canadian community.
I also doubt it’s a coincidence the Star sought out reaction to the story from the National Council of Canadian Muslims, but not from the secular, anti-Islamist Muslim Canadian Congress.
The Toronto Star over the years has often handed over its comment pages to Islamists, to the exclusion of anti-Islamist commentators.
Christopher Hitchens is said to have described “Islamophobia” as “a word created by fascists, and used by cowards, to manipulate morons.”
Food for thought.
Allegation of ‘Islamophobia’ seems silly | FATAH | Columnists | Opinion | Toront
 

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Spurned lover sentenced to death for killing woman with acid in India
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Thursday, September 08, 2016 11:46 AM EDT | Updated: Thursday, September 08, 2016 11:58 AM EDT
NEW DELHI — An Indian court on Thursday sentenced a man to death for killing his neighbour by throwing sulfuric acid at her for refusing to marry him three years ago.
It is the first death sentence given for an acid attack under stringent laws introduced by the government to curb crimes against women following the fatal gang rape of a young woman on a moving bus in New Delhi in 2012.
Prosecutors said a Mumbai court sentenced Ankur Panwar after finding him guilty of killing Preeti Rathi, 23. She died of serious burn injuries 30 days after the attack, which severely damaged her lungs, vocal cords and eyesight.
They said Panwar followed the victim on a train from New Delhi where they lived and attacked her with acid as she got off in Mumbai to begin a nursing career with the navy. He was arrested a year later.
Amar Singh Rathi, the victim’s father, said the court verdict would help curb crimes against women. “It took three years for us to get justice, but I am happy that it has been finally delivered,” he said.
Public fury over the 2012 rape case led to new laws that doubled prison terms for rape to 20 years and criminalized voyeurism and stalking. But many women say daily indignities and abuse continue unabated and that the new laws have not made the streets safer.
In this Dec. 16, 2014 file photo, acid attack survivors participate in a candlelit vigil protesting violence against women as they mark the second anniversary of the deadly gang rape of a student on a bus, in New Delhi, India. An Indian court has on Thursday, Sept. 8, 2016, sentenced a man to death for killing his 23-year-old woman neighbour by throwing sulfuric acid at her for refusing to marry him three years ago. This is the first death punishment for an acid attack under stringent laws framed by the government to curb crimes against women following a fatal gang rape of a young woman in a moving bus in New Delhi in 2012. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das, File)

Spurned lover sentenced to death for killing woman with acid in India | World |
 

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Rivers of blood flow through the streets of Bangladesh
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, September 14, 2016 11:39 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, September 14, 2016 11:44 AM EDT
DHAKA, Bangladesh — Large-scale animal sacrifices marking the Islamic festival of Eid al-Adha combined with heavy rains have turned the streets of Bangladesh’s capital into rivers of blood.
Authorities in Dhaka designated several places in the city where residents could slaughter animals, but heavy downpours Tuesday meant few people could use those areas.
Muslims traditionally mark Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of Sacrifice, by slaughtering livestock. Usually a goat, sheep or a cow is killed to commemorate Prophet Ibrahim’s test of faith.
The meat of the sacrificed animals is shared among family and friends and poor people who cannot afford to sacrifice animals as a gesture of generosity to promote social harmony.
Dhaka residents used parking lots, garages and alleys to kill the animals and the blood flowed into the flooded streets, turning them into rivers of blood.
Flooding is common in Dhaka, an overcrowded city of more than 10 million people, because of poor drainage systems.
In this Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2016 photo, people wade past a road turned red after blood from sacrificial animals on Eid al-Adha mixed with water from heavy rainfall in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Authorities in Dhaka had assigned several places in the city where residents could slaughter animals, but the heavy downpours Tuesday meant few people could use the designated areas. (AP Photo)

Rivers of blood flow through the streets of Bangladesh | World | News | Toronto
that would make a great postcard. ;)
 

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Couple tortured, hanged for alleged affair: Pakistani police
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Thursday, September 15, 2016 10:30 AM EDT | Updated: Thursday, September 15, 2016 01:22 PM EDT
ISLAMABAD — Pakistani police on Thursday arrested the father, husband and brother of a woman who was tortured and hanged alongside her alleged boyfriend in a family courtyard, a local police official said.

Khalida Bibi, a married mother-of-three, and her alleged boyfriend, 21-year-old Mohammad Mukhtar, were murdered in a so-called honour killing in the village of Mian Channu, in eastern Punjab province, the police official Allah Ditta said.

The three arrested relatives confessed to killing Bibi and Mukhtar for having an affair, he said, adding that officers were still questioning the suspects.

Ditta said the bodies of the murdered couple had been transported to hospital for an autopsy.

