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Honour Killing Outcry
By Azeez Mahmood
February 18, 2008 - (IWPR) Activists call for legislative reforms
to tackle honour killing and other forms of violence against women.
Six years ago, Hataw fled to a women’s shelter to escape her
brother’s rage when she refused to marry the man he chose
for her.
Just a few weeks later, her brother ambushed her and her mother
near the shelter, opening fire with an automatic weapon.
Hataw, not her real name, was shot seven times; her mother twice.
Miraculously, they survived, but their physical and psychological
wounds may never heal.
Hataw, now 26, whose brother escaped prosecution, lost one of her
kidneys and her mother has scars on one of her arms.
Although Hataw - still living in a women’s refuge - refused
to speak to IWPR, she gave permission for the head of the shelter
to speak on her behalf.
“She doesn’t sleep all night long,” said the head.
“She gets up and screams at the slightest noise, fearing her
brother will break in and kill her.”
Hataw is one of a growing number of women in Iraqi Kurdistan falling
victim to domestic violence, with honour killings, in particular,
the focus of concern among human rights groups.
The recent increase in cases has outraged activists who blame the
Kurdish government for not doing enough to protect women.
The region’s human rights ministry says that honour killings
in Iraqi Kurdistan rose from 106 in 2005 to 266 the following year.
Figures for 2007 are not available, but official sources say in
Sulaimaniyah alone 30 women were killed in the first six months
of the year.
“Every day, more and more women are killed in Kurdistan while
the authorities watch and do nothing,” said Roonak Faraj,
head of the Women's Media and Cultural Centre in Sulaimaniyah.
In April 2007, an angry mob stoned to death a 17-year-old Yezidi
girl, Duaa Khalil Aswad, in Bashiqa, a small town east of the city
of Mosul, while bystanders applauded and filmed the killing on their
mobile phones.
Duaa’s crime was that she had fallen in love with a Muslim
boy. The footage was seen by thousands on the internet, sparking
massive condemnation by human rights groups around the world.
Faraj said the male-dominated local culture is one of the reasons
why women are targeted in her region. “It is a patriarchal
society,” she said, “Males control everything. For example,
they decide whom a girl should marry.”
There is also insufficient legislation to punish violence against
women. Article 111 of the Iraqi Penal Code - passed in 1969 and
still valid in most of the country - tolerates honour killings if
the defendant has “honourable motives”.
The maximum punishment is two years’ imprisonment, and, in
most cases, the sentence is commuted if the defendant has no criminal
background.
In 2002, the Kurdish parliament amended the 1969 law to allow honour
killings to be treated in the same way as murder. However, critics
say that the changes were too weak.
Following the killing of Duaa, the Kurdish government formed two
agencies to deal with violence against women, one based in Sulaimaniyah
and another in Erbil.
Zhilamo Abdul-Qadir, an official in the Sulaimaniyah agency, said
that since July 2007 they have investigated 110 cases of serious
threats against women, successfully intervening on 70 occasions.
“We have rescued many women from death in the last few months,”
said Twana Ali, spokesman for the Sulaimaniyah agency. “We
have arrested several suspects as well.”
Recently, more than 20 women’s advocacy groups came together
to pressure the authorities to impose heavier punishments on perpetrators
of violence against women and have made recommendations to parliament
on the matter.
They’ve also called on the regional assembly to pass other
legislation tackling discrimination against women, such as a ban
on polygamy and forced marriage, and to ensure equality between
men and women in relation to inheritance law.
Pakhshan Zangana, head of the Women’s Caucus in the Kurdistan
parliament in Erbil, said, “The law is outdated and needs
amendments that go along with the current situation.”
The government has pledged reforms, but for Faraj actions speak
louder than words.
“When bird flu broke out, the government launched a huge campaign
to make people aware of the risks of the disease,” he said.
“You wonder why they can’t launch a similar campaign
to put an end to the killing women.”
Azeez Mahmood is an IWPR reporter in a Sulaimaniyah.
From:http://www.iwpr.net/?p=icr&s=f&o=342738&apc_state=henh
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