http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/joan-smith/joan-smith-honour-killings-are-an-outrage-we-must-confront-792021.html

  
Joan Smith: 'Honour' killings are an outrage we must confront

Thursday, 6 March 2008 


It's a startling statistic: in one British city alone, 33 children under the 
age of 16 are missing from school rolls. Officials in Bradford have not been 
able to establish what has happened to them, and there are fears that some may 
have become victims of forced marriage.


Two days ago the children's minister, Kevin Brennan, revealed the figure to the 
Home Affairs select committee and said that the Government also has concerns 
about 14 areas of the country which are suspected of having high levels of 
so-called "honour" crimes. Brennan said that Bradford City Council lost track 
of 205 children last year and had subsequently been able to establish the 
whereabouts of 172, leaving 33 - around 15 per cent - unaccounted for. While 
there may be an innocent explanation for some of them, the police and the 
Foreign Office forced marriage unit are dealing with around 500 cases each year.

The select committee's chair, Keith Vaz, described the minister's disclosures 
as "very, very serious" matters. "The figures you have given us quite frankly 
have shocked members of this committee just in relation to Bradford," Vaz told 
Brennan. "There are 14 others areas where there are missing children. This is 
totally unsatisfactory."

Last month the same committee heard evidence from a senior police officer that 
the true level of forced marriage and "honour" crime is not reflected in 
official figures, and that as many as 17,500 girls, women and young men may 
become victims each year. A series of trials has provided horrific insights 
into honour-based killings, one of the most shocking being the rape and murder 
in south London of a 20-year-old Kurdish woman, Banaz Mahmod, by hitmen hired 
by her father and uncle.

Until very recently, respect for the idea of multiculturalism has inhibited 
discussion of forced marriage and honour-based crimes in the UK. This doesn't 
help anyone, neither potential victims nor the young men who come under 
pressure from relatives to commit murder on their behalf; in 2004, two boys 
aged 16 and 19 were ordered by their Bangladeshi father to kill their sister's 
boyfriend, a student at Oxford Brookes University, who was from an Iranian 
family.

We have worrying levels of domestic violence in this country, carried out by 
people of all races and backgrounds, but it is important to recognise that 
honour-based crime is different in several important respects; it is planned in 
advance, may be carried out by more than one family member, and depends on the 
silent collusion, if not direct involvement, of many more. In Turkey, where 
hundreds of "honour" killings take place each year, a Turkish 
documentary-maker, Ayse Onal, has visited prisons all over the country, 
interviewing men who have been convicted of murdering sisters, daughters and 
mothers. Few of them show remorse and they are treated with respect by 
fellow-prisoners and guards, who approve of this method of restoring a family's 
"honour".

We urgently need to recognise honour-based killings as an expression of classic 
patriarchal values, which give fathers, brothers and uncles absolute power over 
women and younger, less-powerful males. In societies built on such values, 
girls and women are regarded as commodities, not individuals. They are usually 
married off before completing their education, passing illiteracy on to the 
next generation. In Pakistan, where honour-based crime is a huge problem, the 
female adult literacy rate is 36 per cent, according to the UN, and only 15 per 
cent of rural women receive an education.

In Egypt, 45 per cent of women over the age of 15 cannot read or write, and 85 
per cent of female heads of households in rural areas are illiterate. "Very 
often, a family will take their daughter out of school aged 13 or 14," says 
Nihad Abul-Qumsan, director of the Egyptian Centre for Women's Rights. "By the 
time she's grown up, she'll have forgotten how to read or write properly."

Honour-based cultures depend on strict rules and even surgical procedures to 
allay their fears about women's sexuality, and a staggering 97 per cent of 
Egyptian women have undergone genital mutilation. The Egyptian government 
finally moved to ban the practice (with results that remain to be seen) last 
year, after a 12-year-old girl died as a consequence of FGM.

This is not just a women's issue. When half the population is denied basic 
human rights, from education to being able to choose who to marry, the 
consequences are profound. Women are the "huge, untapped" economic resource of 
the Middle East, according to the World Bank, and there is a direct link 
between female illiteracy, poverty and poor health; life expectancy increases 
dramatically when women learn to read and write, while infant mortality and 
fertility rates fall.

Patriarchal values are supposed to make men feel strong but the evidence is 
that they do just the opposite, filling fathers and sons with unbearable 
anxiety and trapping entire families in poverty. They are the enemy not just of 
women's rights but economic prosperity, and they have no place in the 21st 
century.


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