Hundreds of women are murdered every year in Pakistan, often by their own relatives, for going against their families’ wishes in matters of love and marriage.

The latest case took place weeks after police arrested the father and ex-husband of a British woman Samia Shahid on suspicion of her murder. A police investigation has concluded that Shahid’s father stood guard while her ex-husband raped her, before the two men strangled her to death.
Couple tortured, hanged for alleged affair: Pakistani police | World | News | To
 

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At least 8 people hospitalized after Minnesota mall stabbings
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Sunday, September 18, 2016 12:09 AM EDT | Updated: Sunday, September 18, 2016 02:13 AM EDT
ST. CLOUD, Minn. — At least eight people were taken to a hospital with injuries after a stabbing attack at a Minnesota shopping mall that ended with the suspected attacker, who reportedly made references to Allah, shot dead by an off-duty police officer, authorities said.
St. Cloud Police Chief Blair Anderson said during a news conference shortly after midnight that eight people were taken to St. Cloud Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries following the attack first reported about 8:15 p.m. Saturday. One person was admitted. No further details were released.
Anderson said an off-duty police officer from another jurisdiction shot and killed the unidentified suspect. He did not say where that officer serves.
During the news conference, Anderson said the attacker who was armed with a knife reportedly made references to Allah during the attack and asked at least one person whether they were Muslim.
But Anderson declined to call the attacks an act of terrorism, saying the motive for the attacks isn’t known yet. “We will be diligent and get to the bottom of this,” Anderson said.
The mall remained on lockdown following the incident, but authorities said those remaining inside were expected to be released soon.
Harley and Tama Exsted of Isle, Minnesota, who were in St. Cloud to watch their son play in a college golf tournament, were in the mall when the incident occurred.
“All of a sudden I heard pop, pop, pop,” Harley Exsted told the St. Cloud Times. “I thought someone tipped over a shelf. All of a sudden these people started running. I just saw everybody running our way.”
There also were reports of some shots fired during the attack.
The couple were unharmed and said they helped another woman who was running from the scene to her car.
St. Cloud is about 70 miles (112.65 kilometres) northwest of Minneapolis.
At least 8 people hospitalized after Minnesota mall stabbings | World | News | T
 

