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World News See other World News Articles Title: Du’a Khalil Aswad - another "honour killing" this girl was publicly stoned to death in a so-called "honour killing" but the world's media has failed to show what happened. this is the ugly truth about what happens to girls and women in some parts of the world. i make no apologies for sharing it but if you are easily upset, please do not click on the video links :( Mosul, Iraq -- According to the Kurdish website Jebar.info up to 1000 men from the Yezidi Kurdish community of Mosul killed a teenager who's only crime was running away to marry a Muslim man whom she loved and converting to his religion. For four months ago the girl had been given shelter by a local Muslim Sheik. It was reported that in the last few days her family persuaded her to return home, convincing her that she had been forgiven by her parents and relatives for her mistake. In a short mobile video clip which appears to have been taken by locals at seen 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. http://www.aina.org/news/20070425181603.htm Videos: http://www.jebar.info/yazidivedio/bisababislamaha.3gp http://www.jebar.info/yazidivedio/2.3gp http://www.jebar.info/yazidivedio/016.3gp http://www.jebar.info/yazidivedio/video-0007.3gp http://www.jebar.info/yazidivedio/1.3gp http://www.jebar.info/yazidivedio/3.3gp AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL Public Statement AI Index: MDE 14/027/2007 (Public) News Service No: 084 27 April 2007 Iraq: Amnesty International appalled by stoning to death of Yezidi girl and subsequent killings Amnesty International is appalled by the killing of Dua Khalil Aswad, aged about 17, who was stoned to death on or around 7 April 2007 for a so-called honour crime. A member of Iraqs Yezidi religious minority from the village of Bahzan in northern Iraq, she was killed by a group of eight or nine men and in the presence of a large crowd in the town of Bashika, near the city of Mosul. Some of her relatives are said to have participated in the killing. Dua Khalil Aswads murder is said to have been committed by relatives and other Yezidi men because she had engaged in a relationship with a Sunni Muslim boy and had been absent from her home for one night. Some reports suggested that she had converted to Islam, but others deny this. Initially, she was reportedly given shelter in the house of a Yezidi tribal leader in Bashika, but her killers stormed the house, took her outside and stoned her to death. Her death by stoning, which lasted for some 30 minutes, was recorded on video film which was then widely distributed and is available on the internet. The film reportedly shows that members of local security forces were present but failed to intervene to prevent the stoning or arrest those responsible. In an apparent act of retaliation, some 23 Yezidi workers were attacked and killed on 22 April, apparently by members of a Sunni armed group. The Yezidis, reportedly all men, were travelling on a bus between Mosul and Bashika when the vehicle was stopped by gunmen, who made the Yezidis disembark and then summarily killed them. Amnesty International condemns in the strongest terms both the murder of Dua Khalil Aswad and the subsequent murders of the Yezidi men, and is calling on the Iraqi authorities to take immediate steps to identify and bring to justice, through fair trials and without recourse to the death penalty, the perpetrators of these killings. As well, the organization is calling on the Iraqi authorities to investigate whether law enforcement officials were present but failed to intervene to prevent Dua Khalil Aswads death by stoning, and to take urgent, concrete measures, including through legislative reforms, to protect those at risk of becoming victims of so-called honour crimes. Background There are frequent reports of "honour crimes" in Iraq - in particular in the predominantly Kurdish north of the country. Most victims of "honour crimes" are women and girls who are considered by their male relatives and others to have shamed the women's families by immoral behaviour. Often grounds for such accusations are flimsy and no more than rumour. "Honour crimes" are most often perpetrated by male members of the woman's family in the belief that such crimes restore their and their family's honour. While the Kurdish authorities introduced legal reforms to address honour killings they have, however, failed to investigate and prosecute those responsible for such crimes. Amnesty International has documented its concerns about Iraqi women victims of human rights violations, including honour crimes, in a report issued in February 2005 (Iraq: Decades of suffering-Now women deserve better, AI Index: MDE 14/001/2005, http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index...pen&of=ENG-IRQ)
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#1. To: ruthie (#0)
hey ruthie.. many people think that the enemy of my enemy is my friend but.. not so.. how have you breen'?
hihi Zipporah i'm okies tx - still being domestic and trying to keep my brain from vegetating! sorry about this topic but i feel this has to be shared so people know what some women have to face in parts of the world :(
#3. To: ruthie (#2)
No problem ruthie.. I agreee... many here have no idea what is happening in europe and in the middle east.. so go fot it.. get then informed.
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