Crimes of The Community
Crimes of The Community
Crimes of The Community
2008
Crimes of the Community: Honour-based violence in the UK by James Brandon and Salam Hafez Centre for Social Cohesion A Civitas Project Centre for Social Cohesion Clutha House 10 Storeys Gate London SW1P 3AY Tel: +44 (0)20 7222 8909 Fax: +44 (0)5 601527476 Email: [email protected] www.socialcohesion.co.uk Director: Douglas Murray The Centre for Social Cohesion is a Civitas project CIVITAS is a registered charity: No. 1085494. Limited by guarantee. Registered in England and Wales: No. 04023541 Centre for Social Cohesion, January 2008 All the Institutes publications seek to further its objective of promoting the advancement of learning. The views expressed are those of the authors, not of the Institute. Crimes of the community: Honour-based violence in the UK Some of the names and details of the individuals quoted in the report have been changed at their request. All rights reserved ISBN 978-1-903386-64-4
Contents
introduction
cHapter 1
3 3 3
3 4
advantages of honour Common ways in which honour can be damaged Consequences of losing ones honour
5 6 8
cHapter 2
forced marriage introduction Motives for forced marriage abuses related to forced marriage
n n n n
9 9 12 15
16 17 18 19
Physical violence Psychological and emotional violence Isolation, imprisonment and withdrawal from school Kidnapping and being forced to travel abroad
21
21
Rape
n n
Abandonment Depression, self harm and suicide resulting from forced marriages
22 24
cHapter 3
27 27 28
28 31 33 34 35
Defying parental authority Acting western Control by in-laws Drug and alcohol abuse Economic factors
cHapter 4
honour Killings introduction how many honour killings in the UK? honour killings among people of South asian origin Profiling South asian killings
n n n n n n n
37 37 37 39 41
41 44 45 47 50 51 53
Killings by close relatives and in-laws Womens involvement in murder Role of religion and caste Killings by extended families Pre-planned attacks Killing of children Killings abroad
54
55
Killers arriving from Kurdistan/Kurdish women being killed abroad 57 59 Ritualised nature of Kurdish honour killings
60 63
female Genital Mutilation introduction origins of the practice Muslim attitudes to fGM attitude of other religions fGM in the UK
n n n n n
65 65 66 67 69 71
72 74 75 76 77
cHapter 6
Barriers to change introduction: the reinforcing of traditional attitudes Community attempts to block change
n n n n
78 78 79
79 82 85 88
Imported wives and husbands Segregation and self-segregation Islamist groups Community and religious leaders
94
94
97
98
98 101
Government failures
n n n
102
103 104 107
Local government/schools failures Government employees failing to uphold law No recourse to public funds rule
111
111 112
114 118
cHapter 7
role of nGos
n n n n
125
126 128 128 131
Working with children: challenging traditions Working with adults: changing attitudes Working with women Working with men
131 134
134 137 139
cHapter 8
141
144 145 145
cHapter 9
introduction
In recent years, honour crimes have received an increasing amount of interest from the media, the police and politicians. This has been fuelled by the extensive coverage of the murder of several young Kurdish and Pakistani women by their families. This growing public concern has been largely welcomed by womens groups and has prompted the government to take steps to tackle these crimes. However the medias focus on honour killings and, to a lesser extent, forced marriages and Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) has obscured the true scale of honour-based crime. Honour killings represent only the tip of the iceberg in terms of violence and abuse perpetrated against women in the name of honour. This study shows that honour killings, domestic violence, forced marriage and FGM are not isolated practices but are instead part of a self-sustaining social system built on ideas of honour and cultural, ethnic and religious superiority. As a result of these ideas, every day around the UK women are being threatened with physical violence, rape, death, mutilation, abduction, drugging, false imprisonment, withdrawal from education and forced marriage by their own families. This is not a one-time problem of first-generation immigrants bringing practices from back home to the UK. Instead honour violence is now, to all intents and purposes, an indigenous and self-perpetuating phenomenon which is carried out by third and fourth generation immigrants who have been raised and educated in the UK. This report focuses on four aspects of honour-based violence:
n n n
Some of the most frequently cited killings have been those of Rukhsana Naz, a 9-year old woman of Pakistani origin in Derby in 998, Heshu Yones, a 6-year old Kurdish girl in North London in 2003, and Banaz Mahmod, a 20-year old Kurdish woman in South London in 2006. The Guardian: Love, honour and obey or die, by Jason Burke. October 8 2000. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,37974,00.html
Many of these problems are common to all societies. Domestic violence and crimes of passion exist worldwide. However, honour crimes differ significantly from other outwardly similar crimes. While typical incidents of domestic violence involve men using force against their wives, honour-based abuses regularly involve a womans own sons, brothers and sisters, as well as members of their extended family and in-laws. Similarly, the pre-planned and ritualised nature of much of this violence (particularly in the case of honour-killings and FGM) makes such behaviour distinct from other ad-hoc forms of violence against women. This study explains how and why many British women, and indeed many men, are told that they are not allowed the right to be independent, to have control over their own bodies and who are being denied, often through force, an opportunity to choose their own destiny. The report concludes with recommendations on what the government can do to prevent these abuses.
cHapter 1
origins of honour
introduction
Honour is a fluid concept which has been widely interpreted by different societies, cultures and classes throughout history to promote behaviour which is seen as beneficial to the community. At various times honour has been equated with attributes as diverse as bravery or cunning, strength or wisdom, vengefulness or mercy. In all societies, honour has both a private and a public aspect. On one hand it describes an individuals self-respect; how a person sees himself and his relative value in society. But at the same time, measures of honour also dictate the extent to which society accepts a persons self-worth and help determine the level of status and material benefits which it accords him as a result.
Sexual honour
The form of honour dealt with in this study arises from ideas that the reputation and social standing of an individual, a family or a community is based on the behaviour and morality of its female members. Like other forms of honour, this concept does not exist in a vacuum but rather as a central part of a complex social structure which governs relationships between different families, genders and social units within a given society.
n
Anthropologists have suggested a number of reasons for the development of ideas that the honour of an individual or a group is determined by the behaviour of women. Many speculate that this behaviour evolved because early man wanted to be sure that the children he helped raise, gathered food for and protected were carrying his genes. The most obvious way for him to do this was to ensure that his woman did not have sex either immediately prior to or after his coupling with her. Therefore, researchers suggest, men who controlled their women came to be seen as strong, high-status leaders of society; able to prey on the sexual partners
Honour today
Until recently, similar concepts of honour were found across the UK and throughout much of Europe. Today, however, such extreme and overtly articulated forms of sexualised honour in the UK primarily exist among immigrants and their descendents from the Middle East and South Asia, although such sentiments
2 See, for example, Ladislav Holy, Kinship: Honour and Solidarity: Cousin marriage in the Middle East (Manchester University Press, Manchester, 989), Amina Wahuds Inside the Gender Jihad: Womens Reform in Islam (Oneworld Publications, Oxford, 2006) and JG Peristiany (ed.) Honour and Shame: The values of Mediterranean Society (University of Chicago, Chicago 966; London 974). 3 Ladislav Holy Honour and Shame: The Values of Mediterranean Society ed. by Jean G. Peristiany (Chicago University Press, Chicago, 966) p. 75
origins of Honour
also exist among sectors of the Afro-Caribbean and Latin American population, as well as among portions of the white English populace.4 However, the idea of honour as found among Middle Eastern and Asian immigrants in the UK is often distinctive because it is openly expressed, and because it has arguably become the basis for organising such communities as well as playing an important part of many peoples cultural and religious identities. Just as any honour-based society has always granted social and material advantages to those who conform, so is the case in such communities in the UK today.
advantages of honour
Self-awareness/pride In societies which are ordered around ideas of honour, upholding perceived standards of behaviour can become the basis of a persons identity and positive self-image. Increased security and prospects for offspring Families which conform to accepted standards of honour and moral behaviour receive benefits in terms of a better future for their sons who enjoy increased marriage and career prospects within their community. Improved contacts and business opportunities Families which publicly uphold their honour usually gain increased social status. This can result in better contacts within the community which can lead to material benefits such as increased income for the self-employed and greater trade for owners of shops and businesses. Providing stability in an changing/new environment For immigrants arriving in the UK, vesting ones identity in intangibles such as traditional ideas of honour and pride can be safer than rooting ones reputation and social worth in terms of property, wealth and a career. Sense of superiority (vis--vis members of other ethnic groups, castes, religions) For immigrants with low career prospects, investing in ideas of sexual honour can provide a way to feel superior to strangers by measuring
4 For example, although honour killings are usually understood as murders of women committed by close family members from Asian or Middle Eastern backgrounds, there is reason to believe that many murders by whites could also be classed as honour killings. For instance, the Home Office report Violence crime overview, homicide and gun crime 2004/5 found that of the 23 women murdered during that period, 4 percent were killed by family members (not including partners or ex-partners). http://www.homeoffice.gov. uk/rds/pdfs06/hosb0206.pdf
origins of Honour
cHapter 2
forced Marriage
introduction
ghazala razzaq, co-ordinator at roshni asian Womens resource centre, an advice and training centre in sheffield, says:
The practice of forcing women into marriage through threats of violence is common among many communities in the UK. British police define a forced marriage as a marriage conducted without valid consent of one or both parties, where duress is a factor.5 According to most definitions, a marriage becomes forced if any coercion, physical or psychological, used against either spouses in order to force them to consent. A forced marriage is not the same as an arranged marriage which occurs with the full consent of both parties. The Forced Marriage Unit,6 run jointly by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Home Office deals with an average of 300 cases of forced marriages every year, some of whom have involved girls as young as 3. However, womens groups and police say the total number of cases of forced marriage is much higher. Forced marriages can occur in almost any community governed by honour, pride and shame. Such communities include South Asians, Kurds, Arabs, Iranians, Turks and, in some cases, ultra-orthodox Jewish communities among others. Some womens groups also report they have encountered forced marriages among white British communities. However, most workers in womens refuges say that the majority of people who use their services to escape an arranged marriage are Pakistani. Shaminder Ubhi, director of Ashiana, a womens refuge in Leyton, East London, says: Forced marriage exists mostly in South Asian communities because of the size of the population and the services that are provided for women fleeing such cases. However, the problem of forced marriage is also high in other communities such as the Turkish and Kurdish. To some extent there is more awareness with the Asian community; the womens sector has been established for the last few years; more refuges and services and a lot more awareness now exists in the commu5 For further details on police definition of forced marriage: http://www.gmp.police.uk/ mainsite/pages/forcedmarriage.htm 6 Forced Marriage Unit (FMU), Tackling Human Rights Abuses http://www.fco.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=094234857863
from the immediate family; it is a matter of honour; there is a feeling that the father must be in control of the family. promises are also made by parents to their immediate family. Men from england go back to asia as they want a docile wife to care for them and do the cooking and cleaning ~
10
forced Marriage
ever, some Asian women refuges have had nominal cases of Somali women. Fathiya Yusuf, the Somali community outreach worker for Refuge in South East London, says: We dont have this problem in the Somali community. But we have semi-arranged marriages where a person is not forced but is pressured to marry a second-cousin or someone from the same tribe. In my experience in Somalia even in the most rural countryside forced marriage isnt an issue like it is in the Asian community here.
ila patel, director of the asha project, a refuge in streatham in south london, says:
Womens aid, and they were saying that forced marriage referrals from african and eastern european communities are on the increase ~
However, some activists say that they are dealing with an increasing number of forced marriages are occurring in communities that have not been previously associated with the practice. Ila Patel, director of the Asha Project, a refuge in Streatham in South London, says: I was talking to Lambeth Womens Aid, and they were saying that forced marriage referrals from African and Eastern European communities are on the increase. So that is something that we are looking at as well. Although the nature and extent of forced marriage can differ between different communities, in many cases the motives for forcing men and women into marriages are often very similar.
11
12
forced Marriage C a s e s t u d y
called Shivu; they would act as if the person had died, do the prayer and then never speak of them again. In many cases, especially among South Asians, women are forced to marry first cousins. Families often do this to protect the familys wealth or to reaffirm familial ties. Shaminder Ubhi, director of Ashiana Womens Aid, a womens refuge in Leyton, says:
13
philip balmforth, the vulnerable persons officer (asian women) for the police in bradford, says:
in bradford from Mirpur, who would be poor people living in a village in pakistan. one family is an entire village, so you get this ghetto society in that village of people living off each other and everybody knows each other. so with the forced marriage situation, they would marry within each other to keep the family together and their possessions together, like land and wealth in case of death. it is all about the honour of that village, so the next village down the road says, oh look at that village, look how good they are ~
14
forced Marriage
applications in before March 2008[when the government may raise the age limit for overseas marriages from 19 to 21]. In some cases, forced marriages are carried out so that families will have a cheap source of domestic labour. In some towns in northern England, men are brought from abroad to work long hours on less-than minimum wages in businesses owned by their in-laws. Zalkha Ahmed, director of Apna Haq, a womens support group, says: We have a lot of them here and they are mainly used as cheap slave labour and domestic workers. The motives for forced marriage can include: Maintain the familys honour and pride in the eyes of the community Strengthen family ties with the community or extended family; sometimes in order to improve the familys financial position Control the behavioural patterns in order to comply with the traditional norms of ones family or community Preserve and maintain the familys wealth, which is often in the familys native country Prevent relationships with individuals from outside ones ethnic, cultural, religious group or caste assist relatives immigrating to the UK Fulfil long-standing family commitments and promises Maintain the order of marriage within siblings (in many cases it is customary for the oldest sibling to marry first)
15
Physical violence
In the lead-up to a forced marriage, substantial physical violence may be used to coerce the victim into accepting the marriage. Physical abuse to enforce a marriage can be perpetrated by almost any family member. Before the marriage, it is most often perpetrated by the victims parents, siblings and extended family, such as uncles and cousins. Shaminder Ubhi, director of Ashiana, a womens refuge in Leyton in East London, says: There is a whole spectrum of abuse; sometimes it is subtle emotional pressure over a period of time but sometimes we see women who have been subjected to physical violence, abducted, forced to go Pakistan and married off against their will. Families usually carry out the violence because they believe that the marriage is in the victims best interests. Humera Khan, the co-founder of An-Nisa Society, a womens advocacy group in Wembley, says: No parent either kills the child or deliberately puts their child through a forced marriage because they hate them. A familys desire to see their child married and with children can lead them to take extreme action. Imran Rehman, 33, a support worker at Karma Nirvana refuge in Derby was kidnapped by relatives while in Pakistan visiting family in an attempt to force him to marry his cousin, says: I was woken up with water splashed on my face. Several men were around me; two men held my arms and others held my legs. My brother-in-law said it was time to rehabilitate me. I was mostly swearing at them; threatening them in English. But they shackled my one leg to the other with a metal bar in between and a big ball at the back so that I couldnt walk. I was kept a prisoner there for two weeks. If women are taken abroad to be forcibly married, the risk of them suffering violence if they refuse often increases. Family members will often be less concerned about the police than in the UK and may feel that western standards of behaviour no
shaminder ubhi, director of ashiana, a womens refuge in leyton in east london, says:
of abuse; sometimes it is subtle emotional pressure over a period of time but sometimes we see women who have been subjected to physical violence, abducted, forced to go pakistan and married off against their will ~
16
forced Marriage
longer apply. If the woman resists plans for a forced marriage, she can be kept abroad and subjected to regular physical and emotional violence until she agrees. It can take many years for women to submit. Many eventually agree to the forced marriage in order to be allowed to return home to the UK. Zalkha Ahmed, director of Apna Haq, a womens support group, says: I am a first generation Asian, and a lot of the women who disappeared when I was growing up are slowly returning with families and that is after years of being in Pakistan. God knows what happened to the rest. The government has not released any estimates on how many women holding British passports have been forcibly taken abroad by their relatives and not allowed to return.
n
Humera Khan, the co-founder of an-nisa society, a womens advocacy group in Wembley, says:
or deliberately puts their child through a forced marriage because they hate them ~
Emotional and psychological abuse includes a range of nonviolent, psychological abuse that cause emotional damage and undermine a persons sense of well-being and self-esteem. Women are often subjected to emotional blackmail by their relatives in the lead-up to forced marriage. Philip Balmforth, vulnerable persons officer (Asian women) for the Bradford Police, says: In the 395 cases that I had [this year] there has been emotional blackmail and coercion; like pretending the mother is dying. This form of abuse usually involves telling someone they are worthless, they will never find love and that they will bring dishonour and shame on themselves and the whole family. Other methods can include undermining a persons self-belief or telling them that the abuse will stop as soon as they are married. In some cases, women have been told that they are possessed by jinn (spirits) and that they can only be cured by visiting a holy man. Shahien Taj, the director of the Henna Foundation, a womans refuge in Cardiff, says: I have come across cases where women are suffering from mental illness and are treated for being possessed by jinn. What they usually do, is that the family take them to a Qari [spiritual healer] what he does is take a significant amount of money from certain sectors of the community. He absolutely convinces them that he has the powers to address matters of mental health. He has sessions with them like burning candles, burning paper and holding prayers and encourages people to do the same thing.
17
Many families believe that if their daughters become educated, men from the same ethnic or religious group, especially those brought up abroad, will become less willing to marry them. This fear of being unable to marry off their daughters can lead parents to withdraw their children from school when they approach a marriageable age. When girls are withdrawn from school, teachers are often reluctant to investigate for fear of being accused of racism or of stigmatising minorities. Rahni Binjie, the project manager of Roshni Asian Womens Aid, a refuge in Nottingham, says: There are periods towards the end of the education process when women are taken out of school. The girls just stop coming to classes and the schools dont seem interested in following it up Weve had women who have disappeared from the education system and who then disappear from the system as a whole. We dont know if theyve been taken abroad or killed or anything weve got no idea. Manjit Kaur, a womens development officer at Roshni refuge in Birmingham, was not allowed to continue her education and was sent to Pakistan to marry. She says: My dad refused to send me to school and sent me to Pakistan for four years when I was younger because he believed girls should not be educated. As a result of being withdrawn from education, women may find themselves increasingly isolated from their community and rarely allowed to leave the family home. Women can be prevented from using the phone or the internet, having visitors or seeing certain friends and family members. This also applies to welloff families who can often stand to gain money and property by marrying their daughters to another equally prosperous family.
rahni binjie, the project manager of roshni asian Womens aid, a refuge in nottingham, says:
end of the education process when women are taken out of school. the girls just stop coming to classes and the schools dont seem interested in following it up ~
18
forced Marriage
Philip Balmforth, vulnerable persons officer (Asian women) for the police in Bradford, says:
Jas, a sikh graduate, currently living in london, was subjected to intense psychological pressure by her family to force her to marry. she says:
blackmail to me is worse than physically hitting someone. if they beat me then i would have bruises and get over it but this constant emotional blackmail destroys you from the inside out ~
These girls are brought up to be told to do things and not ask for things; be the good daughter, the good wife and the good mother. A lot of the girls are always told what to do; they are never given the choice to make a decision. I had a case where a woman who is 29 and born here is not allowed to leave the home and is imprisoned because she refused to marry their choice of husband. And as punishment she was imprisoned. Withdrawal from school can have severe consequences for the education levels of women and can also affect their chances of gaining employment and achieving economic independence in later life (See FACTBOX: The effect of honour on education levels). Although the governments Forced Marriage Unit has produced guidelines for teachers on forced marriage,9 there is no obligation for teachers to take action in cases of forced marriage or even to read the guidelines.
