nen-suer said: @Zlejedi
Thats all a lie
plz include a reliable source.
Note that i gave u a BBc link news
So ur saying this happened and all the other news stations ignored it ? |
Haha so every link claiming about muslim "law" being unfair and completly biased against women is lie now ?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/honourcrimes/crimesofhonour_2.shtml
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/crossing_continents/7107379.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/2503143.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/2977446.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4172551.stm
Some interesting quotations:
The move followed the killing of a teenage girl in a Kurdish family in London. In 2002, Heshu Yones, 16, was stabbed to death by her father, Abdullah, because he disapproved of her Western dress and Christian boyfriend.
Rukhsana Naz, 19, wanted to divorce her husband to marry her boyfriend by whom she was pregnant. She refused to have an abortion and was strangled by her brother with a piece of plastic flex while her mother, Shakeela, held her down. The family put Rukhsana's body in the car and drove 100 miles to dump it. Shakeela Naz and her son Shazad Ali were sentenced to life imprisonment for the killing in 1999.
Sold into prostitution aged nine, condemned by an Iranian judge to hang at 18, Leila was saved by a group of human rights activists.
Leila's husband began selling her for sex to as many as 15 men each night. Two months into the marriage, police raided the house and arrested everyone.
The husband was sentenced to five years in jail for providing a house for illegal sex.
During the course of the criminal investigation, Leila's brothers had confessed to raping her. They were flogged. For this Leila was accused of incest. A crime punishable by death.
Welsh Euro MP Glenys Kinnock has called for urgent action after more than 100 people were killed in riots in Nigeria as Muslim fury over the Miss World beauty pageant, which has a Welsh entry, escalates.
She was sentenced to death in March 2002 by a Sharia court in northern Nigeria. Her crime was getting pregnant out of wedlock. The man has not been charged. But she is now appealing against being buried up to her neck and stoned to death.
In Iran, a married woman who is raped risks the death penalty for adultery if she cannot prove she was violated.
If she kills her attacker, she may also face the death sentence for murder.
And those are usually only the "lucky" cases where multinational uproar and scandal has saved the victims.