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'I had to kill her'; Inside the mind of an 'honour' killer in Pakistan
Kathy Gannon, The Associated Press
First posted: Monday, October 03, 2016 09:30 AM EDT | Updated: Monday, October 03, 2016 10:03 AM EDT
LAHORE, Pakistan — For two months, over the thunder of machines at the steel mill, the men taunted Mubeen Rajhu about his sister. Even now, they laugh at how easy it was to make him lose his temper.
Some people had seen Tasleem in their Lahore slum with a Christian man. She was 18, a good Muslim girl, out in public with a man. Even though the man had converted to Islam out of love for her, this couldn’t be allowed.
“Some guys got to know that his sister was having a relationship,” says Ali Raza, a co-worker at the mill. “They would say: ’Can’t you do anything? What is the matter with you? You are not a man.”’
Raza can barely contain a smile as he talks about the hours spent needling Rajhu.
“He used to tell us, ’If you don’t stop, I will kill myself. Stop!”’ Raza says.
He raises his voice to compete with the sounds of the coal-powered mill, and workers blackened by its dust gather to listen. They too smile. A few laugh at the memory of Rajhu’s outbursts.
“The guys here told him, ’It would be better to kill your sister. It is better than letting her have this relationship,”’ Raza says.
Rajhu told them he had bought a pistol, and one day in August he stopped coming to work.
Rajhu discovered that his sister had defied the family and married the Christian. For six days he paced. His rage grew. How could she?
He watched her laughing on the phone, ignoring their mother’s pleas to leave the man.
On the seventh day, he retrieved the pistol from where he had hidden it and walked up to his sister and with one bullet to the head, he killed her.
———
For generations now in Pakistan, they’ve called it “honour” killing, carried out in the name of a family’s reputation.
The killers routinely invoke Islam, but rarely can they cite anything other than their belief that Islam doesn’t allow the mixing of sexes. Even Pakistan’s hard-line Islamic Ideology Council, which is hardly known for speaking out to protect women, says the practice defies Islamic tenets.
It doesn’t matter: in slums and far-off villages, away from the cosmopolitan city centres, people live in a world where religion is inextricably tied to culture and tradition, where tribal councils can order women publicly punished, and a family can decide to kill one of its own, even to avenge a wrongdoing committed by someone else.
In the vast majority of cases, the “honour” killer is a man and the victim is a woman.
She is a sister who falls in love with a man not of her family’s choosing. She is a daughter who refuses to agree to an arranged marriage, sometimes to a man old enough to be her father. She is a wife who can no longer stay in an abusive marriage and divorces her husband.
He is a brother, like Rajhu, who cannot bear the taunts of other men brought up as he was, believing that women are subservient and must be kept in the shadows, their worth often measured by the number of sons they can produce. He is a neighbour, like Raza at the plant, who doesn’t think his friend did anything wrong in taking his sister’s life. He is a father, like Tasleem’s, who is angry about her killing not because she is dead, but because her death will reveal her “shame” to other members of the family and beyond.
As modernity pushes against tradition, Pakistan has seen an increase in the number of women and girls killed in the name of honour: last year, 1,184 people died, only 88 of them men. The year before, the figure was 1005, and in 2013 it was 869, according to the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. The true numbers are believed to be higher, because many cases go unreported.
The killings have fuelled a growing public outrage at the practice, and a chorus of voices saying that there is no honour in killing - only dishonour. They are working to close the legal loophole that lets killers go free.
A proliferation of television channels and newspapers has brought the horrors of girls strangled, burned alive or shot in the head out of the secrecy of the home and into the public.
But for many who have been fighting this kind of killing, it is the mindset of the boy who could kill his sister, or the parent who could kill a daughter, that has to be understood and changed.
———
The shackles that Rajhu wears look too heavy for his slender wrists. They make the harsh sound of metal clanking against metal, reverberating in the silence that punctuates his conversation.
For more than a month, he has been held at the police headquarters in Lahore. He tells his story in a sparsely furnished office. His minders have left; he is behind closed doors, out of sight and earshot of police.
Rajhu says he loved his sister, a quiet young woman who had never before rebelled against her family. He gave her a chance, he says; he demanded that she swear on Islam’s holy book, the Qur’an, that she would never marry the man. Frightened, she swore she wouldn’t.
“I told her I would have no face to show at the mill, to show to my neighbours, so don’t do it. Don’t do it. But she wouldn’t listen,” he says.
Rajhu, who thinks he’s 24 but isn’t sure, occasionally wavers when he tells his story, revealing a hint of remorse. It is brief, however; only when he speaks of her as a child is his voice soft and his gaze somewhere in the distance. He helped raise her, he says, fleetingly seeming to wonder at how things had gotten so out of control.
Toying with the chains that bind his hands, he fidgets as he remembers the taunts. Then his eyes harden and his voice becomes steely. His anger grows as he talks about the day his sister married the Christian. It was the same day their grandmother died.
Tasleem said she was going to buy medicine, and his younger brother was sent with her. They were gone a long time. The next day Rajhu grilled his younger brother, beating him until he confessed that Tasleem had married and he had been a witness.
“He was right there in court when they married,” he says, as if he still can’t believe it.
Tasleem returned to her parents’ home because she wanted them to accept her new husband, Rajhu says.
For one week she stayed, talking every day to her husband, planning their reunion. Rajhu remembered the taunting. His anger grew.
“I could not let it go. It was all I could think about. I had to kill her,” he says. “There was no choice.”
On Aug. 14, Rajhu got his gun. Tasleem was sitting with her mother and her sister on the cracked concrete floor of their family kitchen.
“There was no yelling, no shouting,” he says. “I just shot her dead.”
———
The Rajhu family lives in a dirt-poor neighbourhood on the northern edge of Lahore where water buffalo compete with cars for space on mud-clogged roads. Swarms of mosquitoes hover over vast pools of putrid-smelling, stagnant water left behind by monsoon rains.
At the entrance gate to his brick shack, the siblings’ father, Mohammed Naseer Rajhu, peeks out, reluctant to admit visitors into his cramped home. The rooms are so small there is barely space for a rickety wooden bench and the traditional rope bed where he sits. In the kitchen, Tasleem’s blood still stains the rough wall.
He is adamant that his image not be taken either on video or in a photograph in keeping with his interpretation of Islam, which some say forbids human images. He says that is the reason the family has no photos of Tasleem, whom neighbours call a beauty. The only image of Tasleem, her thick black hair falling carelessly over her face, was taken by police after her death.
“Never can you show my face. My son killed my daughter to save his face, to not have anyone see his sister’s face, and now you are asking me to do the same thing,” he says.
He agrees for a brief few minutes to speak with his head turned away from the camera until even that is too much. His outrage grows — all of it directed at his daughter.
He is angry that his son killed his sister for two reasons only: the young man is in jail and no longer earning nearly $200 a month, and his family, spread throughout Pakistan, will soon learn of Tasleem’s indiscretions.
“My family is destroyed,” he says, his voice rising. “Everything is destroyed only because of this shameful girl. Even after death I am destroyed because of her.”
The elder Rajhu weaves a tale of Tasleem’s deceit and deception. He says they discovered she had two mobile phones, swearing he knew nothing of them until after her death, when they also found sleeping pills. He accuses Tasleem of drugging the family, putting powdered sleeping pills in their tea so she could sneak off at night to meet Jehangir.
His tale of conspiracy rings hollow. He is unable to explain how she could be so surreptitious in a home without doors and only a curtain concealing a small bathroom. He sees his family as victims of Tasleem’s deception.
Later, sitting on the broken steps of his neighbour’s home, he nods firmly as his neighbours heap praise on the boy who killed his sister.
“I am proud of this man that he has done the right thing, to kill her,” says one of them, a man with a scraggly beard named Babar Ali. “We cannot allow anyone to marry outside our religion. He did the right thing.”
After his son killed Tasleem, the elder Rajhu went to the police and filed a complaint. In Pakistan, parents often do so not to see the killer punished, but to lay the legal groundwork so they can forgive the culprit — a legal loophole that activists are fighting.
He wouldn’t explicitly say he forgives his son, but it is clear that he thinks the young man had every right to kill his sister.
Not everyone agrees - women in particular. Down the dirt street, Fauzia Javed runs a hole-in-the wall shop selling penny candy and biscuits. She knows too well the double standards of her society.
“Why did she have to die?” she asks. “My husband is having an affair and he left me with four kids to support and no one is killing him. Why?”
———
The man Tasleem married, Jehangir, fled the night she was killed. The gate to his home, barely a block from Tasleem’s, is padlocked. But the fallout from his love for Tasleem has engulfed the members of the small Christian community living in the area.
Earlier this month, just weeks after the killing, gunmen fired shots into their homes. No one was hurt, but no one has slept well since. In this majority Muslim country, Christians make up barely 5% of the population and in recent years have come under increasing attack by militants, who insist all non-Muslims are unbelievers. Yet Pakistan’s minorities, including Christians, are protected in the country’s constitution.
“We have been scared since the killing took place,” says a neighbour, Shahzia Masih, sitting in a small room decorated with pictures of Jesus and Mary. “There are just a few houses of Christians here, but we have nowhere else to go.”
Jehangir’s cousin Abbas Ainat doesn’t smile much and when he speaks, he is matter-of-fact.
“He converted to Islam for the girl, but still the girl’s family didn’t like it and they killed her.”
———
Rajhu’s jailers return. It is time. He must return to his cell to prepare to be taken the next day to Lahore’s Kot Lakput prison, where he will await trial.
Darkness has settled on the sprawling police station that was humming with activity when Rajhu began his story. A policeman grabs hold of Rajhu’s chains to lead him down the concrete stairs.
His father is hanging behind in the shadows. He has been waiting. He comes to his son’s side.
'I had to kill her'; Inside the mind of an 'honour' killer in Pakistan | World |
 