Source: http://www.jrf.org.uk/bookshop/eBooks/1997-education-ethnicity-poverty. pdf p. 11. Nb. This information was based on the 2001 census
Many women and some young men are tricked or blackmailed into travelling abroad and then forced into a marriage. Once in their country of origin they are often unable to refuse their familys demands. Saamiya, a 6-year old of Pakistani origin from the Midlands
9 In 2005, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office published Dealing with Cases of Forced Marriage (1st Edition): Guidance for Education Professionals. http://www.fco.gov.uk/Files/kfile/ Dealing%20with%20cases%20of%20Forced%20Marriages.pdf
19
to have sex with him. He was the opposite of what i was. He was twice the size of me. and anyway they would not have let me return until i got pregnant anyway. i didnt know him or meet him before and he was not related to me, he was just from the right caste ~
20
Rape
Once they are forced marriage, women are sometimes raped in order to become pregnant. The rape is often condoned by the womans parents who fear that if she does not become pregnant or have a child, she will run away. Families from traditionalist backgrounds believe that their honour is not satisfied and the marriage contract fulfilled until the daughter is pregnant. If the woman fails to become pregnant or refuses to have sex, her familys honour will be damaged. Ayesha, a Pakistani woman from northern England, who wishes to remain anonymous for security reasons, says: I was raped; I didnt want to have sex with him. He was the opposite of what I was. He was twice the size of me. And anyway they would not have let me return until I got pregnant anyway. I didnt know him or meet him before and he was not related to me, he was just from the right caste. If the marriage takes place abroad, a family may not allow the woman to return to the UK until she has given birth in case she terminates her pregnancy on her return. Latifa, a 9-year old of Pakistani origin who fled to a refuge to escape a forced marriage, says: The guy I was supposed to get married to was my auntys son. And because I didnt get married to him, they gave him my sister instead. Thats what its like. Shes in Pakistan now. Shes 16 and shes pregnant. They had promised me verbally to him and his family when I was born. But now because Ive run away theyve given my sister to him instead. My sister blames me because shes in this situation shes
21
Abandonment
Womens groups report that an increasing number of women brought from South Asia to marry British men are being re-
22
forced Marriage
ferred to the voluntary sector and social services after their husbands abandoned them in the UK. On many occasions they are not entitled to benefits, hold few qualifications and cannot speak English fluently. Women who are abandoned by their husbands can be left destitute and may be rejected or subjected to violence from their own relatives who believe they have damaged their familys honour.
23
rania Hafez, principle lecturer in education at the university of east london, says:
a multicultural society where the norms and values learnt at home are not corresponding to the norms and values learned outside. the child who goes out has a contradiction and a conflict its about managing the conflict ~
Depression, self harm and suicide resulting from forced marriages Many women forced into marriage have so deeply internalised concepts of honour that they may feel unable to defy their families. In consequence, women being forced into a marriage who suffer violence and abuse often suffer depression, anxiety and other psychological problems that can lead to self-harm, schizophrenia and suicide. In many cases, the contradiction between how women are told to act by their families and the personal freedoms which they see enjoyed by wider society can create complex psychological problems. Rania Hafez, principle lecturer in Education at the University of East London, says:
24
forced Marriage C a s e s t u d y
What you have in Britain is a multicultural society where the norms and values learnt at home are not corresponding to the norms and values learned outside. The child who goes out has a contradiction and a conflict its about managing the conflict. It is a conflict which many women are unable to resolve. Jatinder
25
suxeenah, 21, was forced into a marriage in pakistan at 18 before being brought to the uK. abused by her british husband and in-laws, she ran away from home with her daughter: she says:
thought about my daughter and what kind of life she would have without her mother because they never treated her right and just ignored her, calling her names and treating her like an outcast. no one could ever understand what i am going through depression, anxiety and not being able to think straight. i feel helpless and hopeless; there is nothing to keep me going on living apart from my daughter ~
26
cHapter 3
dont understand that their husbands cant hit them, and that that is called domestic violence. they dont even know what it is ~
Abigail Morris, director of Jewish Womens Aid in London
Honour-based domestic violence in general occurs because a womans spouse, relatives or in-laws think that their familys social status is more important than the womans individual welfare. Sana Bukhari, outreach worker at Ashiana, a womans group in Sheffield, says: Honour to them is all about appearance and how they look on the
4 Home Office website: Domestic violence: What is meant by domestic violence? http://www. homeoffice.gov.uk/crime-victims/reducing-crime/domestic-violence/ 5 See for example, ACPO Guidance: Identifying, Assessing and Managing Risk in the context of Policing Domestic Violence (ACPO, February 2005)p. 9 http://www.acpo.police.uk/asp/policies/ Data/250205DV%20Risk%20Assessment%20(ACPO%20Draft%20Guidance5.3%20last). doc
27
Women often suffer psychological abuse and physical violence from their relatives if they are seen as defying parental authority or acting in a western manner which could damage the familys reputation and their standing in the local community. Emotional and physical violence are often used by families and spouses to ensure that women conform to their communitys traditions and cultural norms. Such violence is also used to punish women for actions or behaviour which the community may consider unacceptable. Shaminder Ubhi, director of Ashiana in Leyton in East London says: Parents and families often use a range of abuses that can be emotional and physical to stop or prevent their children from behaving in a way that they see as unacceptable and that happens a lot. Psychological and emotional abuse can also play an important role in controlling and punishing women. This can involve withholding money, confining the person in their room or house to separate them from the outside world and their friends and removing them from education. Jas, a Sikh graduate from Birmingham, has experienced most of the psychological violence mentioned above. She says: Intimidation and emotional blackmail to me is worse than physical violence, because it has long term effects. I would get ignored at family functions. I would not even get invited to my brothers birthday. They would all go out while I was left at home.
problem. id say 60 per cent of arab families suffer from domestic violence. the main problem is the lack of awareness within the community on the violence and its effects ~
Mohamed Baleela, project worker at the Domestic Violence Intervention Project in West London
28
In the Kurdish community, male members of the family are usually seen as the guardian of cultural norms and values. If a woman contravenes those norms and values, the male guardian is often obliged to act to protect the communitys belief system. Gona Saed, director of the Middle East Centre for Womans Rights, an advocacy group in South London, says: Its a combination of nationalistic traditions, culture and religion. These all feed into this violence against women.
29
Mohamed baleela, project worker at the domestic violence intervention project in Hammersmith in West london, says:
problem. id say 60 per cent of arab families suffer from domestic violence. the main problem is the lack of awareness within the community on the violence and its affects ~
30
rahni binjie, the project manager of roshni Womens aid, a refuge in nottingham, says:
Acting western
there is a lot of difference [between white and asian families]. if you go to some of the white working class communities up north you still can find this strong sense of community and the feeling of being part of a large extended family ~
Honour-based violence is often initiated against women who are seen to be acting too western or who have relationships or friendships which transgress gender, caste, ethnic or religious distinctions. Womens behaviour which is viewed as unacceptable by families and communities can include having a boyfriend of different race, religion, caste or wearing western style clothing and listening to western music. Sana Bukhari, outreach worker at Ashiana, a womens refuge in Sheffield, says: Honour is about stopping people talking, anything different is seen as deviant and not acceptable as it is not the norm. The family didnt want to be seen as different. And the norm is what people want to reach and achieve, it is the moral code in to which you live your life.
31
bawjit singh, an indian Hindu who works as a social worker in east london whose sister was disowned by her family after marrying a Muslim, says:
marrying a Muslim is marrying the enemy. We are taught that we can be friends with them but we cant date them and definitely cant marry them. if i marry one who is Muslim then i am disowned ~
32
philip balmforth, the vulnerable persons officer (asian women) for bradfords police force, says:
when families have turned violent on other families for the reason of kids running away together. one case even included a shot gun being fired at a familys house ~
Control by in-laws
The majority of womens refuges report that many of their clients have suffered abuse from their in-laws who seek to control women who have married into their family. In many cases, this situation is exacerbated because many South Asian customs often require newly married couples to live in their husbands family home. On many occasions, as soon as the women has are married they are subjected to psychological abuse, followed by violence if the person continues to step out of line. Sakina, a Pakistani woman currently in a West Midlands womens refuge, says: [My mother in-law] started hitting me and then pushed me down the stairs. I was semi-unconscious, but that didnt stop her with hitting me around the head with her shoes till I completely passed out. I cant remember the amount of times I have been abused; it was a daily thing with my husband, his mother and sister getting involved. Sometimes I had an iron thrown at me but not by my husband, he only used to punch and kick me. As a means of control, families often restrict the victims day-today activities and limit their contact with the outside world. Rav,
33
economic deprivation as a direct cause of domestic violence because we believe that violence is a choice that people make. but we do recognise that these factors might contribute to situations which can lead to violence through causing arguments for instance ~
Drug and alcohol abuse causes increased violence against women within ethnic and religious communities just as it does among other communities. In some cases, a belief among immigrant communities that drug and alcohol issues are western problems or are somehow deserved can make it harder for victims and perpetrators to seek help and treatment. In Muslim communities, in particular, there is often a lack of support and understanding for drug and alcohol addicts. Zahia Tatimahand, director of Kiran Asian Womens Aid, a refuge in Leytonstone in East London, says: It does not matter which community people come from, there are still drugs and alcohol in Muslim communities. The problem is more so for Muslims, because if you are not meant to be drinking, who do you turn to when you have a problem? Seeking treatment or admitting to such problems can also be seen as shameful for oneself and ones family. Ila Patel, director of the Asha Project, a refuge in Streatham in South London, says:
34
Economic factors
Stresses caused by unemployment can also fuel honour-based domestic violence. Womens groups, however, say that poverty in itself is very rarely a direct cause of violence. Nicola Sharp, policy manager at Refuge in central London, says: We dont see poverty or economic deprivation as a direct cause of domestic violence because we believe that violence is a choice that people make. But we do recognise that these factors might contribute to situations which can lead to violence through causing arguments for instance. In many communities of immigrant origin, rates of unemployment are often far above the national average (see FACTBOX below). This can lead to socio-economic deprivation as well as increasing the feelings of inadequacy and frustration which can often drive men to abuse women. Stresses related to unemployment and lack of money can be further compounded by language and economic barriers. Rania Hafez, principle lecturer in education at the University of East London, says:
Source: Britains Immigrants: An Economic Profile, Institute of Public Policy Research, London, 2007. Table 6.2, page 34
35
6 Britains Immigrants: An Economic Profile, IPPR report fig. 5.3 (page 30)
36
cHapter 4
honour killings
introduction
Honour killings are the most extreme example of instances where community values and interests are imposed on individuals at the expense of their most basic human right: the right to life. The United Nations Population Fund has estimated that around 5,000 women die in honour killings every year worldwide, the vast majority in Pakistan, India and Bangladesh.7 Such murders are usually carried out against women who act in a manner which a community (whether their immediate or extended family, co-religionists or inhabitants of their town, a district) finds unacceptable. The large-scale immigration of people from these regions and others means that such killings of both men and women now occur in the UK.
7 The United Nations Population Fund: A Human Rights and Health Priority. http:// www.unfpa.org/swp/2000/english/ch03.html 8 The police estimate of 0-2 honour-killings a year is widely quoted by the British media. This figure seems to originate with Commander Andy Baker who said on 29th September 2003 that the police estimated that 0-2 honour killings occurred in the UK every year. He said on the day that Abdulla Yones was convicted for the murder of his daughter, Heshu. See: The Guardian: Kurd who slit daughters throat in honour killing is jailed for life by Vikram Dodd 30 September 2003, The Independent: Execute me, pleads Muslim who killed daughter after she took western boyfriend boyfriend by Terri Judd 30 September 2003, Birmingham Post: Women pay high price for shame 30 September 2003 and Yorkshire Post: Honour killings claim lives of 3 women a day 29 September 2003. 9 According to the Home Office there were 839 recorded murders in the UK between April 2004-March 2005. Home Office Statistical Bulletin, Warning signs and symptoms of domestic abuse, Violent Crime Overview, Homicide and Gun Crime 2004/2005 (2nd edition), by Kathryn Coleman, Celia Hird and David Povey. January 2006. Page 49. http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs06/hosb0206.pdf
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Honour Killings
As a result of these factors it seems likely that the number of honour-killings is significantly higher than estimates produced by the police or the Home Office.
rav, a 30-year old sikh woman who is staying in a refuge in south london, fled her marital home because she feared that her in-laws were planning to kill her for failing to produce a child. she says:
treatment in the uK, they were going to send me to india for special treatment, but i know there was nothing wrong with me and getting treatment there could be dangerous to me; that i would probably be dumped or killed ~
2 According to in-house analysis of honour-killings reported in the UK media between 990 and 2007.
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Honour Killings
district in Uttar Pradesh, a low caste woman was gang-raped and then killed because her son was said to have run away with the wife of a man from the higher Yadav caste.7 Bangladesh: Honour killing is a major problem in Bangladesh. Although even basic statistics are lacking, many believe that several hundred women are killed for honour-related reasons annually.8 Killings in rural areas are often covered up by families of both the victims and the murderers, the wider community and the local authorities. Police rarely investigate the deaths of women, particularly if their deaths are disguised as accidents and suicides. Furthermore there is also a high genuine suicide rate among Bangladeshi women largely as a result of verbal, emotional and physical abuse from husbands, brothers, in-laws and other women. As a result, there are now only 100 women to every 105 men in Bangladesh even though hundreds of thousands of Bengali men have travelled abroad in search of work.9 This demographic in-balance has reportedly been accentuated by female infanticide, abortion of female foetuses and the widespread practice of giving young girls less food than boys and inferior medical treatment.
7 The Communist Party of India, AIDWA Convention Against Honour Killings. January 8 2004. http://pd.cpim. org/2004/08/082004_aidwa%20convn.htm and Frontline, Indias national magazine, Volume 2 Issue 03, February 3 2004. http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/fl203/stories/200402300205000.htm 8 The scale of honour killings can be gleaned from other statistics. Between January and December 2006 there were 639 reported rapes in Bangladesh. Of these, 26 women were subsequently killed and 3 others committed suicide. During the same period there were 243 dowry-related killings reported to the police, Odhikar, a local human rights organization said. http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2006/78869.htm 9 Division for the Advancement of Women: Violence against women: A statistical overview, challenges and gaps in data collection and methodology and approaches for overcoming them (page 2), by Sharmeen A. April 2005. http://www. un.org/womenwatch/daw/egm/vaw-stat-2005/docs/expert-papers/Farouk.pdf
Indeed, in some small, highly-segregated towns in the North and the Midlands, South Asian women may be less likely to suffer honour killings precisely because they are less exposed to nontraditional lifestyles and are therefore likely tempted to transgress their communitys cultural boundaries.
Most victims of honour killings reported in the UK are Muslim women from South Asia who are below the age of thirty. As in other forms of honour-based violence, the majority of killings are carried out either by close family members or husbands. A typical victim of such honour killings was Samaira Nazir, a 25year old woman of Pakistani origin. Nazir, a businesswoman and
41
university graduate whom friends described as strong-willed,22 was summoned to the family home in April 2005 after rejecting husbands proposed by her family and having a relationship with an Afghan asylum seeker. When she refused to stop dating him, her brother (Azhar Nazir, a 30 year-old businessman), her father and her 7-year old cousin, stabbed her 7 times and slashed her throat. Samairas boyfriend later said:
22 Times Online: Sister is stabbed to death for loving the wrong man, by Steve Bird. June 7 2006. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article675686.ece
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Honour Killings
We were as boyfriend and girlfriend for about five or six years. But we couldnt tell her family because Samaira said her father was a very strict man who would not allow any female in his family to marry outside of his caste or tribe. We had discussed marriage. Samaira wanted to tell her family herself. Her father was very upset and said I was only after their money.23 Samairas brother and cousin were convicted of murder. Her father fled to Pakistan while on bail and is still wanted by police. Because there is no extradition treaty with Pakistan, he cannot be extradited. Honour killings can be carried out for almost any failure to meet the expectations of ones in-laws or relatives. Rav, a 27-year old Sikh woman who is staying in a refuge in South London, fled her marital home because she feared that her in-laws were planning to kill her for failing to produce a child. She says: Although I had fertility treatment in the UK, they were going to send me to India for special treatment, but I know there was nothing wrong with me and getting treatment there could be dangerous to me; that I would probably be dumped or killed. Usually, honour killings only take place when a womans perceived failings become known to the wider community. Only when the familys loss of honour becomes public knowledge, does the family finally feel compelled to act. Waheed Malik, coordinator of Awaaz Asian Womens Group in Accrington, says: In our culture women are not allowed to talk about domestic violence [DV]. If she does talk about it then maybe the little DV will become a big DV if the family thinks that she is talking about it to outsiders. Rasheedah, a 24-year old Mirpuri Pakistani woman, ran away from her marital home after being tricked into marrying a mentally disabled man through an arranged marriage. Although she experienced severe domestic violence from her in-laws during the marriage, she says that she only became at risk of an honour killing after fleeing to the refuge where she has lived for the last 4 months. She says: They managed to get my number and gave me threatening calls. They said that they will find me and kill me if I dont return, but the police found out and got me a new phone. I fear for my life if they know where I am.
23 Times Online: Sister is stabbed to death for loving the wrong man, by Steve Bird. June 7 2006. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article675686.ece
allowed to talk about domestic violence [dv]. if she does talk about it then maybe the little dv will become a big dv if the family thinks that she is talking about it to outsiders ~
43
Many women are discouraged from fleeing abusive situations because they know that if they are subsequently found by their families, they will be at risk of even greater violence.
n
Honour, as it exists in parts of the Middle East and South Asia, is a cultural concept shared by all members of the community. Consequently women, as well as men, have taken part in honour killings in order to defend their familys honour and to preserve their culture against outside influences.
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Honour Killings
In 999, for example, Rukhsana Naz, a 9-year old woman of Pakistani origin living in Derby, was murdered by her mother. She was killed when, three years after she had been forced to marry an older man, she became pregnant after having an affair with a young man she had known since childhood. When she refused to have an abortion, her mother told her that she was an insult to [her] husband.24 Soon afterwards Naz was held down by her mother while her brother strangled her. Olivia Madden, client co-ordinator for Panah refuge in Newcastle, says: It is common for a mother to be involved and we have had a case where a woman was responsible for the killing. We have had women come here running away from home thinking that their mother is going to kill them. In other cases, honour-killings have been arranged by female inlaws. In 998 Bachan Athwal, a Sikh grandmother arranged for her family to murder Surjit Athwal, her 27-year old daughter-inlaw. Athwal urged her relatives to murder Surjit, a customs officer at Heathrow, after discovering that she was having an affair and was planning to divorce her son. She lured Surjit to India under the pretext of a family wedding where she was killed. After the murder, Bachan boasted that her daughter-in-laws body had been disposed of in a river.25 To disrupt police investigations, Surjit and her son (the dead womans husband) sent forged letters to the Indian police.26 She was only convicted in July 2007, aged 70 and was sentenced to life.27
n
in 2006, Mohammed riaz killed caneze riaz, his wife and their four daughters in accrington, lancashire. riaz was angered that his wife was speaking out for womens rights and encouraging their daughters to wear western fashions. John paton, manager of the lancashire family Mediation service, who knew canaze riaz, says:
speak any english and he became jealous of his wife who was brought up here. she was very well-respected in the community and did a lot of talks and was much liked. and sadly this man couldnt cope with this and he set light to her house, killing her and her children. its a tragic case and although its a rather extreme one its also largely typical of the sort of problems that arise in these cases ~
In many cases of honour killings by people of South Asian origin, the violence was sparked by relationships which transgressed caste or religious boundaries in a way which was seen as shameful for the individuals family. In November 2002, for example, Mustaq Ahmed, a 40-year old London businessman of South Asian origin, killed his daughters boyfriend, Rexhap Hasani, an Albanian Catholic asylum seeker, because he did not want her to marry a Christian. He killed Hasani after he had previously tried and failed to force the couple
24 The Observer: Love, Honour and Obey Or Die by Jason Burke. 8 October 2000 http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,37974,00.html 25 Daily Mail: Grandmother jailed for life over honour killing of cheating daughter-inlaw. 9th September 2007.http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news. html?in_article_id=482669&in_page_id=770 26 The Guardian: Sikh wifes disgrace sparked killing, court told, by David Ward. 3 May 2007. http://www.guardian.co.uk/crime/article/0,,20726,00.html 27 BBC: Life for murder plot grandmother 9 September 2007 http://news.bbc.co.uk// hi/england/london/7002404.stm
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28 BBC: Life for honour killing. 7 October 2003.http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/england/london/372202.stm 29 BBC: Father jailed over daughters murder. 8 February 2002. http://news.bbc.co.uk// hi/england/827623.stm
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Honour Killings
n
In several cases, women have been killed by their extended families without the consent of their more immediate relatives. This may often provoke further violence from relatives who disagree with the legitimacy of the honour killing.
47
30 Birmingham Evening Mail: Man given life for murder of brother, by Amanda Geary and Louise Grifferty. February 200.
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Honour Killings C a s e s t u d y
49
Pre-planned attacks
Most honour-killings committed by South Asians are planned in advance by one or more members of the victims family. The pre-meditated nature of such attacks helps distinguish such murders from more spontaneous crimes of passion which are common in many other communities. In March 998, Rukhsana Naz, a 9 year-old woman of Pakistani origin, was killed by her mother and 22-year old brother after she threatened to divorce the man she had been forced to marry and said she was pregnant by another man.3 Three weeks before the murder, Nazs mother confronted her daughter, kicked her in the stomach and ordered her to have an abortion. When Naz refused, the mother made plans with her sons to kill her. The week before her murder, Nazs family forced her to sign a will giving them guardianship of her two children in the event of her death. Naz was strangled by her brother while her mother held her legs.32 Many honour killings have a ritualistic element. In April 2005, Samaira Nazir, a 25-year old Muslim woman, was killed in her familys home in Southall, London, by her brother, Azhar Nazir, and her cousin after she refused to marry any of the men proposed by her family. When her family told her she would have to marry a man of their choice, she replied that she wanted to marry her Afghan boyfriend and threatened to leave home, saying to her mother, You are not my mother anymore. Her brother and cousin then held her down, stabbed her 7 times and cut her throat. They then forced her two sisters aged two and four to watch her die. As her brother was led away by police he told them: There had been a problem with my sister. She does not wish to have an arranged marriage. We only allow marriage within the family. My sister wanted to run away from the house and was stopped.33 Nazir was a graduate from Thames Valley University and was working as a recruitment consultant. She may have felt that she had outgrown her familys traditions. Her success may also have created feelings of envy among her less successful male relatives; and to have made them feel emasculated by her success and in3 BBC: Man confessed to murdering sister May 999 http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/ uk/34238.stm 32 The Independent: Mother murdered pregnant daughter by Kate Watson-Smyth. 26 May 26 999 33 BBC: Man convicted of murdering sister. 6 June 2006. http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/ england/london/5087702.stm
ghazala razzaq, the centre co-ordinator at roshni asian Womens resource centre in sheffield, says:
14 will tell their mothers what is acceptable when their fathers are not around because they are taught to act in that way ~
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Honour Killings
dependence. It is probable that her nieces were forced to watch her murder so they would know not to embrace a western lifestyle as she had. The fact that her killing was carried out by her younger male cousin is also significant. In many cases, South Asian boys are taught by their families from an early age that their duty is to police their female relatives. Ghazala Razzaq, the centre co-ordinator at Roshni Asian Womens Resource Centre in Sheffield, says: Some young children as old as 14 will tell their mothers what is acceptable when their fathers are not around because they are taught to act in that way. The ritualised nature of Nazirs murder recalls other cases. When the Kurdish teenager Heshu Yones was killed, her father stabbed her eleven times in the chest and then cut her throat,34 a powerful gesture which for many rural immigrants has connotations of sheep being slaughtered. The manner of killing may reflect deeply internalised views of women as an asset or form of property.
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Killing of children
In some cases, a husbands attack on his wife has resulted in the death of their children. In some cases this is done intentionally if male relatives believe the children have been tainted by their mothers supposed immorality. In 2006 in Accrington, Lancashire, Mohammed Riaz, an immigrant from Pakistans highly conservative North-West Frontier Province, killed Caneze Riaz and her four daughters by setting fire to the family home after locking them inside. The girls who died in the blaze were aged 6, 5, 0 and three. The husband, who died from injuries sustained in the fire, had arrived in the UK aged 32 after his wife was sent from the UK to Pakistan to get married. At the time of the killing, the father was under great pressure as his only son, a 7-year old, was in hospital undergoing treatment for leukaemia. Although he had previously criticised his wife for encouraging their children to wear western fashions, the final straw came when his eldest daughter told him that she wanted to become a fashion designer. It seems likely that Riaz felt emasculated both by his failure to produce a healthy son but also by his wifes success; while he worked in a succession of low-paid jobs, his wife was confident and successful, building her own circle of friends and starting to work with women who
34 BBC: Honour killing father begins sentence. 30 September 2003. http://news.bbc. co.uk//hi/england/london/349030.stm
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felt oppressed by traditional South Asian values.35 John Paton, manager of the Lancashire Family Mediation Service, who knew Canaze Riaz, says: He was illiterate and didnt speak any English and he became jealous of his wife who was brought up here. She was very well-respected in the community and did a lot of talks and was much liked. And sadly this man couldnt cope with this and he set light to her house, killing her and her children. Its a tragic case and although its a rather extreme one its also largely typical of sort of the problems that arise in these cases. In July 2006, Uzma Rahan, 32, and her three daughters were killed in Manchester by her husband after he suspected her of having an affair. She came to the UK through an arranged marriage in 992 but gradually adopted an increasingly western lifestyle, making friends independently and dressing less conservatively. This behaviour gradually enraged her husband, Ra35 Telegraph: Father Kills Family for Being too Western, by Nigel Bunyan. 22 February 2007. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/02/2/nmuslim2. xml
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Honour Killings
han Arshad, who worked as a taxi driver. Under this pressure the couple separated and then reunited. Soon afterwards, Uzmas husband accused her of having an affair and then killed her by hitting her 23 times with a rounders bat before similarly attacking his children.36 Before her death, Uzma had told her friends that she feared becoming the victim of an honour killing, saying, Count the days before he kills me.37 At his trial, Arshad told the court that he had been angered by his wifes decision to wear tight jeans and tops. He said: It wasnt right for a mother and someone who came from Pakistan to change the way she dressed all of a sudden. It wasnt right at all.38 Sometimes children are killed accidentally in honour-related attacks. In Aston, Birmingham, in March 2006, a six-year old girl, Alisha Begum, was killed after her familys house was firebombed by the Bengali relatives and friends of a 6-year girl who her brother was dating. Mohammed Foaz Ahmed, the girls brother, and his friend Jabed Ali are still wanted by police for the attack and are believed to have fled to Bangladesh.39 Two of their friends, Hussain Ahmed, a 26-year old dentist, and Daryll Tuzzio, 8, were convicted for their part in the attack.
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to take me back to pakistan so that they can kill me basically. theyll just pay the police there to keep quiet. the police there are totally corrupt and if they see a girl whose run away theyll take them back to their family ~
Killings abroad
Frequently, women are killed after being taken home to the Indian subcontinent. Often their families appear to hope that the police there will not investigate the case properly. These killings further show that many honour killings are pre-meditated and planned in advance. In 998 Bachan Athwal, a Sikh woman was taken to India and killed by her in-laws because they believe that she was planning to get a divorce. They were only convicted in 2007 after one of the victims relatives gave fresh evidence to the police. Police said that securing a prosecution had been complicated because Athwals body was never found it had been reportedly dumped
36 Manchester Evening News: Uzma Arshad: The Westernised wife. 3 March 2003. http:// www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/s/00/0086_uzma_arshad_the_westernised_wife.html 37 Stockport Express: Evil dad slaughtered wife and three kids, by Barbara Simpson. 4 March 2007http://www.stockportexpress.co.uk/news/s/524/52456_evil_dad_slaughtered_ wife_and_three_kids.html 38 Stockport Express: Arshad: Profile of a killer. 4 March 2007. http://www.stockportexpress.co.uk/news/s/524/524550_arshad_profile_of_a_killer.html?related_link 39 Birmingham Mail: Firebomb murder suspects may be back, by Mark Cowen. 3 October 2007.http://icbirmingham.icnetwork.co.uk/mail/news/tm_headline=Hunt%20fo r%20firebomb%20murder%20suspects&method=full&objectid=20038646&siteid=50002name_page.html
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Honour Killings
Despite the frequency of honour killings by Kurds in parts of Iraq and Turkey, there are relatively few recorded cases of honour killings by Kurds in the UK. Only two Kurdish women are recorded as having been killed by their relatives in the UK (Heshu Yones and Banaz Mahmod). However because at least two other Kurdish women living in the UK (Shawbo Ali Rauf and Subhia Nadir) have been taken back to Iraqi Kurdistan and killed there, many Kurdish womens organisations believe that the number of Kurdish women living in the UK who have been killed could be higher. The relatively low numbers of known Kurdish honour killings may also conceal how widely honour killings are seen as acceptable by Kurdish immigrants in the UK. For example, some Kurdish womens groups in London estimate that 0 per cent of the women who flee to refuges believe themselves at risk of being killed.44
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the immediate family as we often deal with cases where significant members took part in the act; in the murder. and in the case of banaz [Mahmod], for instance, in addition substantial numbers of the community actually did not assist and support prosecutors; instead they supported the family members who were responsible for the killing. they really didnt care and it showed We dont see this as domestic violence its beyond that. the murder of banaz was so brutal that it was a clear warning to others; it was a way of saying dont step out of line or this could be you ~
In all four known cases of Kurdish women living in the UK being killed, all were murdered on suspicion of having boyfriends which their family members and the community iterpreted as a sign of becoming westernised. In all cases, the womens deaths followed years of physical and emotional violence committed either by close family members or by the men they had been forced to marry. Abdulla Yones killed his daughter, Heshu, in October 2002 after subjecting her to months of repeated beatings in an unsuccessful attempt to force her to end her relationship with her boyfriend, an 8-year old Lebanese Christian. He finally killed her after her relationship became public knowledge among the Kurdish community of North London and he received a note at his work at the offices of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan saying that his daughter was a prostitute.45 Soon afterwards he found a stash of love letters in his daughters room and a note that showed she was planning to run away. Later recovered by the police, one letter read: Bye Dad, sorry I was so much trouble. Me and you will probably never understand each other, but Im sorry I wasnt what you wanted, but theres some things you cant change. Hey, for an older man you have a good strong punch and kick.
44 For example, Diana Nammi, director of Iranian and Kurdish Womens Rights Organisation in London, believes that one in ten women who come to her refuge believe themselves to be at a risk of an honour killing. 45 The Daily Telegraph: ;Muslim cut his daughters throat for taking a Christian boyfriend. By Sue Clough and Sean ONeill. 30 September 2003 http://www.telegraph. co.uk/news/main.jhtml;sessionid=0EL53AIWUAVSPQFIQMGSM5OAVCBQWJVC?xml=/ news/2003/09/30/nyones30.xml
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Honour Killings C a s e s t u d y
Killers arriving from Kurdistan/Kurdish women being killed abroad Kurdish honour killings often have an international component. Women may either be taken abroad to be killed or else their family might arrange for relatives from Kurdistan to come to the UK to carry out the killing. In May 2007, 9-year old Shawbo Ali Rauf was taken from her home in Birmingham to Iraqi Kurdistan. Once there, her family stoned her to death after finding unknown numbers on her
57
sawsan selim, co-ordinator of the Kurdistan refugee Womens organisation in north london, says:
disadvantaged people here. if you give one of these men a photo and 2,000 to kill someone they will do it. it is a lot of money for these people if you are only on two or three pounds an hour ~
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gional Government has said that it knows the mens identity but the British government has said that it is unable to extradite the men due to the lack of a relevant extradition treaty.5
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In many cases, Kurdish honour killings have a strong ritual element. Often the murder itself and the events leading up to it seem intended to degrade the victim and to present the murder as an act of collective justice. When the 9-year old Shawbo Ali Rauf was taken from her home in Birmingham to Iraqi Kurdistan and killed in May 2007, her relatives stoned her to death. This Islamic execution was presumably intended to portray the murder both to the woman and other family members as a legitimate act that was both culturally and religiously permissible. Similarly, Banaz Mahmod was punished before her death with rape and beatings designed to deliberately humiliate her. On the orders of her father, she was stripped by her killers and raped for two hours in her family home before being garrotted. Mohamad Hama, a 30-year old Kurd recruited by Banazs father to kill her, was recorded telling a friend in prison that he had slapped and fucked the 20-year old woman as her father watched in the family home.52 The ritualised nature of such abuse makes it clear that such killings are seen by elements in the Kurdish community as quasi-judicial punishments with a strong moral dimension rather than as spontaneous outbursts of anger. Often, such ritualised brutality suggests these killings are intended as a warning to other women not to transgress the communitys moral red lines. Nazir Afzal, the lead on honour-based violence at the Crown Prosecution Service, says: We dont see this as domestic violence its beyond that. The murder of Banaz was so brutal that it was a clear warning to others; it was a way of saying dont step out of line or this could be you.53 Two of the Kurds who carried out honour killings in the UK have
5 The Guardian: Honour killing: pressure grows on UK to extradite suspect from Iraq, by Karen McVeigh. 22 November 2007. http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,225030,00. html 52 Daily Mail: Two hour rape and torture of honour killing girl. 20 July 2007. http:// www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=469553&in_page_ id=770 53 This motive was openly articulated by Muslim and Middle Eastern writers as early as 860 when Mela Mehmud Bayezidi, a Kurdish scholar, wrote in an essay called Kurdish Manners and Customs that the purpose of honour killings was to instill fear in other women to make them guard their modesty and their chastity. http://www.womansrights. org/doc/FadimeMojab.pdf (page 3)
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numerous womens groups say that the rates of forced marriage and domestic violence among arab communities in the uK are lower than in south asian ones. Mohamed baleela, a team leader at the domestic violence intervention project in Hammersmith in West london, says:
speaking community deal with it in a different way they remove their families back home and then they think problem solved. once the women are back, they will have to do what they have been taught. even if they are not forced to marry a particular person, they will still marry someone from their own community ~
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ligious codes through other means. Mohamed Baleela, a team leader at the Domestic Violence Intervention Project in Hammersmith in West London, says: I think that the Arabic-speaking community deal with it in a different way They remove their families back home and then they think problem solved. Once the women are back, they will have to do what they have been taught. Even if they are not forced to marry a particular person, they will still marry someone from their own community. A similar situation prevails in the UKs Turkish community. Although up to 200 men and women die in honour-based violence occur every year in Turkey, no honour killings have been recorded among Turks living in the UK. Derya Yildirim, a Turkish project co-ordinator for Refuges community outreach project in London, says: Turkish communities in North London have tried to resolve issues themselves by interfering and not by going to the police. There was a recent case where a Turkish woman who was married had an affair with a black man and she had a mixed race child. Her husband found
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D U M P e D i n Pa K i S ta n
Khan was married at the age of 17 to her cousin. she comes from Karachi, Pakistan. she was married to a British-born graduate and businessman of Pakistani origin who lived in slough. My husband was British, and had his British home with his family. So I moved to England in 1998 to 2003. I have three children. First one the girl, born in Saudi Arabia, then my daughter and son who is the youngest also born in the UK. I dont do papers for residency because I didnt know and I spoke little English. I was a house wife, looking after my children and looking after my husbands family in Slough. I was mistreated very badly. Not just my husband but his whole family was very bad, and they were my relatives. Didnt have anyone, I spoke no English. All the time they just treated me as a slave; I cooked, cleaned and looked after the kids. I was treated as a slave, beaten by my husband and women in the family would pull my hair. They would do things if dinner is late the whole family and this happens a lot with Asian families. When my husband re-married [married a second wife], he married here. He just had Nikah. My children didnt get treated well, he would push them [sometimes]. When my husband new lady came, she would sleep with him while I slept down stairs. He did not ask me if he wants to marry. He refused to divorce and would use to hit me. I was not allowed to speak to my mom or any of my relatives in Pakistan. I wasnt allowed to speak to anyone, leave the house or have friends. Then suddenly he said Oh... you have not spoken to your mother in so many years, dont you want to see her? I have tickets. In the summer of 2003 we went to Pakistan, just he and me. I was very happy to see my mother, sister and brothers [Father is deceased]. He said we go Pakistan just for two weeks. I tell him why you do not bring children with us. He made so many excuses. I never suspected he would leave. He dropped me at my mothers house in Karachi. One week later he phoned me and tells me he is in the UK now. I say what about me, he said after one month I come and take you. I say where is my passport, and he said, Tickets in Pakistan are very expensive. I asked about my children and he told me not worry. My daughter said, when you come back? and I said, tell your daddy to come and take me. One month became two then three, he kept delaying and delaying. For one and a half year I was in Pakistan with no money and without my three children. There was no honour or shame in my family. My mother was all the time praying for me, she was supportive and all my two brothers and sisters. Finally he said that he will come and pick me and bring the children, so I packed my suitcase a month before just waiting. But he did not come. So in January 2005 I went to the High Commission office in Karachi. It took 5 months to arrange my return, from January to May.