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Muslim dad accused of raping daughter for being 'too western'
By Brad Hunter, 24 Hours
First posted: Tuesday, October 11, 2016 02:16 PM EDT
A Muslim man who became enraged at his daughter becoming “too Western” allegedly raped her.
According to the Norwegian press, the man -- believed to be in his 40s -- attacked his daughter at the family home in Fredrikstad.
Cops say the alleged victim -- in her 20s -- told detectives she was raped for not living a strict Islamic lifestyle.
“They had been arguing prior to the rape,” police lawyer Anette Sogn told Fredrikstad24. “The father has been angry because his daughter did not follow his (Islamic) way of life, she explained in questioning.”
The terrified young woman then fled the house and flagged a passing postman who called cops, according to the report.
The father is reportedly mystified why he has been charged with a crime, Fredrikstad24 reports. He allegedly said he was stunned by the DNA results.
Muslim dad accused of raping daughter for being 'too western' | World | News | T
 

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Muslim dad accused of raping daughter for being 'too western'
By Brad Hunter, 24 Hours
First posted: Tuesday, October 11, 2016 02:16 PM EDT
A Muslim man who became enraged at his daughter becoming “too Western” allegedly raped her.
According to the Norwegian press, the man -- believed to be in his 40s -- attacked his daughter at the family home in Fredrikstad.
Cops say the alleged victim -- in her 20s -- told detectives she was raped for not living a strict Islamic lifestyle.
“They had been arguing prior to the rape,” police lawyer Anette Sogn told Fredrikstad24. “The father has been angry because his daughter did not follow his (Islamic) way of life, she explained in questioning.”
The terrified young woman then fled the house and flagged a passing postman who called cops, according to the report.
The father is reportedly mystified why he has been charged with a crime, Fredrikstad24 reports. He allegedly said he was stunned by the DNA results.
Muslim dad accused of raping daughter for being 'too western' | World | News | T
Heck, that ain't a Muzzie thing. The good ol' boys been doing it forever.