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Honour Killings
lis in the UK. In Somalia, honour killings are rare even though ideas of sexual honour are strong and women are often seen as less valuable than men.59 Fathiya Yusuf, Somali community outreach worker for Refuges office in Deptford in South East London, says: From hearing stories, honour killing does not exist in Somalia but there is dishonour instead. A woman who gets pregnant without getting married or who runs away or becomes a prostitute; she becomes an outcast. For the family it is as if she is dead but they wont go as far as killing someone. Its not allowed its considered illegal as far as religion is concerned. But if the family wont talk to her and they dishonour her, she will be made to feel ashamed by the whole community. Unless she leaves the community altogether or goes to another country she will have a hard time for her whole life.
fathiya Yusuf, somali community outreach worker for refuges office in deptford in south east london, says:
killing does not exist in somalia but there is dishonour instead. a woman who gets pregnant without getting married or who runs away or becomes a prostitute; she becomes an outcast ~
63
62 BBC: Two guilty over religion killing. 20 June 2005. http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/england/west_midlands/463746.stm 63 The rareness of such cross-cultural honour killings indicates the continuity of much honour-based violence throughout the centuries, in particular the understanding that the idea of honour only functions between two people existing in the same conceptual universe. For this same reason, European duels were only fought between men of similar rank and while medieval jousts in which men competed to win renown for themselves and honour for their ladies were only fought between knights (Honour and Shame; PittRivers, page 7).
64
cHapter 5
64 Unicef Fact sheet No: 24: Female Genital Mutilation (June 2000) http://www.who. int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs24/en/ 65 Unicef: Child Protection Information Sheet: Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting (May 2006) http://www.unicef.org/protection/files/FGM.pdf 66 Unicef Fact sheet No: 24: Female Genital Mutilation (June 2000) http://www.who. int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs24/en/
65
evidence. for example, ive had a call from a woman in birmingham who said that her husband wanted to take her six-year old daughter out of the country to gambia ~
66
fathiya Yusuf, the somali community outreach Worker for refuge in deptford:
community is making change and so is the government saying it is illegal. it is the combination of these that is effective. the government making it illegal stops people doing it; work within the community tells people that they dont have to do it ~
67
In a modern context, attempts to reduce FGM rates have generally been supported by secularist and moderate Muslims and opposed by the more conservative Islamic clerics although this is not always the case. For instance, in October 994 Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, the grand mufti of Egypt, challenged the idea that there were any valid hadiths which permitted FGM or made it compulsory. He was opposed however by opposition Islamists who equated any attempt to challenge traditional customs as an effort to promote western culture and ideas at the
68
69
Source: A statistical study to estimate the prevalence of Female Genital Mutilation in England and Wales. Forward, London, 2007. http:// www.forwarduk.org.uk/download/96
beliefs are still prevalent. In Egypt, Coptic Christian leaders have stated that the practice has no basis in Christianity and should be stopped. For example, Bishop Moussa, Bishop for Youth of the Coptic Orthodox Church and representative of Pope Shenouda III, the head of the Coptic church, has said: From the Christian perspective this practice has no religious grounds whatsoever. Further, it is medically, morally and practically groundless. [] When God created the human being, he Made everything in him/her good: each organ has its function and role. So, why do we allow the disfiguring of Gods good creation? There is not a single verse in the Bible or the Old or New Testaments, nor is there anything in Judaism or Christianity not one single verse speaks of female circumcision.78 However, such official disapproval has had a limited effect. Smallscale localised campaigns by Christian priests in rural Egypt have often been more effective. For example, a campaign by the Coptic Evangelical Organisation for Social Services in villages in Upper Egypt produced a sharp decline in FGM prevalence in just five years.79 Similar strategies have been applied in Ethiopia by groups such as Care Ethiopia and Save the Children Norway-Ethiopia.80 These efforts have helped reduce prevalence rates. One survey found that in 2000 80 per cent of women had undergone FGM; in 2005
78 Unicef: Changing A Harmful Social Convention: Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting (Unicef, Florence, 2007) http://www.unicef-icdc.org/publications/pdf/fgm-gb-2005.pdf p.2 79 Unicef: Coordinated Strategy To Abandon Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting In One Generation: A Human Rights-Based Approach To Programming (Unicef, New York, 2007) p.29-30. http://www.childinfo.org/areas/fgmc/docs/Coordinated_Strategy_to_Abandon_FGMC%20_ in_One_Generation_eng.pdf]. Also Who Health Organisationl: Female Genital Mutilation: Programmes to Date: What Works and What Doesnt (Department of Womens Health, Health Systems and Community Health, World Health Organization, 999) p.59 http://www.who. int/reproductive-health/publications/fgm/fgm_programmes_review.pdf. 80 The Norwegian International Effort Against Female Genital Mutilation by Tonje Bentzen and Aud Talle(Oslo, July 2007) (page5-6) http://www.norad.no/items/8252/38/3520709369/ The%20Norwegian%20International%20Effort%20Against%20Female%20Genital%20M utilation.pdf
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fGM in the UK
Perhaps even more than other honour-related crimes, FGM is an underground practice and may not even be openly discussed within communities and families. In many cultures men are not aware of the nature of the FGM operations and the suffering that they can cause to women at the time of the operation and in later life. In addition, the very nature of the act means that even in places such as East Africa where the practice is near-universal it is usually carried out in semi-secrecy in private homes. The difficulty of tracking FGM in the UK can be gauged by the fact that since the Female Genital Mutilation Act became law in 2003, not a single person has been prosecuted for the offence. A previous law, the Prohibition of Female Circumcision Act 985, also failed to produce any prosecutions.
Prevalence
An October 2007 study carried out by Forward and the London School of Hygene and Tropical Medicine estimated that at least 98,376 women under the age of 5 were at risk of undergoing some form of FGM or had already undergone the procedure.82 Of this, the study estimated that nearly 6,000 girls aged 8 and below were at risk of suffering a Type III mutilation the most extreme. The study also estimated that around 65,000 women in the UK had already had some form of FGM most of whom will have suffered it before leaving their home country. Alison MacFarlane, one of the co-authors of the report, says however that we think this is an underestimate and that the real figures may be higher. Despite this, the figures in the survey are the most accurate to date. The Department of Health had previously estimated that 74,000 women in the UK have undergone the procedure.83 In both cases, these estimates are based on little more
8 A Study on Female Genital Mutilation In Eritrea by Worku Zerai. April 2003. http://www. stopfgm.net/dox/worku_zerai_fgm_eritrea_2003.pdf (page 44) 82 A Statistical Study to Estimate the Prevalence of Female Genital Mutilation in England and Wales (Summary Report) by Efua Dorkenoo, Linda Morison and Alison Macfarlane (Foward UK, 2007, London) (page 25) http://www.forwarduk.org.uk/download/96 83 See briefing paper Prevention of Female Genital Mutilation in the UK issued by the British Medical Association (BMA) in July 2006 http://www.bma.org.uk/ap.nsf/Content/PreventionFGM
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In different communities
n
African
Attention on FGM in the UK has mostly focused on immigrants from East African nations where FGM rates run to over 90 per cent. In many parts of Somalia, Sudan and Djibouti rates of FGM are believed to exceed 90 per cent. In some Muslim countries where it is common such as Mali (where 90 per cent of women have undergone FGM) the practice is legal while others (such as Libya and Djibouti) have recently outlawed it. However, in other mainly Muslim countries in Africa such as Niger less than 5 per cent of women have undergone FGM. In some occasions followers of non-Muslim African religions such as animists in Benin and Orthodox Christians in Ethiopia also practice FGM. Despite this, anecdotal evidence suggests that, among African immigrants
threatened with fgM, and thats why they left. the most recent one was a Muslim Zimbabwean, and aged 18. she escaped. We had 3 cases so far ~
72
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Arab
Information about FGM in the Arab world is scarce however this does not mean that it does not happen. Just as in the case of honour killings and other sensitive issues, independent surveys on FGM in the Arab world have only been carried out in the few countries which are sufficiently open. Where such surveys have been carried out they have revealed that FGM is much more common than was originally anticipated. In Egypt, for example, surveys found that that over 90 per cent of women (both Muslim and Christian) have undergone some form of FGM86. Efua Dorkenoo, a Ghanian campaigner against FGM who co-founded Forward, says: Its only African countries where governments have really opened this up to study. Other countries, particularly Arab ones, have not and so we dont know whats going on there.87 In Yemen, one of the few other Arab countries where FGM prevalence has been studied, surveys suggest that at least a quarter of women have undergone some form of FGM.88 However, in many cases, the form of circumcision differs and may escape detection. For instance, in the Yemens coastal Tihama region where links with Africa are strong, up to 70 percent of women may have undergone FGM often in the Africa style.89 There are also scattered reports of FGM occurring in the United Arab Emirates
86 A Statistical Study to Estimate the Prevalence of Female Genital Mutilation in England and Wales (Summary Report) by Efua Dorkenoo, Linda Morison and Alison Macfarlane (Foward UK, 2007, London) (page 7) http://www.forwarduk.org.uk/download/96 87 Speaking at the launch of Forwards FGM Prevalence Study in England and Wales on 9 October 2007. 88 Unicef Yemen FGM/C Country profile. Briefing paper published by Unicef in November 2005 http://www.childinfo.org/areas/fgmc/profiles/Yemen/Yemen%20FGC%20profile%2 0English.pdf 89 ibid.
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Kurdish
Apart from Egypt and Yemen, one of the few areas of the Arab world where FGM incidence has been surveyed is Iraqs Kurdistan region. Although FGM was known to be practiced there, the practice was believed to be rare. However in 2005, Wadi, a German charity, surveyed 6 villages in the Iraqs Kurdistan region and found that 65 per cent of the 3665 women interviewed had undergone FGM.94 Researchers from Wadi found that Kurdish villagers who had circumcised their daughters cited religious reasons, for example, saying that if a girl is not mutilated even the
90 Harvard International Review: No end in sight: female mutilation unabated by Rebecca Buckwalter. Spring 2005. http://hir.harvard.edu/articles/30/ Arab News: Female Circumcision: Weight of Tradition Perpetuates a Dangerous Practice by Maha Akeel. 20 March 2005 http://www.arabnews. com/?page=9§ion=0&article=60703&d=20&m=3&y=2005&pix=community. jpg&category=Features 9 Freedom House Country Report: United Arab Emirates (page 85) http://www. freedomhouse.org/template.cfm 92 Agence France Press: Abused women find shelter in controversial UAE refuge by Ali Khalil 7 May 2006. Avaiable at http://www.metimes.com/International/2006/05/7/ abused_women_find_refuge_in_controversial_uae_shelter/7737/ 93 U Elchalal, B Ben-Ami, A Brzezinski Female circumcision: the peril remains BJU International, Volume 83, Issue S, (999), 0308. http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/ action/showPdf?submitPDF=Full+Text+PDF+%2876+KB%29&doi=0.046%2Fj.46440x.999.0830s03.x&cookieSet= It is perhaps worth noting that, as regards Israels Bedouin, FGM occurs alongside with some of the worlds highest recorded rates of domestic violence. For example, one 2003 study of 202 Bedouin women found that 48 percent had suffered lifetime exposure to domestic violence See: The Physical and Psychosocial Health of Bedouin Arab Women of the Negev Area of Israel: The Impact of High Fertility and Pervasive Domestic Violence by Julie Cwikel, Rachel Lev-Wiesel and Alean AlKrenawi in Violence Against Women, Vol. 9, No. 2, 240-257 (2003) http://vaw.sagepub. com/cgi/content/abstract/9/2/240 94 2 July 2007 press release by Wadi: http://www.wadinet.de/news/dokus/press_june07stopfgm_en.htm. Also see Middle East Quarterly: Is Female Genital Mutilation an Islamic Problem? by Thomas von der Osten-Sacken and Thomas Uwer Winter 2007 http://www. meforum.org/article/629
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South Asian
FGM is rare in Pakistan, Bangladesh and India although surveys are again incomplete. The only South Asian group known to habitually practice FGM are the 00,000 Bohra Muslims who live in Pakistan and the Gujarat region of India. However the absence of reliable surveys of womens sexual health especially in Pakistan, Bangladesh and remote regions of India make it impossible to say whether the practice is more widespread. Although FGM is rare in South Asia, some womens groups in the UK believe that the practice may now be occurring among South Asians in the UK. Shaminder Ubhi, director of the Ashiana network in Leyton, says that she has come across cases of South Asian girls in their early teens who have reportedly been threatened with circumcision by their families: I have girls threatened with it, but we have probably dealt with one or two in our history. Although such cases are rare, in this context it seems that FGM may be used by some South Asian immigrants in the UK like other forms of violence against women to control the sexuality of their familys women and to enforce traditional standards of female behaviour.
95 IRIN news agency: Iraq: Survey suggests widespread female circumcision in Kurdish north 6 January 2006. http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=2454
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Other groups
FGM is increasingly believed to be more widespread in parts of Indonesia than was previously realised. In some cases, Indonesian-style FGM is more ritual than real involving only a small symbolic cut but in other cases Type I or II operations are carried out. In 2000 during Muslim attacks on religious minorities in Indonesias Maluku Islands, thousands of Christian women (and men) were forcibly circumcised by Islamist clerics as part of their forcible conversion to Islam.96 There is no information on whether the relatively small numbers of Indonesians living in the UK are practicing FGM on their children.
96 Sydney Morning Herald: Terror attacks in the name of Religion, by Lindsay Murdoch, 27 January 200.
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Barriers to change
introduction: the reinforcing of traditional attitudes
Honour-based violence in the UK is no longer simply the result of first-generation immigrants bringing their values with them when they arrived. Instead the idea that the honour of an individual or a family depends on the behaviour of ones women is now being sustained from generation to generation within the UK. It is also now common for third or fourth generation immigrants to play a key role in reinforcing traditional codes of behaviour over other members of their family and community, including in some cases over their parents. Some have even participated in the honour killings of their female siblings. In general, social and cultural attitudes largely develop through the interaction between an individual and their family, community and peer groups. For example, a womans understanding of her role in community is programmed at an early age through how her parents treat her and particularly how they treat her in relation to her male siblings. These attitudes may then be further reinforced through future interactions with extended family members, neighbours and schoolmates and with community figures such as local elders and religious leaders. Jasvinder Sanghera, director of Karma Nirvana, a refuge in Derby, says: These families are conditioning their girls to believe that its unacceptable to talk to a guy; to have a boyfriend. And at the same time boys are getting told that its their duty to keep an eye on their sisters and to make sure that they do not step out of line. Many factors influence how a persons value system evolves. However, it is broadly clear that families and communities in the UK where honour-based social systems are proving slowest to change are those which have least direct contact with nontraditional behaviour patterns. In other words: where families mix less with other ethnic or religious groups their children have fewer opportunities to experience alternatives to traditional ways of life compared to those who live in a more mixed area, or compared to children who are themselves of mixed parentage. Children brought up in such a mono-cultural environment are consequently less likely to absorb and practice non-traditional values themselves in later life.
Jasvinder sanghera, the director of the Karma nirvana refuge in derby, says:
by people to integrate; people are almost being encouraged not to integrate; the idea of integrating goes against everything that they have ever been taught ~
78
barriers to cHange
The extent to which the values of children differ from those of their parents are not only affected by the dynamics of the relationship between children and their immediate relatives however. Many immigrant groups especially those from Muslim parts of South Asia have taken a number of steps, both consciously and unconsciously, individually and collectively, to prevent their children from abandoning traditional ways of behaviour. These include importing socially-conservative marriage partners from abroad, adopting self-segregating patterns of settlement, choosing conservative religious leaders and councillors who will defend and reinforce traditional attitudes from above and sending children to after-school religious classes. Women who, despite being deliberately sheltered from outside influences, break or threaten to break traditions are also subjected to a number of penalties including, but not limited to, honour-based violence which are intended to force them to conform to traditional roles.
The practice of bringing wives and husbands into the UK from traditional and conservative parts of the world is probably the largest cause of the perpetuation of traditional attitudes and thereby of honour-based violence.
and husbands to enforce their social and traditional values on their daughters and sons because they believe it is right ~
Families and communities give many reasons for importing men and women from abroad for marriage such as the tradition of marrying first cousins or of honouring promises made to family members in the country of origin. However, one of the main reason parents want their children to marry an imported spouse is usually to ensure that they do not become westernised and so their grandchildren will be brought up in a traditional environment. Jasvinder Sanghera, director of the Karma Nirvana refuge in Derby, says: There is this sheer reluctance by people to integrate; people are almost being encouraged not to integrate; the idea of integrating goes against everything that they have ever been taught.
79
Mohamed baleela, a team leader in the domestic violence intervention project in Hammersmith, says:
a guy at college and he is not a Muslim, the family will object to the marriage definitely. they will probably force her to stop seeing him and marry someone else ~
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barriers to cHange
The New York Times: A Dishonorable Affair by Katherine Zoepf. 23 September 2007. Source: http://www.nytimes. com/2007/09/23/magazine/23wwln-syria-t.html?_r=&pagewanted=&oref=slogin 2 The Daily Star (Lebanon), Coalition raises awareness of outdated laws permitting marriage and rape by Jessy Chahine (22 July 2005). 3 Khafagy F, Honour Killing in Egypt .Expert paper prepared by Fatma Khafagy, The Association of Legal Aid for Women, for the United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women. http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/egm/vaw-gp2005/docs/experts/khafagy.honorcrimes.pdf 4 Human Rights Watch Kuwait: Promises Betrayed: Denial of Rights of Bidun, Women, and Freedom of Expression. October 2000, Volume 2, Number 2(E). http://www.hrw.org/reports/2000/kuwait/kuwait-05.htm 5 Sisters Arab Forum for Human Rights Honor Crimes in Yemen: A legal & social analysis on violence against Yemeni women pertaining to honor. May 2005, Yemen.
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debbie fawcett, the manager of the Hydburn and ribble valley outreach womens group, which is based in accrington, says:
The development of mono-cultural and mono-ethnic ghettos in parts of many British cities plays a key role in perpetuating traditional attitudes and slowing down the spread of western ideas such as sexual equality. Just as many communities tacitly endorse honour-based violence, so many of the same communities also see the growth of mono-cultural ghettos as a positive development which will allow them to better preserve their values and traditions from outside interference and influence. Nazir Afzal, the Crown Prosecution Services national lead on honour-based violence, says: There are areas in some northern towns you can go to which are road-after-road, street-after-street of villages transplanted directly from South Asia where everyone knows everybody elses business; everyone knows everyones secrets. Why do people choose to live like that? Because its convenient, because they like it; because they want to be near their family; because they want to feel like they have some sort of security against the wider community; against the world outside. They havent really understood what being British is about and they dont want to. In some northern towns there are real horror stories from places like Blackburn where people say that you might as well be in rural Kashmir for all the way that women are seen and treated. Others see the development of such areas as less negative phenomenon. Atif Imtiaz, a community worker in Bradford,97 says: If you drove through the town in the 80s it would have looked more diverse than it is today. You might think it is segregation, but it is not the case, people grow up and want to live next to their family; thats chain migration. Sons and daughters live close to their parents when they marry or move out because in Asian cultures there is always a link between the families.
97 He is also the author of the blog: www.bradfordmuslim.blogspot.com
community and everyone knows everyone. but at the same time once youre accepted by the community leaders and it is clear that they support you, then youre in. the downside of this is that if you upset them you are out ~
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barriers to cHange
Others say that segregation is less deliberate and is more often the result of economics. Nisha Kapoor, a specialist in integration at the University of Manchester, says: Concentrations of ethnic minorities have grown for demographic reasons due to younger population structures than [among] the majority white population Analysis of migration trends show dispersal into white areas; self-segregation is a myth. Whatever the cause, the concentration of ethnic minorities and particularly South Asians in particular districts can have important consequences for many women. Ghazala Khan, the project manager of Naye Subah, a mental health-orientated charity and advice centre in Bradford, says: The problem is bigger here because we get more segregation in the North than in the South. Asian womens refuges operate here but they are all undercover and dont operate in the freedom they get in London. Ila Patel, director of the Asha Project, a refuge in Streatham in South London, says that women who are referred to them from towns in northern England are often more afraid of their families and have a strong sense of being part of a community whose members keep them under close surveillance:
The residents we have who come from the North are usually more terrified of being found. Up North the communities are smaller and they know each other; they are tighter. In addition, the development of highly-segregated areas has, in some cases, caused communities to become even more isolated and less willing to take advice from people who are not part of their cultural, ethnic or religious group. Shaminder Ubhi, director of the Ashiana Womens Refuge in Leyton in East London, says that this may have an impact on the governments ability to influence such communities: What we find is that perhaps interventions from people outside of the community are not that well received, because sometimes it can be seen as intrusive, and what the hell are you doing here and what do you know about our community as a state or the police or government there is a bit of a resistance. One result of this, according to Ubhi, is that, in many cases, only Asian individuals and groups can influence Asian communities. She says:
understanding of their rights than their south asian counterparts. they can also understand the interpretations of the Quran so they know their rights. they also have cultural baggage but it not as visible as the people that came from the [sub] continent. but when things go wrong, it is no different to the pakistani and the bangladeshi community ~
83
shahien taj, director of the Henna foundation, a womens group in cardiff, says:
98 www.rightsofwomen.org.uk
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barriers to cHange
Arabs are a bit more sophisticated about how they do things. The women from my experience are a bit stronger. Also, Arab women have a greater understanding of their rights than their South Asian counterparts. They can also understand the interpretations of the Quran so they know their rights. They also have cultural baggage but it not as visible as the people that came from the subcontinent. But when things go wrong, it is no different to the Pakistani and the Bangladeshi community. By comparison, the insular nature of many Kurdish immigrant communities has slowed down the spread of new ideas and has led directly to the honour killings of several Kurdish women. Heshu Yones, for example, was killed by her father after his Kurdish co-workers told him that she had been seen behaving like a prostitute by dating a Christian and acting in a western manner.99
n
Islamist groups
Many Islamist groups encourage violence against women by promoting traditional ideas of honour as well as modern Islamist ideas which say that the health of a Muslim society is dependent on the chastity and sexual fidelity of its females. Islam is rarely directly cited as a cause of honour-based violence either by witnesses, victims or perpetrators. At the same time, however, it is clear that some current understandings of Islam however vaguely held can play a central role in legitimising violence against women and sustaining traditional values. Shahien Taj, director of the Henna Foundation, a womens group in Cardiff, says: I dont think that people are actually that intelligent to refer to [Islamic] books; it is a learned behaviour. People might have come across it, but it is usually vague ambiguous statements that they use from years ago; passed through the grapevine. Members of British Islamist groups frequently direct much of their anger against independent and self-sufficient women whom they can often regard as agents of westernisation. Ibn Qazi, a former member of al-Muhajiroun and Hizb ut-Tahrir (HT) from South East London who is of Pakistani origin, says: With more intellectual groups like HT, women are encouraged to be active and take more of a proactive role in their community and
99 The Observer: Death before dishonour by Geraldine Bedell. 2 November 2004. http:// www.guardian.co.uk/gender/story/0,82,356386,00.html
85
ibn Qazi, a former member of alMuhajiroun and Hizb ut-tahrir from south-east london who is of pakistani origin, says:
Muhajiroun with their immature agendas, women are forced to take the back seat as restrictions through their perceptions of religious teachings are imposed. they are told to cover up, not to work and, if in a job, they are told to leave that job; they are pulled out of education. these women themselves believe that it is their religious duty to stay at home, not to mix with the western public and men, not to go to school and not to work. violence is also encouraged to be used if these women break any of those restrictions ~
86
barriers to cHange
87
Among many South Asian, African and Middle Eastern immigrants, community leaders and clerics play a key role in
88
barriers to cHange
shaping the ideas and values held by those communities in the UK. In many cases, such leaders who are almost always men forcefully uphold and defend conservative ideas of honour on other communities. Community leaders can hold official positions in religious institutions or in local community groups. Alternatively, they can be people who hold land and/or power back home and hence have status and influence among immigrants in the UK. In many cases, these community leaders are highly reluctant to admit that their community has any problem with honour-based domestic violence. Nazir Afzal, the Crown Prosecution Service lead on honour crimes, says: When you talk to community leaders there are basically two responses. The first response is that they say there is no problem; that they deny that anything is wrong. The second response is that they dont deny it and they acknowledge it as a problem but they then say that they have other priorities instead they just see it as something that is not important to address. In some communities, community leaders can also be religious leaders. Gona Saed, director of the Middle East Centre for Womens Rights in Peckham in South London, says:
nazir afzal, the lead for honour-based violence at the crown prosecution service, says:
Me and Sawsan [Selim, co-ordinator of the Kurdish Refugee Womens Association] have tried to go to mosques to talk about this. And they have said to us go away, there is no violence here, go away and dont come back. Typical of such community elders is Sheikh Haitham al-Haddad, an imam of Palestinian origin, educated in Saudi Arabia, who sits on the UK Islamic Sharia Council and is also its spokesman. When asked about forced marriage, al-Haddad says: Forced marriage is a media exaggeration, designed to criticise Muslims and demonise them in this current climate of fear and Islamophobia. There are forced marriages and forced relations in every society and we need to look at the scale of the problem because I believe in a western non-Muslim society there are a lot of forced relationships and domestic violence. There is also the case of rape and forced sex within western culture; also date rape and the list is endless. Again, domestic violence is always shown by the media to be a problem associated with Muslim women; its not.
previous eid to talk about this issue to his congregation. He just said that he couldnt. He said that he was paid by his congregation and that his job depended on these people he said they pay my salary how am i supposed to tell them something that they dont want to hear? ~
89
sheikh Haitham al-Haddad, a sauditrained imam based at the al-Muntada alislami (the islamic centre) who is also the uK islamic sharia councils spokesperson, says:
from abroad is going to preach violence against women. if you look at the ones who we have been told have said something or the imams the media mis-quoted they were either from here or converts~
00 See, for example, The Sunday Times, Mothers of Prevention by Julie Bindel. 20 September 2007 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article2538090.ece, Also The Guardian: Mother out to seize stronghold of unforgivable BNP by Matthew Taylor. 23 March 2006 http://politics.guardian.co.uk/farright/story/0,,737567,00.html
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Many of those who work to end violence against women agree. Mohamed Baleela, a team leader at the Domestic Violence Intervention Project in Hammersmith West London, says: We need people who are in touch with the issues. How is a cleric who has arrived from Saudi Arabia or Egypt going to advise a 17-year old who was born here? They dont even know that violence against the family is illegal here; that it is a criminal offence. They dont even know that. They keep saying well, back home its not like this. Well, theyre not back home theyre here. There is, however, evidence that training British-born imams will not, in itself, resolve this problem. Zalkha Ahmed, director of Apna Haq, a womens group in Rotherham, says: British-born imams, they themselves can be violent. In Rotherham we have six mosques and six imams, and we can name those who are violent ... We have a couple of imams from India and their thinking has been clearer. So we can meet a modern imam, who has clear and positive thinking [on other issues] but he can still be a perpetrator. Conservative religious leaders themselves say there is no reason why British-born imams will be more opposed to domestic violence than imams from abroad. Sheikh Haitham al-Haddad, a Saudi-trained imam based at the al-Muntada al-Islami (The Islamic Centre) in West London who is also the UK Islamic Sharia Councils spokesperson, says: There is no proof that an imam from abroad is going to preach violence against women. If you look at the ones who we have been told have said something or the imams the media mis-quoted they were either from here or converts. Riyadh ul-Haq;101 he was born here and was found to be advocating almost everything and looked to attract people to crime.
roots institutions of the Muslim community, and have enormous potential to support the positive development of society ~
In some cases, community leaders have themselves attempted to carry out honour killings. In 200 Mohammed Arshad, a Pakistani living in Dundee in Scotland, attempted to have his daughters husband murdered for marrying her without his permission. Arshad was a founder member of Tayside Racial Equality Commission, chairman of the Tayside Islamic Council, chairman of the Dundee Mosque02 and an advisor on spiritual and pastoral care
0 Riyadh ul-Haq is a prominent Deobandi preacher educated in northern England. The Times: The homegrown cleric who loathes the British by Andrew Norfolk 7 September 2007 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article2402998.ece 02 The Courier: Hitman tells court of threat to kill daughter by Alan Wilson. 5 November 2003. Source: http://www.thecourier.co.uk/output/2003//05/newsstory539672t0. asp
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Kubir randhawa from the asian family counseling service in West london which arbitrates in family disputes, says:
because they are more aware. in the past people used to go to their parents or community elders. now they are less willing to go to them and try and seek help by contacting someone from the outside. and it is mainly the younger generation that comes to us ~
03 2004 Annual report of Spiritual Care Sub-Committee of Tayside NHS board http:// www.nhstayside.scot.nhs.uk/about_nhstay/commitees/archive/2_scsc/030505/43520.pdf 04 BBC: Honour Killing appeal refused. 28 July 2006. http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/scotland/tayside_and_central/522406.stm 05 Appeal Court, High Court of Justiciary (Appeal No: XC282/03) 28 July 2006 http:// www.scotcourts.gov.uk/opinions/2006HCJAC57.html
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One consequence of community leaders not speaking out against honour-based violence is that many young people of South Asian or Middle Eastern origin brought up in the UK are afraid to approach them for help. Many would rather approach womens groups. Kubir Randhawa, director of the Asian Family Counselling Service in West London, which arbitrates in family disputes, says: We are seeing more people now because they are more aware. In the past people used to go to their parents or community elders. Now they are less willing to go to them and try and seek help by contacting someone from the outside. And it is mainly the younger generation that comes to us. Some womens groups say that police and local authorities can sometimes unwittingly reinforce traditional attitudes when they only approach communities through community and religious leaders. Diana Nammi, director of the Iranian and Kurdish Womens Rights Organisation (IKWRO) in East London, says: Many times the police say that the community doesnt want to speak but thats not the case. There are a lot of people who want to help but the police dont know how to reach them. The police need better links with people rather than always going through the mosques. How are you going to solve the problem if you go through the mosques? The mosques are the source of these backward ideas. Some of those experienced in tackling honour-based violence say the concept of dealing with groups through community leaders should be rejected entirely. Philip Balmforth, vulnerable persons officer (Asian women) for the Bradford Police, says: There is no such thing as a community leader. People should not use such words as community leader. I could take you down any street in Bradford and we can find two or three people in any street who say that they are the community leaders. It is all self-appointed; no one has actually voted or elected them. I refer to such people within the Asian community as influential rather than call them community leaders. Because if we call them leaders then that just helps them stay on the top of a pedestal. In many cases, however, government policy at both a local and national level remains based around working through such community leaders rather than directly with individual members of immigrant communities.
philip balmforth, vulnerable persons officer (asian women) for the bradford police, says:
community leader. people should not use such words as community leader. i could take you down any street in bradford and we can find two or three people in any street who say that they are the community leaders. it is all selfappointed; no one has actually voted or elected them ~
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Almost all refuges dealing with Asian women report on the existence of informal networks which exist to track down and punish with death if necessary women who are perceived as bringing shame on their family and community. In many cases, women fleeing domestic violence or forced marriages have been deliberately returned to their homes or betrayed to their families by policemen, councillors and civil servants of immigrant origin. In many areas, womens groups point to particular problems with local taxi firms. Jasvinder Sanghera, the director of the Karma Nirvana refuge in Derby, says: We have a huge problem with the taxi drivers here. We just cant trust them. This can be a matter of life and death for these girls. If they get in the wrong taxi, they might just take them straight back home; straight back to the place that theyve just escaped from. Saamiya, a 6-year old girl who is living in a refuge in northern England after leaving home when her family threatened to kill her after refusing a forced marriage, says: When I asked the taxi driver to drop me here, he just asked me where are you from, whos your dad does he know youre here? All the Asian community knows about the taxi-firms its like a network. Theres always someone whos got a friend there who knows your dad. Sana Bukhari, an outreach worker at Ashiana refuge in Sheffield, says: We dont house girls in the refuge anymore, instead we house them with the local housing association because if their families are looking for them then all they have to do is roll up to the train station and ask the taxi drivers who will bring them straight here. All the taxi drivers know where we are and bring people looking for girls straight here. Although, this practice of exploiting networks originated in many smaller towns, particularly in the Midlands and northern England, it is now becoming increasingly common elsewhere. Lesley Musa, the director of Womens Aid in Glasgow, says: This is something new that the community organises such networks
saamiya, a 16-year old girl who is living in a refuge in northern england after her family threatened to kill her, says:
to drop me here, he just asked me where are you from, whos your dad does he know youre here? all the asian community knows about the taxi-firms its like a network. theres always someone whos got a friend there who knows your dad ~
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and it is becoming more frequent where women are tracked and news is reported. Women who work here believe that it is a common occurrence. It has happened for us and women dont get into taxis in fear of being tracked down. In many towns, this problem has become so severe that Asian womens refuges have stopped using Asian taxi firms altogether. Imran Rehmen, a support worker at Karma Nirvana in Derby, says: We never go with an Asian taxi firm because they might be family or friends of the family. In other instances, women have been tracked down through family members working in Job Centres accessing their National Insurance (NI) data which indicate where they are collecting their benefits. The Asha Project in Streatham recorded one case when an 8-year old Pakistani Muslim woman was almost abducted from a Job Centre as she went to sign-on after her relatives accessed confidential National Insurance information. Ila Patel, director of the Asha Project in South London, says: She went to sign on, and the family was there, and abducted her. Luckily her boyfriend was there and immediately alerted the police. In other cases women have been tracked through community members accessing details of their mobile phones. Lesley Musa, the director of Womens Aid in Glasgow, says:
forced marriage are confused and upset. as a consequence of running away, they dont go to school, they dont live with their family and they leave their friends. they suffer from stress, depression and anxiety. they are also scared of being in danger and often they are worried about being found out ~
My colleagues say it is very common for women to be tracked via the use of their mobile phones. They use websites and other devices to track down women. We have had service users who have been chased down through their telephone on many occasions. Diana Nammi, the director of IKWRO, says similar situations occur within the Kurdish community in North London: We have a case where we moved a girl from eight refuges and still her husband found her even though she had changed her identity. He found her through her National Insurance number. There are people in the council and in government offices who help communities find girls who have gone missing. Leaking confidential information from state organisations is quite common. Sawsan Selim, the co-ordinator of the Kurdish Refugee Womens Association in North London, says: In one case we moved a girl 16 times and always the husband found
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philip balmforth, vulnerable persons officer (asian women) for the bradford police, says:
i have been at risk on numerous occasions. i have been attacked five times, only once it went to court, and that was when it was really serious, the man pleaded guilty and he was charged with affray. that was over me helping his 16-year-old daughter ~
06 Appeal Court, High Court of Justiciary (Appeal No: XC282/03) 8 March 2006 http:// www.scotcourts.gov.uk/opinions/2006HCJAC28.html and Appeal Court, High Court of Justiciary (Appeal No: XC282/03) 28 July 2006 http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/opinions/ 2006HCJAC57.html
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Mohamed baleela, a team leader at the domestic violence intervention project in Hammersmith in West london, says:
Many womens refuges report that members of local communities have sought to intimidate their employees in an attempt to force them to reduce or end their activities. In many cases, this has led to refuges having to move away from areas with a high immigrant population or to take measures to protect themselves against violence. The Karma Nirvana refuge in Derby, based in the heart of the citys immigrant area on Normanton Road, say that they have frequently been the target of abuse. Jasvinder Sanghera, the centres director, says: I had a serious threat this year. I was told by the Sikh community not to help the government or the police. They also told me that I should look out for devices under my car. Shazia Qayum, who works with Jasvinder Sanghera at Karma Nirvana in Derby, said: The communities dont support us. They say that were women without shame. Ive had texts saying that Im a disgrace to the Asian community; saying Id better watch my back or Ill get my head chopped off; saying Im a slut. Weve got police boxes in our office that can set off an alarm. Ive got a police alarm box in my house so does Jasvinder. Weve had faeces smeared on our windows. Ive not had any support from any community leaders. Fear of violence often means that womens groups cannot base themselves in the heart of immigrant areas. Gona Saed, from the Middle East Centre for Womens Rights, says that although the group mainly focuses on Kurds and Arabs, it has been obliged to work from Peckham, a mainly Black and Afro-Caribbean area of South London, rather than from parts of West London with a much larger Middle Eastern community. Saed says: Weve thought of going to an area near Edgware Road where there are huge numbers of Arabs but we have to consider our safety. We have to ask if we really want to be directly in the heart of the community maybe its better to stand back and let people come to us. In many parts of the Midlands and the North, support workers in some womens groups are so afraid of a backlash from the local community that they were unwilling to allow their names to be used in this report. One womens group in the Midlands who wished to remain anonymous says:
marital rape in a mosque i nearly got beaten up. because we said that the law makes it illegal to rape your wife, someone got up and hit me because he was ignorant of the law ~
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us. they say that were women without shame. ive had texts saying that im a disgrace to the asian community; saying id better watch my back or ill get my head chopped off; saying im a slut. Weve got police boxes in our office that can set off an alarm. ive got a police box in my house so does Jasvinder. Weve had faeces smeared on our windows. ive not had any support from any community leaders ~
Islamic marriages
Muslim women are often unable to escape domestic violence or abusive partners because imams are unwilling to allow them to initiate divorces.
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Islamic marriages are sometimes carried out in mosques in addition to or instead of a civil marriage. Although they have no legal standing in the UK, these Islamic marriages are seen as virtually obligatory for Muslims. Sheikh Haitham al-Haddad, one of the judges on the UK Islamic Sharia Council in Leyton in East London, says: It is important to have an Islamic marriage as well as a civil marriage because Islamically people cannot have matrimonial life without an Islamic wedding. Without an Islamic wedding, communities will regard a couple as living in sin even if they have had a UK civil marriage which can lead to them being ostracised from the community or face violence. Rehana Bibi, a domestic violence advisor at Hyndburn and Ribble Valley Outreach in Accrington, says: If youre Asian, the community doesnt see it as necessary to have English marriages but you have to have an Islamic marriage. But while numerous laws have made it easier for women to obtain civil divorces on the grounds of domestic violence or sexual abuse, this is not always true for Islamic marriages. In many cases, the womans family and community will not accept the validity of a civil divorce and will insist on an Islamic divorce. Until this is obtained, the woman risks being socially ostracised by her family, neighbours and religious community. Lesley Musa, the director of Womens Aid in Glasgow, says: Women are ostracised by their community if they dont get an Islamic divorce despite having a civil divorce. I dont have statistics on this but it is a major problem because although they are divorced, they are still tied down. Mohamed Baleela, a team leader at the Domestic Violence Intervention Project in Hammersmith, says that this situation can leave women in limbo; divorced under civil law but still married in the eyes of the community: In the eyes of English law they are co-habiting, but in the eyes of Islamic law they are married. So if she goes to an English court to ask for a divorce they will say to her you are not married anyway. And if she goes to a Sharia court she will not be allowed to get divorced without her husbands consent. Organisations like the Islamic Sharia Council,07 the largest of
07 Islamic Sharia Council website is at http://www.islamic-sharia.org/
} We approached schools in
derby to try and get posters up to let children know that there was help available if they wanted it. this was just before the school holidays which is the most critical time because this is when girls will get taken off to pakistan or bangladesh to be married. unfortunately none of the schools would let us put them up because they said it would offend the parents ~
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it is not accepted to have relations while making the decision. Also, it is not advised to issue a divorce and leave the women with nothing, often these decisions are made in anger and are made on the spur of the moment. The man has to also issue a clear statement of divorce before it is accepted. Members of the UK Islamic Sharia Council are themselves under pressure from community members who believe that the council is too liberal and from family members who believe that they will suffer shame if the council grants a divorce to their female relatives or in-laws. Al-Haddad says: We get intimidation by men who are not happy that we are issuing a divorce for their wives and this is usually six or seven times a week. This comes from mixed communities. I have been intimidated a lot over the years. At first we try and ignore it, if not then we give them advice that their actions are un-Islamic. There are allegations that members of the Islamic Sharia Council have only granted women divorces in return for money. Shahien Taj, director of the Henna Foundation, a womens group in Cardiff, says: I have had cases where the Sharia Council is asking for money, as much as 250 to issue a divorce. This woman could have three children and be destitute and they have the audacity to ask for money. Some of them are taking advantage and because they are not regulated they get away with lots of stuff. There are people taking advantage of the system. But there are also nice people in there. The Islamic Sharia Council says that it has never given in to intimidation and that it always delivers judgments which are fair to women.
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narinder Matharoo, the general secretary of sikh sangat london east temple in leyton, says:
and they dont exist in the sikh community. the gurdwara [sikh temple] is a place of bringing families together and not for breaking them up; it is a place of happiness and not sadness. We encourage people to stay in relationships because divorce is not allowed ~
Sikh divorces
Many Sikh religious leaders refuse to accept the concept of civil divorce and also downplay the presence of issues like honourbased crime and domestic violence in their community. This can create problems similar to those which occur in many Muslim communities. Narinder Matharoo, the general secretary of Sikh Sangat London East temple in Leyton, says: We dont recognise divorce and they dont exist in the Sikh community. The Gurdwara [Sikh temple] is a place of bringing families to-
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Government failures
Many government policies have inadvertently contributed to the perpetuation of honour-based violence. In particular the
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lack of a national strategy to tackle crimes of honour across the education system, the police force or in local government has allowed many abuses against women to go un-checked or unmonitored.
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Local government could play a key role in tackling honourbased crime. Instead many local authorities are reluctant to involve themselves in the issue and by doing so actively contribute to the perpetuation of honour-based violence. Many womens groups say branches of local government are unwilling to involve themselves in minority issues for a variety of reasons ranging from a lack of knowledge of the problem to a politically correct reluctance to intervene in minority affairs for fear of accusations of racism or Islamophobia. In Derby, members of womens groups have asked schools to put up posters produced by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office warning of the threat of forced marriages. All the schools refused even though they had put up other posters warning of the dangers of drugs and alcohol. Shazia Qayum, team leader at Derbys Karma Nirvana, says: We approached schools in Derby to try and get posters up to let children know that there was help available if they wanted it. This was just before the school holidays which is the most critical time because this is when girls will get taken off to Pakistan or Bangladesh to be married. Unfortunately none of the schools would let us put them up because they said it would offend the parents. Qayum says that this was not a policy issued by a central authority but rather was a decision made at the discretion of individual head teachers: We approached head teachers and each one independently said they didnt want them. We had just last week a girl from one of these schools who had been forced to marry. Jasvinder Sanghera, director of Derbys Karma Nirvana refuge, says: Myself and Shazia [Qayum] asked every school in Derby to put up this poster about forced marriages. And every single school refused for fear of upsetting communities. Yet they put up posters on drugs, alcohol Schools are afraid to raise the issue because they are afraid of communities and especially the Muslim community they are afraid of a backlash.
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John paton, manager of the lancashire family Mediation service which is based in preston, says:
up against is the issue of confidentiality. its extremely difficult for an asian woman to go to a community worker or an agency where she knows that there are potentially people there who will report back to her family what she has said ~
Several womens groups say that many South Asians working in local government and the police service abuse their positions to defend traditional practices and to block attempts to halt honour-based violence. In many northern towns where immigrant communities are tight-knit and conservative, some womens refuges say that South Asian women are often afraid to seek help because they know that many Asians working in local government and in private firms believe that women who break traditional taboos deserve to be punished. John Paton, manager of the Lancashire Family Mediation Service which is based in Preston, says:
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One issue we have come up against is the issue of confidentiality. Its extremely difficult for an Asian woman to go to a community worker or an agency where she knows that there are potentially people there who will report back to her family what she has said. This goes on to the extent that there is a solicitors in Blackburn that has no Asians [working there] and as a result of this it receives a very disproportionate amount of business from Asian women. In particular, this solicitors is involved in getting a lot of court injunctions to prevent husbands from seeing their wives. This is contrary to the doctrine which says that agencies should recruit more people from ethnic minorities because Asians want to talk to other Asians to people who are like themselves. In this particular case it acts against the very interests of the people they are trying to help because it actually may deter Asian women from using these services. Zalkha Ahmed, director of Apna Haq, a womens support group in the North of England, says some translators working for social services have deliberately blocked government attempts to help South Asian women who are fleeing violence and abuse: We have also had translators who would lie to the social services when women go to seek help. The translators would not reveal the extent of the story, and try to play down the extent that honour had to play in the problem to try and portray a positive image of the community. Ena Mercy, director of the Pennines Domestic Violence group which is based in Huddersfield, home to a large Pakistani and Sikh population, says some councillors there have sought to block the activities of womens groups:
a chairperson of a bradford-based womens group, who wished to remain anonymous because of death threats, says:
the local councillors in bradford, they are the bad ones, because they abuse their power, by trying to get details on who is staying with us and what they are doing. they give us a hard time, till we have to complain to the police and they back off ~
You get councillors who try to exercise control. You get Asian councillors trying to stop our meetings from happening. Other councillors white councillors are afraid of upsetting the Asian councillors and the other community leaders. Theyre afraid of being called racist or whatever. Similar incidents reportedly occur in Bradford. The chairperson of a womens project in Bradford, who wishes to remain anonymous because she is concerned for her safety, says: We have a lot of pressure from the local councillors in Bradford; they are the bad ones, because they abuse their power by trying to get details on who is staying with us and what they are doing. They give us a hard time, till we have to complain to the police and they back off. They are dominant males who are trying to bully us. A worker in another womans refuge in northern England who also requested anonymity for safety reasons says:
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But sumthing wasnt right ---- I wish I coulda changed the event I shoulda killed myself instead Id rather have been dead Coz now I have a burden on my chest And no it wont go away, the guilt, the pain When I look back on things I coulda changed coulda stop, prevented, exchanged But i had to turn out this way (so trapped) Now Im sitting on my window bay Looking at the rain ---- Drowning sorrow and pain Will this ever go away ---- I feel trapped so trapped, Im trapped Im trapped, so trapped Im trapped (I dont know wot do) I feel trapped. But my family ignored
The Asian News Were these her final words of despair. 19 December 2003. http://www.theasiannews.co.uk/news/s/480/480998_were_these_her_final_words_of_despair.html
The councillors are interested in votes, and they are usually from a certain family that the community looks up to, so they have to act a certain way. In some cases, this problem has even reached the judiciary with Asian members of the courts services on occasion acting to protect their communitys values. Jasvinder Sanghera, director of the Karma Nirvana refuge in Derby, says: Because were not seen as amenable, to them we are enemies. An Asian woman magistrate has stood up and called me an imposter The communities dont see us as honourable; they see us as people who are undermining their whole way of life.
n
Women who have recently arrived in the UK are often unable to escape violence from their husbands or in-laws because of the No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF) rule which prevents immigrants from claiming many forms of benefits within two years of arriving in the UK. Lesley Musa, the director of Womens Aid in Glasgow, says: No recourse to public funds is a huge problem. Women tend to
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be penniless with no access to any money. Usually they dont have money because they have had to escape and dont have a job because of their situation or lack of skill. These women then become reliant on charity and a lot of refuges cant afford to help them. Womens refuges say that a significant proportion of women who come to them have no recourse to public funds. Shaminder Ubhi, Ashianas director in Leyton in East London, says: We deal with a huge number of women with no recourse to public funds. Only last year [between April 06-March 07] we supported 595 women all together. Under no recourse we saw 80 women and 92 women had immigration issues. Many womens groups and activists believe that many families often purposely leave the immigration status of their imported spouse in hiatus to exert maximum control over them. This sometimes also occurs to men who can be forced to work for little or no money in the businesses run by their new in-laws.
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Jenny Moody, the chairperson of Lutons Womens Aid says: Money can be used for control. Just like women with no recourse to public funds having their passports taken, and if they dont have money then their husbands have complete control. Women who flee their marital homes to escape violence or abuse within two years of arriving in the UK can become vulnerable to further abuses. Kubir Randhawa, director of the Asian Family Counselling Service in Southall in West London, says: They cant get a job because they dont have a national insurance number; they have no status in this country, so basically they are on their own. Also, people from back home cant actually support them because of the exchange rates, so no matter how many thousand rupees they came into the country with, its not enough to even last them two days. The result is that many women are often forced to stay in abusive relationships for fear of becoming destitute. Mohamed Baleela, team leader at the Domestic Violence Intervention Project in Hammersmith in West London, says: A lot of women choose to stay in violent relationships because they have nowhere to go. If they have children, the social services have a duty to help them under government laws. But if they dont have children there are no facilities in place to help them. This problem is made worse because the No Recourse to Public Funds rule means that refuges usually cannot use government money to help women with unresolved immigration status. Refuges which cannot afford to support women are forced to turn them away. Grace Busuttil, the manager of the North Kirlees Refuge near Leeds, says: I wont accept anyone with no recourse to public funds unless I have it in writing from social services saying that they will support them. However the level of support given to refuges by local councils varies widely. Some councils provide extensive financial support for women who are affected by the No Recourse rule. Others do not. Ila Patel, director of the Asha Project in Streatham, notes that the borough of Lambeth is not fully supportive of such women. She says: We do get referrals all the time. It also depends on the borough you are in because Islington has a no recourse to public funds network, and things are a lot easier there. So if you are a refuge in Islington the
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local authorities under section 4 and 21 will help. In Lambeth we find that there isnt much help [from the council]. Philip Balmforth, vulnerable persons officer (Asian women) for the Bradford Police, says: They are very lucky in Bradford; it costs the council 190,000 a year paying out for these women. They will put two to three women together in one house to save money.
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All womens groups interviewed for this report believe that in its present form, the No Recourse to Public Funds rule has greatly increased the suffering of hundreds of women. Women who are suffering domestic violence are deterred from leaving home. Women who do leave are more likely to become destitute or forced to return to their abusive relationship.
In dealing with the Muslim community, the government has often worked through the Muslim Council of Britain which describes itself as the largest umbrella body of Muslim groups in the UK.10 The MCB has sought to block legislation aimed at ending honour-based violence. Almost all womens groups interviewed for this report say that the MCB has done little or nothing to end honour-based violence against women. In particular, the MCB has sought to block attempts to criminalise forced marriage, arguing that a new law on forced marriages will have the real risk of being seen to target ethnic minorities09. Partly as a result of the MCBs pressure, the government halted its plans to criminalise forced marriage and made it a civil offence instead. This reflects what many see as the organisations lack of interest in womens issues. Nazir Afzal, the Crown Prosecution Services lead on honour-based violence, says: The MCB pretty much dont want to get involved. Theyve made it abundantly clear that they believe that the Islamic community has other priorities. Theyd rather talk about Islamophobia or anti-terrorism laws instead they say that these are the things that matter to the
08 The MCB describes its self as this in Judge Drabu Receives Lifetime Achievement Award From Association Of Muslim Lawyers. 9 November 2007. http://www.mcb.org.uk/features/ features. php?ann_id=659 09 The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) response to consultation paper Forced Marriage A Wrong not a Right 8 December 2007. It is available online at http://www.mcb.org.uk/uploads/wrongnotright.pdf p.2
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Mcb has failed. i was a member but have withdrawn my membership. first of all they have no women. they are clueless and sexist. they always talk negatives never positives. i have no faith with them ~
The government has relied heavily on the Southall Black Sisters for information on honour based violence in the UK. Founded in 1979, this feminist group has campaigned against honour killings and domestic violence, and championed abused women who killed their husbands as well as offering counselling and support to abused women. More recently, however, the group has virtually stopped carrying out grassroots work and
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its helpline is rarely answered. In consequence it has lost touch with the community that it aims to serve. Philip Balmforth, vulnerable persons officer (Asian women) for the police in Bradford, says: I once said to a police sergeant in Southall that he was lucky to have the Black Sisters there, and he said not really, they are never here; they dont have a hostel or anything. It is two old women sitting in an office, getting good money from the government to criticize the government. My personal point of view is that whenever I have been to a meeting in England, everyone has heard of them but no one has ever spoken to them. It is quite wrong in my opinion that the government should give them money as advisors and they [Southall Black Sisters] dont then consult with other groups around the country. I have been to high powered meetings around the country and you would think some people would have had some sort of documentation, a phone call, or some sort of an email from them just to say what do you think of this, but none of that happens. Humera Khan, the co-founder of An-Nisa Society, a womens advocacy group in Wembley in London, says: I do respect Southall Black Sisters for the work they have done in challenging legislation, [But] they are very unpopular because they are absolutists in their methodology; they dont believe at all in mediation and dont listen and that is a problem. Many groups in the Midlands and the North of England also say that government policy is too London-orientated. Jasvinder Sanghera, the director of the Karma Nirvana refuge in Derby, says: Im constantly having to tell people that the world does not revolve around London. Because Karma Nirvana is outside London we are aware of a lack of engagement with us because the government is in London. In some cases weve had to fight to get into these meeting rooms. Several womens refuges have also said that the government does not sufficiently take into account how regional variations in segregation, education and employment affect the way in which honour-based violence should be tackled.
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sawsan salim, co-ordinator of the Kurdistan refugee Womens organisation in north london, says:
had six or seven cases which we forwarded to the police and they never replied ~
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marriage. On each occasion, the police told her to return home as they believed that she was exaggerating the risks that she faced. Shortly after she approached the police a final time, Banaz was kidnapped by Kurdish men hired by her family, raped repeatedly and then killed. Her body was then chopped up and buried in a suitcase in a garden in Birmingham. Gona Saed, director of the Middle East Centre for Womens Rights in Peckham in South London, says: I am feeling very angry about Banazs case. At the moment after the case of Banaz the police are really making an effort especially Steve Allen saying to us we want to listen to what you do. Now they are making a strategy to prevent honour killing. But its not up to the speed we want it to be. We dont know if it will continue or if after a few months, they will say look there are no more honour killings problem solved. Officials involved in tackling honour crimes point to the difficulties of prosecuting everyone who was involved in honour-based violence. Nazir Afzal, the Crown Prosecution Service lead on honour-related violence, says: Its easy to prosecute someone if youve got a knife with blood on it and on the murder weapon youve got the perpetrators DNA thats easy. But we have to go after everybody whos involved. Its always much more difficult to go after a conspiracy than to go after a straightforward criminal act. Some womens groups suggest that specialised teams of police officers who have been specifically trained to recognise and deal with honour killings should be set up. Gona Saed, director of the Middle East Centre for Womens Rights in Peckham in South London, says: Police need to be able to recognise when there is a threat of honourbased violence. The other thing wed like to see is a special advisory units for the police. We dont expect every policeman to know about honour-based violence but when they suspect something they need to be able to call a specialised unit who can tell them what to do. And at that point they could contact one of these womens organisations we have a lot of experience and we can tell them what to do. Several womens groups, particularly in the Midlands and northern England, say they are often reluctant to go to the police with women who have ran away to escape violence because they cannot trust Asian police officers. Zalikha Ahmed, director of the Apna Haq refuge, says:
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like police, they dont trust them, and [it is the same when] they come here. back home the women never trusted police, they were always seen as an oppressing force, police here are to help and women just [need to] realise that ~
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Even if women come to us about domestic violence, they dont want to report it to the police. You cant force them to report but we can only advise them that this is the best way. They dont want to go to the police because culturally its not acceptable. Men are always [seen as] the figures of the household and they have the right to treat the family every way they want. Among many Muslim immigrants this wariness has been heightened by the work of several Muslim pressure groups which have sought to portray the police service as Islamophobic. For instance, the Muslim Council of Britain has said that the Stop and Search powers of London police were being used unfairly against Muslims.0 Yvonne Ridley, speaking as an activist for the Respect Party, has similarly told a public meeting in June 2006: From today until the terrorisation of the Muslim community is stopped immediately, I believe all Muslims should withdraw their support. This goes from asking the community copper for directions to passing the time of day with a beat officer We should enforce non-co-operation. Olivia Madden, client coordinator for Panah refuge in Newcastle, says: This stuff does not help but we tell women to speak no matter to their teachers, doctors and police. We encourage people to speak up and not care about whats in the media or what people are saying. We tell them that the police are here to help and we tell them to talk to them whatever is happening in the background. In some instances, judges have also passed sentences which seem to indicate that in some cases violence against women by immigrants is acceptable on cultural or religious grounds. For example, in September 2003, Judge Neil Denison sentenced Abdulla Yones to 4 years for murdering his daughter Heshu rather than the recommended 20 years. Denison said that 6-year old Heshu had provoked her father by having a Christian boyfriend.2 In his concluding remarks, he said:
saba Melles, an advice worker at the eritrean community centre in islington, says:
This is, on any view, a tragic story arising out of irreconcilable cultural differences between traditional Kurdish values and the values of western society.113
0 For example, see the MCBs Have Your Say on Police Stop and Search Powers on Wednesday 6th October 2004 http://mcb.org.uk/features/features.php?ann_id=500 BBC: Call to Muslims over police help. 7 June 2006. http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/ uk/5054600.stm 2 Regina v Abdulla Yones; High Court of Justice, Case No: 2004/659/MTS 20 June 2007 http://www.hmcourts-service.gov.uk/cms/44_2042.htm 3 The Daily Telegraph: Father gets life for honour killing. 29 September 2003. http:// www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/09/29/ugirl.xml&sSheet=/portal/2003/09/29/ixportaltop.html
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generation. i used to believe that once the older generation have died, all these practices would just die out. but now you get 21 year olds who were brought up here saying exactly the same thing. i had one guy who said to me, a man is like a bar of gold, a woman is like a piece of white silk. He then said that, if gold gets dirty you can just wipe it clean, but if a piece of silk gets dirty you can never get it clean again and you might as well just throw it away. thats a 21-year old speaking. the work now has to be done with the nine- and ten-year olds ~
4 Der Spiegel: A German Judge Cites Koran in Divorce Case, by Veit Medick and Anna Reimann. 2 March 2007. http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,58,47307,00.html
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cHapter 7
very insular communities who tend to live with each other as family groups, and the same applies in lancashire. the south is definitely more integrated than the north ~
Philip Balmforth, vulnerable persons officer (Asian women) for the Bradford police
Although a culture of honour-based violence is arguably becoming increasingly entrenched in many minority communities in the UK, there are also signs that, in some cases, the strict ideas of honour brought to Britain are starting to erode.
The erosion of traditional values in some communities of immigrant origin is largely due to a mixture of successful government policies, immigrants increased exposure to other cultures and womens increasing economic independence through enhanced access to education and employment. Examining the factors and processes which are accelerating such changes can provide insights into how the government can act to make such change more likely and widespread. Many womens groups say that immigrant communities in larger cities are generally proving most receptive to change even if such progress there remains sporadic. However, evidence from some smaller towns also, on occasion, appears to show that traditional ideas of honour are changing. Ila Patel, director of the Asha Project, a refuge in Streatham in South London, says: My cousin in Leicester can meet friends in a bar and go out with male friends. But in some parts of Wolverhampton that would be totally unacceptable; you just couldnt. The residents we have who come [to the refuge] from the North are usually more terrified of being found. Up North the communities are smaller and they know each other, they are tighter. London and surroundings are more clear and isolated; people dont know each other as much. [Improvements are filtering] from the South to the North but its very slow If I use myself as an example: when I got married, 25-years ago to an English man, I was ostracised from the community so I left as I couldnt deal with the way I was treated. But recently my sister married outside of the community, and it was slightly different; despite people talking about it, she is able to go in and out of the community and she attends community events. Such changes are not only affecting younger generations but also
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Hassan safour, project officer in refugee and integration issues at the Muslim Welfare House in finsbury park in north london, says:
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tanisha Jnagel, the community services team leader for roshni asian Womens aid, a refuge in nottingham, says:
but at the same time I think that it is going down even though its still an unknown issue. You can only talk about what you see not about what you dont see. Making people more aware of it makes them more willing to come and discuss it with you. Others, however, warn that this growing willingness to discuss the issue is only slowly filtering down and changing the practices of more isolated communities. Tanisha Jnagel, the community services team leader for Roshni Asian Womens Aid, a refuge in Nottingham, says: What you see is a change in the ideas that young people hold but they still may not be able to exercise these choices. What is changing is that in arranged marriages there is now much more a level of choice. Now you might be able to choose a partner more than before but
ideas that young people hold but they still may not be able to exercise these choices ~
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ghazala razzaq, co-ordinator for roshni asian Womens resource centre, a support group in sheffield, says:
Many children of foreign origin brought up in the UK are becoming increasingly aware of other lifestyles which offer alternatives to belief system of their families and communities. While this is already occurring through exposure to other cultures through the media and the education system, tackling segregation can also raise awareness of womens rights. Although many families of immigrant background attempt to prevent their children from being influenced by western ideas and modes of behaviour, young people brought up in the UK are inevitably exposed to a range of concepts which challenge traditional ideas of acceptable behaviour. This process is occurring at schools, in the streets and in daily life, as well as through television, the media and popular culture. In many cases, this is leading younger generations to question imported ideas of honour. Humera Khan, co-founder of the An-Nisa Society, a womens advocacy group in Wembley, says: Children up to adolescence, despite what the dynamics, are generally happy. Then suddenly when they reach adolescence they judge themselves on what they see in the mainstream culture through television or magazines; there is a feeling of dissatisfaction on the way they are living their life because the message from the media is strong. Maureen Salmon, the interim-director of Forward, a group campaigning against FGM, says that many of these principles also apply to FGM. She says: If you are in your country of origin, you see it [FGM] just as something that all the girls have done. And then suddenly youre in a society where its not common and then for the first time you have to think about actually why you do it. Ghazala Razzaq, co-ordinator for Roshni Asian Womens Re-
the older women have accepted domestic violence. the younger women are willing to take a lot less in terms of abuse ~
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In cases where a Jewish marriage has broken down, a man can use this situation in order to extract a more favourable divorce settlement knowing that unless he grants his wife a get, she cannot have legitimate Jewish children. For example, a man can withhold the Get in order to obtain more money or property under a divorce settlement. Since 2003 civil divorce courts in England have been granted extra powers intended to neutralise any potential bargaining advantage to be gained by either party refusing to grant or receive a Get.
Source: Getting your Get: Information for Jewish men and women in England about divorce according to Jewish law with articles, forms and explanations for lawyers.By Sharon Faith and Deanna Levine. http://www.gettingyourget.co.uk/.
Women in the orthodox community tend to suffer more incidences of domestic violence before coming forward. We suspect there is a higher level [of domestic violence] in arranged marriages, some of the girls are very young, but we dont know exactly [the figures] because it is a very hard community to break into. But this is a guarded community and it is difficult area to get statistics on it. Jews have lived in the UK for hundreds of years. The ability of some members of the orthodox community to remain isolated from so many trends affecting mainstream society illustrates the potential perils of the type of self-segregation sometimes favoured by more recent immigrants.
primary school and infant school to tackle these attitudes as soon as possible. it needs to become part of the curriculum; it should be part of the citizenship agenda ~
Nazir Afzal, the Crown Prosecution Service lead on honour-based violence
NGOs and voluntary groups often conduct the majority of grassroots work with women at risk of violence. Often coming from the same background as the victims of honour-based violence, workers in such groups believe that their work in raising gender equality issues, holding workshops and working with schools can transform successfully challenge traditions of honour-based violence. Many members of ethnic minority groups in the UK are suspicious of the government and the police. As a result, non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and voluntary organisations play a key role in challenging traditional ideas, promoting ideas of gender equality and condemning violence against women. Sha-
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young people on gender specifics in a fundamental way, then these abuses are going to be really difficult to eradicate in the future ~
Almost all womens groups and those working in related areas believe that working extensively with schools is the best way to prevent ideas that honour-based violence is acceptable from being passed on to new generations. Nazir Afzal, the Crown Prosecution Service lead on honour-based violence, says: [Education to tackle causes of honour-based violence] has to be done at primary school and infant school to tackle these attitudes as soon as possible. It needs to become part of the curriculum; it should be part of the citizenship agenda. Some of the faith schools particularly in East London have been quite good at this it doesnt matter if a school is 90 per cent Asian as long as theyre getting the right sort of education. In the absence of effective action by many branches of local government, several womens groups have begun independently working with nearby schools to make pupils and teachers more aware of the risks of forced marriage and honour-based violence. Such work generally aims to build young womens self-confidence in order to allow them to better resist family pressure and threats of violence, as well as seeking to raise awareness of the threats they can face. Ghazala Razzaq, co-ordinator of Roshni Asian Womens Resource Centre, a support group in Sheffield which works with schools, says: We provide homework support and group work support in schools. We build their self-esteem and confidence, and we are looking at why
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by doing that we have attracted more people by not imposing a set of values on anyone, as vulnerable women are then too afraid to come and men would be more hostile to us if they knew our intentions ~
Ghazala Razzaq, centre co-ordinator for Roshni Asian Womens Resource Centre, Sheffield
While many groups believe that it will be necessary to educate the very youngest generations in order to change future attitudes, others believe that it is still possible to change the attitudes of adults in order to help make honour-based violence socially and culturally unacceptable.
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Womens groups say that in order to tackle traditional ideas of honour, it is vital to work with women who have been victims of honour-based violence and with those who are at risk of such violence. Rafaat Mughal, the director of the Joint Association of Nissa Trusts, a womens support group in North London, says that encouraging women to learn occupational skills and helping them build relationships with people from outside their family, can give them economic independence while also improving their overall confidence. She says: We try and change the mindset by inviting them here to meet other people from the community who have achieved something and are respected. We expose them to other people and it proves successful. If I tell them then its like Im forcing them, but I bring experts in [to talk to them]. Other womens groups say that even women who rarely leave
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Humera Khan, co-founder of the an-nisa society, a womens advocacy group in Wembley, says:
[by the media] they would be more receptive to deal with their bad practices ~
If Muslims were less attacked [by the media] they would be more receptive to deal with their bad practices. Just like with FGM, they [the government] realised they had to find ways to understand that it is a norm with people and then deal with it. You got to make people feel less threatened if you are asking them to change a deep-rooted cultural practice. But while groups working in communities which are receptive to new ideas are able to use sewing classes and other forms of training to reach potentially vulnerable women, in other communities women who contact any type of womens group can be seen as bringing shame on their family and the community. However,
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culture generally, in terms of the somali community, they dont see her [ayaan] as the right sort of role model ... i personally think it does help but others say that this isnt the sort of role model that we should listen to ~
Mohamed baleela, team leader at the domestic violence intervention project in Hammersmith in West london, says
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batool al- toma, the head of the national Muslim Womens advisory group and an advisor on womens affairs for the Mosque and imams national advisory board (Minab), says:
Many workers in womens groups also emphasise the importance of working with men as a way to achieve deep rooted cultural and social changes. Rania Hafez, principle lecturer in education at the University of East London, says: The role of male members in the community speaking out against honour-based crimes is crucial. There should be greater work done with men in terms of them understanding equity and equality. Mohamed Baleela, team leader at the Domestic Violence Intervention Project in Hammersmith in West London, runs a violence prevention programme through working with male perpetrators of domestic violence. He also works with Islamic organisations in West London, such as the Muslim Cultural Heritage Centre, in an attempt to raise awareness of domestic violence. He says: We have a violence prevention programme, which tries to help male perpetrators of domestic violence. If their English is not good enough I can hold one-to-one sessions with them [in Arabic]. Our outreach work consists of raising awareness of domestic violence within the wider community. We also work very closely with imams and community leaders on this issue. We cannot defeat violence in the community without having the community on our side. One man who has been through the programme says: I have spent a year living away from my children and wife. I have greatly missed them and it is a great joy to be with them again. Programmes like the one I attended have helped in my understanding the issues and allows me to control and channel my anger into constructive things. Mohammad Beleela estimates 25 per cent of the men who go through his programme stop abusing their wives and 50 per cent stop using violence but continue to use psychological and emotional pressure to control them. The remaining 25 per cent, he says, do not stop using physical violence against their wives.
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for them to use islam for violence against women because there are no teachings in islam that allow such acts, however if the imam is hell bent on promoting this stuff, they can misinterpret, and twist and bring in a more cultural dimension than a religious one ~
Ibrahim Mogra, the chair of the Masjid and Community Affairs Committee of the MCB
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The role of the mosque to my mind is very positive We had two to three meetings in the big mosque in Accrington in which we gave presentations and talked about what we wanted to do. There was also real engagement from quite a large number of community organisations also involvement from the police who were very positive.
The Muslim Parliament, mainly through the work of Ghayasuddin Siddiqui, its leader, has also tackled FGM, forced marriage and honour-based domestic violence. In association with the Muslim Womens Institute the group has launched a Stop Forced Marriages Campaign7 with the aim of creating awareness within Muslim communities. Prior to this, the Muslim Parliament produced practical guides for those intending to have a Muslim marriage in Britain.8 Siddiqui, believes that, as a result of these and other measures, such subjects are increasingly debated openly in the Muslim community. He says: Even child abuse is becoming a topic possible to discuss. For example, some people who have made a new magazine called Suburb Magazine 119 in Bradford recently contacted me and asked me to write an article about child abuse. They saw my website and saw that I was the only person talking about these things. A lot of people are finding out these things through the internet its become very easy now. Although many and perhaps most mosques still shun campaigns against domestic violence, more Muslim religious leaders than ever before are now working with womens groups in the UK. Mohamed Baleela, team leader at the Domestic Violence Intervention Plan in Hammersmith in West London, says: We try to be the link between mosques, community centres and Islamic centres and outside agencies. Regents Park Mosque, Muslim Heritage Centre, Westbourne Park and Al Muntada al-Islami are all mosques we work with. We work also with other smaller mosques. These Islamic centres have a lot of facilities we can use, and the majority of Arab Muslims go there.
7 Forced Marriage, a briefing paper by the Muslim Parliament of Great Britain is available online at http://www.muslimparliament.org.uk/marriage.htm A study of Forced Marriages produced by the Muslim Womens Institute in association with the Muslim Parliament Thinking About Marriage by Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood (London, 2005) is available online at http://www.muslimparliament.org.uk/Documentation/ThinkingaboutMarriage.pdf 8 The Muslim Parliaments Getting Married Some Guidelines is available online at http:// www.muslimparliament.org.uk/marriage_guidelines.htm. 9 Suburb Magazine is not available online.
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Government successes
Many voluntary groups say that the British government particularly the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) and the police service is beginning to understand the issue of honourbased violence and take steps to address the problem. Although most womens groups say that the government is not yet doing enough to tackle honour-based violence, many also say that the government has begun to take steps to tackle the problem. Shahien Taj, director of the Henna Foundation, a womens group in Cardiff, says: We have been working with South Cardiff police for nine years, and they have started to understand these issues [honour crimes]. Now the police have realised that they have to work with us; ringing us and asking us to meet with their clients because they are realising that they need our help because sometimes they make things worse. In particular, the government has worked through the FCO and the police, backed by legislation where appropriate, to deter and punish perpetrators and open avenues of escape for victims and potential victims of violence. Many of those interviewed for this study say that if the government further prioritised the tackling of honour-based violence, created a co-ordinated national strategy and allocated more resources to the issue, the rate of honourrelated abuse and violence would soon begin to decline.
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is excellent. they are proactive, they take active steps, follow up and help girls; that unit is good ~
Anne-Marie Hutchinson, a lawyer specialising in honour-related crimes for Dawson Coronwell in London
In recent years, the police have dramatically stepped up their attempts to tackle instances of honour-based violence. This has
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reach vulnerable people much quicker than a volunteer group because i am hiding behind a badge that says West Yorkshire police and because i am seen as someone in authority. if i was seen as a worker from the voluntary group then people would not have that kind of conversation with me and i would not be able to help as many people as possible ~
The police have been particularly spurred into action by the highprofile murders of Rukhsana Naz and Heshu Yones. More recently, the police have had to reassess their approach again following the murder of Banaz Mahmod, a Kurdish woman who had unsuccessfully appealed for the police to protect her against her family. The polices growing awareness of honour-based violence is leading them to adopt new approaches. Recently, for example, police have also begun using more sophisticated techniques to pursue perpetrators of honour-based violence. Nazir Afzal, the Crown Prosecution Service lead on honour-based violence, says: We are now using techniques usually used to fight organised crime to tackle this were using covert officers, listening devices and other methods. Its all perfectly legal but we are finding that the only way to tackle this is to use techniques that are unusual for family cases. Thats because we dont see this as domestic violence its beyond that. The murder of Banaz was so brutal that it was a clear warning to others; it was a way of saying dont step out of line or this could be you ... Weve started to realise how organised this is and that this is what distinguishes it from ordinary domestic violence when you just have one-on-one violence; a husband beating his wife for instance. In the last few years Ive not dealt with a single case of honour-based violence that didnt involve multiple perpetrators. Almost all womens refuges can narrate stories of individual police officers who have gone to great lengths to protect women who are at risk and to gain prosecutions against perpetrators. Ila Patel, the director of the Asha Project in Streatham, says: We had a case when the police actually went to the Punjab region in India because someone had been killed there and that person had been at the refuge. The police started an investigation after examining an insurance claim [her husband] had made. In some cases, individual police forces have implemented their own one-off strategies against honour-based violence. In Bradford, for example, Philip Balmforth (a former police inspector who had worked on honour-related issues since 988) was appointed as the districts vulnerable persons officer (Asian Women). Balmforth says that this job put him in a unique position to help women at risk of violence: A person in my position could reach vulnerable people much quicker than a volunteer group because I am hiding behind a badge that says
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The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) has instituted a number of procedures to help women who are being forced into a marriage or who are at risk of honour killings. Most significantly, the FCO has established a Forced Marriage Unit (FMU) which aims to intervene to stop forced marriages happening. Every year the FMU deals with between 250-300 cases of forced marriage.120 The service also runs a helpline which offers advice to victims and professionals and holds around 70 outreach meetings every year. The FCO also produces a number of print and electronic guides for police officers, social workers, education and health professionals. The guides are uniformly well-thought out and clearly presented. Among the FMUs most notable successes was to rescue an -year old British-Bengali girl from marriage in May 2007.2 Anne Marie Hutchinson, a lawyer who specialises in honourrelated crime and who has advised the FCO on the issue, says of the FMU: They are excellent. They are proactive, they take active steps, follow up and help girls; that unit is good. Many women who have used the FCOs services praise its profes20 Forced Marriage (CivilProtection) Bill: Research paper. 28 June 2007 http://www. parliament.uk/commons/lib/research/rp2007/rp07-056.pdf 2 BBC: Girl, , rescued from marriage 8 May 2007 [http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/ uk/66359.stm]
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Legislation
The government has sought to tackle honour-based violence through by instituting new laws. In particular, two laws against forced marriage and FGM have sought to criminalise specific forms of honour-based violence. The Forced Marriage (Civil Protection) Act received Royal Ascent on 27 July 2007 and, when it comes into force in late 2008, will allow victims of forced marriage to pursue perpetrators through civil courts but does not necessarily force the police to act in suspected cases of forced marriage.22 Parliament took a different approach towards tackling FGM. The Female Genital Mutilation Act23 of 2003 criminalised not only perpetrators of the act but also made it a crime to help anyone else in the UK or overseas perform the operation. Although no-one has yet been convicted under the FGM law, womens groups say that its high-profile launch in regional, national and ethnic media has probably deterred people from carrying out the operation on their daughters, whether in the UK or abroad. Maureen Salmon, the interim-director of Forward, which campaigns against FGM, says: The police campaign on this has been one of the most successful which theyve ever done on the issue people taking their children outside the UK to have this done will be aware that this is illegal If you talk to Somali community leaders they say that they feel their community is being looked at. But while the explicit criminalisation of FGM sent out a clear message to communities that their traditional, practice was considered illegal by the British government, the Forced Marriage Bill was issued with little fanfare. This may have been an attempt by the government to please advocates of the bill without antagonising pressure groups like the Muslim Council of Britain which had campaigned against it. One individual who was involved in drafting the bill says: The civil marriage bill will help. The consultation was a real consultation and it was split 50:50 between people who wanted it to be made a criminal offence and those who didnt. It was argued that making it
22 The text of the Forced Marriage (Civil Protection) Act 2007 can be found online at http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2007/pdf/ukpga_20070020_en.pdf] The act is due to come into force in autumn 2008, according to a press release issued by the Ministry of Justice from 28 November 2007 [http://www.justice.gov.uk/news/newsrelease2807a.htm]. 23 The text of the Female Genital Mutilation Act 2003 can be found at http://www.opsi. gov.uk/ACTS/acts2003/pdf/ukpga_2003003_en.pdf
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cHapter 8:
taCKlInG honoUr-CrIMeS: hoW InDIa taCKleD SatI (the rItUal BUrnInG oF WIDoWS)
In India, the once-commonplace Hindu practice of Sati (the ritual burning of widows) has been virtually stamped out through laws, policing, theological reform and changing attitudes. In 1987, the government passed the Commission of Sati (Prevention) Act which outlawed all glorification and advocacy of the practice.Mark In addition the law reversed the burden of proof, requiring defendants to prove they had not abetted Sati and also allowed for anyone who inherited property as the result of sati to be barred from receiving that inheritance. The law slowed incidents of Sati to a trickle. [The text of the Act is online at the website of Indias Ministry of Women and Child Development. http://wcd.nic.in/commissionofsatiprevention. htm] In 2007 the government outlined plans to finally eliminate the practice. The government now plans to amend the 1987 act to allow prosecutions against all witnesses to the act of Sati and against whole villages and communities if necessary. The amendments would also raise the minimum prison sentences. Village councils could also be tried if they failed to report a Sati case. Even though we have just a few recorded cases of sati annually, even one is too many, an official from the women and child development ministry said Mark.
[Reuters: India to toughen law on custom of burning widows. 17 July 2007. http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSDEL55004]
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shaminder ubhi, the director of ashiana, a womens refuge in leyton in east london, says:
integrate honour crimes, and forced marriages into the general domestic violence framework. We need to look at it as an overall violence against women. [but] we [also] need to realise that different communities need different responses ~
Mohamed baleela, a team leader at the domestic violence intervention project in Hammersmith in West london, says:
we have to say there is a problem. the best way to tackle issues is to tackle them head on ~
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recommendations
It is self-evident that the government should take all necessary steps to tackle honour-based violence. Yet at the same time there are real concerns that an overly aggressive approach could make minority communities and particularly Muslim ones more suspicious of the police and the government, and indeed, entrench some peoples determination to defend traditional ideas
24 The Economist A dishonourable practice Apr 2th 2007 http://www.economist.com/ world/europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9009023 25 BBC: Imam rapped for wife-beating book. 4 January 2004. http://news.bbc.co.uk// hi/world/europe/3396597.stm 26 The Guardian: Cleric hits back at uniformed critics by Faisal al-Yufai. 2 July 2004. http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,258933,00.html 27 BBC: Jail for Denmark honour killing. 29 June 2006. http://news.bbc.co.uk//hi/ world/europe/528206.stm
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Low impact:
Improve police knowledge Police need to be more aware of the nature of honour-based violence. A pool of officers specialising in tackling honour-based violence should be established in each district. reform the no recourse to Public Funds rule Women suffering from domestic violence should be made exempt from the No Recourse rule on condition that they undertake language and career training. This will enable women to flee abusive situations and also help them become financially independent in the long-term. [Fines should also be introduced for those who abandon spouses] Greater support for womens groups Local and central government should extend greater support to womens groups. This can include greater financial support and greater access to schools and local authority premises. Consult wider range of womens groups The government relies excessively on the Southall Black Sisters for information and advice. The government should instead consult with a broader range of womens groups from around the UK which actually carry out on-on-the-ground work with victims of honour-based violence. Unified government strategy A single strategy to tackle honour-based violence is needed to coordinate action by the police, the health services, local authorities, the social services and central government. Government agencies also need to agree on a definition of honour-based violence. Foreign policy Foreign policy should aim to encourage other countries and especially Pakistan, Bangladesh and Kurdistan to improve womens rights. This will help to change attitudes among immigrants from these regions who live in the UK. extradition treaties with Pakistan and Iraqi Kurdistan Many women have been murdered by men who then fled to Pakistan and Kurdistan. At present there is no formal system to have them extradited to the UK.
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Medium impact:
Improve information flow to women at risk Information on womens legal rights in the UK and the support available to victims of domestic violence should be made available to all brides arriving in the UK on marriage visas. This could be done at airports by women fluent in the appropriate languages. Criminalise forced marriages Making forced marriages a civil offence has not worked. A high profile law to criminalise forced marriage is needed to tell communities that this practice is wrong and that people who carried out forced marriages will be held accountable. Punish accomplices in honour killings and domestic violence People who seek to impede police investigations or withhold evidence should be held accountable. Those who help track down women who are then subjected to violence should also be prosecuted. tackle breaches of confidentiality Existing rules which prohibit local government employees from leaking National Insurance details or tax records to womens families should be enforced and strengthened if necessary. This should also apply to policemen and councillors who give out confidential information. tackle ideas of honour in schools Schools should play a key role in ending honour-based violence. Children must be taught sexual equality and that violence against women is wrong. Schools can work with immigrant-focused refuges and womens groups to raise awareness of issues and of the assistance available to those at risk.
High impact:
accelerate integration More training and educational opportunities should be offered to women from minority communities to enable them to enter the job market. Government-produced leaflets in foreign languages should be reduced to encourage greater fluency in English. Punish those who advocate domestic violence or honour killings People who incite or encourage violence against women in print, media or at public meetings should be prosecuted. Similar laws which criminalise incitement to other forms of violence already exist.
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Conclusion
Violence against women occurs in all societies and cultures and in all parts of the world. In the UK, such violence has been tackled over the last few decades through new laws, awareness-raising campaigns and a zero-tolerance approach tailored to changing specific aspects of mainstream British culture. This policy has largely succeeded in reducing domestic violence and making such violence socially unacceptable. As a result, domestic violence is today widely seen as morally wrong and as a criminal act.28 A similar approach is now needed to bring about a comparable change among some of the UKs immigrant groups. At present, ideas of honour which fuel violence against women are common in sectors of British society which originate in the Middle East and South Asia. In some cases, particularly among Pakistani communities in the North of England, such attitudes appear to be becoming more entrenched in peoples cultures and identities through increasing segregation, rising religious radicalism and the development of a them-and-us attitude to mainstream society. Frequently, ideas of sexual honour are perpetuated as a counterpoint to a mainstream British culture which community and religious leaders frequently dismiss as corrupt, worthless and immoral. In many cases, these factors are combining to make ideas of honour the core of many immigrants identities. So far, government attempts to tackle honour-based crimes have been inconclusive. Laws have been passed to criminalise specific acts of violence (such as Female Genital Mutilation) while police officers and the voluntary sector have aimed to protect women at acute risk of immediate violence. These attempts have avoided tackling the roots of the violence. The government appears to have hoped that honour-based violence would simply fade away as immigrants integrated into mainstream society. This approach has not worked and in many cases social services have failed to protect women from violence. If the government wishes to end honour-based violence against women it must change the aspects of immigrants cultures which
28 For example a July 2005 report by the Home Office found that between 995 and 2004/5 reported incidents of domestic violence fell by 59%. It seems likely that this change is real rather than reflective of changes in how such crimes are recorded. Crime in England and Wales 2004/2005 Sian Nicholas, David Povey, Alison Walker and Chris Kershaw (Home Office Statistical Bulletin, July 2005) [http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs05/hosb05. pdf p.9]
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whole. Womens groups have reported that many senior Asian policemen and councillors openly put their loyalty to their culture, community and religion before their loyalty to the rule of law. Informal nationwide networks of taxi drivers, community elders and religious groups now exist to co-operate to track down and punish, with death if necessary, those who break community traditions and offend their religious codes. High profile Islamic organisations have repeatedly tried to block attempts by the government, the police and the judiciary to tackle the violent abuse of women by arguing that the community will feel victimised by any laws aimed to halt the violence. Elected officials of all ethnicities have sought to block the activities of womens groups for fear of offending Asian voters. Most troubling of all, perhaps, is the increasingly widespread belief that where religious and cultural practices conflict with British laws, traditions should take priority. Unless the government takes action soon, these practices and attitudes will become more commonplace. Womens groups also say that the branches of government the legislature, the police, schools, elected officials and local authorities are not taking decisive action to end honour-based violence because of political correctness and because they are afraid of being accused of racism or Islamophobia. The government has some legitimate concerns about how to approach this issue; few communities respond favourably if they believe that an alien value system is being forced upon them. The government must therefore make clear that it is not seeking to enforce conformity, assimilation or western values but rather that it is promoting ideas of womens rights and sexual equality that are universal. Political leaders also need to say that in Britains pluralistic society all individuals and groups have an obligation to stand up for all the rights of all societys members and to fight violence and injustice wherever it occurs. Politicians must recognise that not standing up for the rights of ethnic minority women is racism; it is to say that immigrant women feel pain, humiliation and fear less than native Britons and that they should not aspire to the freedom that they would want for themselves; it is to say that they are less human for being part of a foreign culture. The government must show that it believes that all women should have the right to choose their own futures regardless of the culture of their parents and community; similarly to proclaim that the desire to live free of violence and servitude, fear and intimidation is not a western trait but one that is common to all people.
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appendix
a letter from the Muslim Wellwishers Group
Cardiff-based community groups circular which went to more than 1,250 Pakistani Muslim homes in Cardiff, according to Shahen Taj, the director of the Henna Foundation in the city. The document appears to have been sent with the aim of discouraging individuals and families from acting in ways which the community believes to be immoral. The following text appears with its original spelling and punctuation. PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL Dear Mrs. Shahnaz Tariq, Do the communitys respectable women really know who you are, and the family that you belong to? Shahnaz (Sadiq) Tariq (wife of Mohammed Tariq Grocer / Off Licensee, Clifton, Cardiff) Shahnaz is a woman who was forced into an arranged marriage to a man called Mohammed Tariq of spar Shop a Grocer / Off Licensee. The sad thing is that once someone is forced into an arranged marriage there is no turning back unless a woman is strong and puts principles before any other thing, which Shahnaz has shown. This particular lady enjoyed the best part of her life as a child with her family and then growing up to the High School days. These are all precious mischief sweet memories that she has experienced in her six form days at Hawardian, which were abruptly brought to an end when the family realised she was not excelling at academics, but was only enjoying and very much looking forward to school life. Forcibly arranging her marriage to Mohammed Tariq, the father thought was a right thing to do as the girl well into her puberty. For Mohammed Tariq this was a passport to paradise, as in Pakistan he was suffering like any other peasants cutting corns in the
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field, milking cows and listening to flute music in the fields, and in the evenings the social past time was gossiping and back biting. When the opportunity came to come to Britain and the prospect of a British passport he could not believe his luck. Once the mattiage was arranged for whatever reason Mohammed Tariq resented Shahnaz and disliked her as this wasnt a love marriage, but forced, but what he did love was the opportunity to come to Britain and getting his hands on a British passport. The only thing that kept together was the British passport. Whilst waiting for a passport his careless and laid back approach produced children, as a result of this he has always felt that he is trapped, since he was never happy with what Shahnaz had to offer him. He always thought that the grass was definitely greener elsewhere and therefore he has never stopped searching for illicit sexual affairs, and hoping that he may find something that his was unable to give him. Its impossible to feel sorry for Shahnaz as she has became similar to gangsters mole and disgust is an everyday occurrence which she has become to accept as a norm of life. Shahnaz has been surrounded for the best part of her life by members of her family who were either, accused of adultery, indecently assaulting children or those arrested for gang rape of an underage girls, or selling alcohol to underage children, which was also charged with herself. Shahnazs father Haji Mohammed Sadiq was arrested recently for indecently assaulting children, as a result of this he very seldom comes out for fear of persecution, and is currently planning to leave the country. Shahnazs brother Mahmood Sadiq also known as Moody, of Bayside Chip Shop, was arrested and found guilty for gang raping a young underage girl for which he was given a lengthy prison sentence, and will remain on the sex offenders register for the rest of his life. Shahnazs brother-in-law Asif of Spar Shop Grange Town, was also arrested for indecently assaulting the young girl. When arrested he was asked: why did you put your hand in the young girls panties? He replied I was looking for the chocolate that I thought she had taken without paying. Shahnazs husband Mohammed Tariq is notorious for his evil behaviour in the community. He is accused by the community for his adultery of which his wife is fully aware, she has fought on many occasions with Pakistani ladies whom she blamed he was
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they have faied so miserably to do anything over many yearts. For many years Mohammed Tariq together with his accomplice, one calling himself General Secretary and one calling himself Chairman, have been misleading the community with the support of the sacrificial goats who have no directions or objectives other than to make money and put it in their shoe boxes or under the mattress. The so called Jacos donkeys are now supporting Mohammed Tariq by allowing him to make his wife Chairman of Hope, and supporting Abra for Abras wife to be General Secretary of Hope. What a farce! No educated god fearing true carers, respectable and honourable members of the community will support these people once the truth is before them. Which decent and honourable man will allow his children or his wife to be befriended by Mohammed Tariqs wife Shahnaz, so that she can take these women home for her husband to ogle over with his evil and sinister dirty looks and thoughts that are perverted? Just as Mohammed Tariq and accomplice have been baffling and making a fool of fools, sometimes genuine people have been mislead too, who have been made into bulls, owls and donkeys. In the same way Mohammed Tariq and his accomplice want their wives to do the same as they have been doing for over 5 years, which is to hoodwink women by feeding them lies, intimidating them and trying to treat them as cows, owls and stray cats. Mohammed Tariqa wife Shahnaz recently made her maiden statement as a bogus Chairman of the homemade society of Mohammed Tariqs and his accomplice, the statement she made was as follows: I want my partco opened. The members of the mosque were reluctant to open Shahnazs partco as she put it, as she had no right to give consent, especially when her husband had failed to open it. Why was she flaunting her request around the city? The members of the community were quite concerned as to why Shahnaz was continuously using the phrase: I want my partco opened. Why would she want partco opened? Surely the area to which
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her sister, even though she has a past with a man from Riverside who had been showing her around Cardiff for approximately 3 years and her family refused to allow this gentleman from the Riverside community to marry her. How can this woman Shahnaz stand up and call herself Chairman when she has no hope in hell? And cant even sort out her own family affairs? Who would trust their children, mothers, sisters, daughters and wives in her home, where all the four beasts have access? The community is well aware that many genuine ladies have signed membership forms and become members of Hope, innocently supporting these evil men and the endeavours of Mohammed Tariq and the Abra of Cardiff Allah will never help succeed these men and women with their evil intentions. We pray that the mothers, sisters, daughters and wives completely disassociate themselves from this organisation Hope (umeed), which is being launched by Mohammed Tariq, and his co-conspirators. We request those respectable, honourable God fearing ladies whose husbands are true men and not idiots, bulls, owls or donkeys to kindly refrain from joining Hope (umeed) and if you have already joined, withdraw your so called membership in the interest of izzat, honour, respect and dignity for yourself, your husband, your children and your family as a whole in the community. The true hope is that after reading this the respectable ladies will completely disengage themselves from this sinister society of women prepared to serve certain evil men, and be used and humiliated. Do not allow your mothers, sisters, daughters, wives and children to fall into the preying eyes of evil men, who will use their wives, mothers, sisters and daughters to get into your homes to achieve their dirty deeds. There is one thing that must be brought to the attention of the dear respected ladies, which is, when at first a few years ago a womens organisation was formed, Mohammed Tariq and the so-called Abra condemned those poor ladies who were and are doing a worthy job to help suppressed ladies. Mohammed Tariq and Abra called these ladies because they formed an organisation of women, prostitutes, home wreckers, and women that wear
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thority at the highest level. He is currently being investigated by a very serious branch of the police for fraud together with others for trying to obtain money of mosque by deception (insurance fraud). O good Muslim, Pakistani Brothers, protect the honour of your loved ones from Mohammed Tariq, bogus secretary and Abra bogus Chairman and now Mohammed Tariqs wife Shahnaz Sadiq Tariq Chairman, and Abras wife Secretary of Hope, same snakes same skins (wolves in sheeps clothing). God will help us defeat them at every opportunity, as Mohammed Tariq and his co-conspirators intentions are pure evil. The Abra Army was defeated once before and shall be defeated once again inshallah. Thank you Muslim Wellwishers Group
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Bibliography
Chapter 1:
Holy, Ladislav, Kinship: Honour and Solidarity: Cousin marriage in the Middle East (Manchester University Press, Manchester, 989). Peristiany, J G (ed.), Honour and Shame: The values of Mediterranean Society (University of Chicago, Chicago 966; London 974). Wahud, Anima, Inside the Gender Jihad: Womens Reform in Islam, Oneworld Publications (Oxford, 2006)
Chapter 2:
Raleigh, V.S., and Balarajan, R, Suicide and Self-Burning among Indians and West Indians in England and Wales, British Journal of Psychiatry, 29, pp.365-368 (992).
Chapter 5:
Lightfoot-Klein, Hammy, The Sexual Experience and Marital Adjustment of Genitally Circumcised and Infibulated Females in the Sudan, The Journal of Sex Research, 26, 3, pp. 375-392 (August 989). Momoh, Comfort (ed.), Female Genital Mutilation (Radcliffe Publishing, 2005). Roald, Anne Sofie, Women in Islam: The Western Experience (Routledge, London, 200).
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acknowledgements
Abigail Morris, Jewish Womans Aid Amtal Rana, Kiran Asian Women Aid Andrew Cameron, Metropolitan Police Anne Marie Hutchinson, Dawson Cornwell Atif Imtiaz, community worker in Bradford Batool Al- Toma, the National Muslim Womens Advisory Group Bawjit Banga, Newham Asian Womans Refuge Bawjit Singh, social worker Catherine Hossain, Muslim Public Affairs Committee (MPACUK) Debbie Fawcett, Hyndburn and Ribble Valley Outreach womens group Diana Nammi, Iranian and Kurdish Womens Rights Organisation Ila Patel, Asha Project Ena Mercy, Pennines Domestic Violence group Fathiya Yusuf, Refuge Frank Field, MP Ghayasuddin Siddiqui, Muslim Parliament Ghazala Khan, Naye Subah Ghazala Razzaq, Roshni Asian Womens Resource Centre (Sheffield) Gina Khan Gona Saed, Middle East Centre for Womens Rights Grace Busuttil North Kirlees Refuge near Leeds Haley, Jewish Womans Aid Hassan Safour, Muslim Welfare House Humera Khan, An-Nisa Society Ibrahim Mogra, Muslim Council of Britain Ishbana Hussain, Staying Put Project Jasvinder Sanghera, Shazia Qayum and Imran Rehman,Karma Nirvana Jatinder Chana, Asha Projects Jenny Moody, Luton Womens Aid John Paton, Lancashire Family Mediation Service, Judy Morgan, Lantern Project Julie Pyke, Annah Kirklees Asian Black Womens Welfare Association (KABBWA) Kubir Randhawa, Asian Family Counseling Service Lesley Musa, Womens Aid (Glasgow) Latifa Rahman, Hackney Asian Womens Aid Manjit Kaur, Roshni (Birmingham)
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