Honor Killings

April 19, 2011 • Volume 5, Issue 8
Can murders of women and girls be stopped?
By Robert Kiener

Introduction

Kurdish women participate in a rally in Istanbul (AFP/Getty Images/STR)
With posters of murdered women as a backdrop, elderly Kurdish women participate in a rally in Istanbul, Turkey, to protest so-called honor killings of young women and girls. Although condemned by the government, honor killings mostly occur in Turkey's Kurdish region, where they are part of traditional culture. (AFP/Getty Images/STR)

Each week brings horrific new headlines stating that, somewhere around the world, a woman or girl has been killed by a male relative for allegedly bringing dishonor upon her family. According to the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, “In the name of preserving family ‘honor,’ women and girls are shot, stoned, burned, buried alive, strangled, smothered and knifed to death with horrifying regularity.” Between 5,000 and 20,000 so-called honor killings are committed each year, based on long-held beliefs that any female who commits — or is suspected of committing — an “immoral” act should be killed to “restore honor” to her family. Honor killings are deeply rooted in ancient patriarchal and fundamentalist traditions, which some judicial systems legitimize by pardoning offenders or handing out light sentences. Human-rights organizations are demanding that governments and the international community act more forcefully to stop honor killings, but officials in some countries are doing little to protect women and girls within their borders.

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Apr. 19, 2011  Honor Killings
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Jul. 17, 2009  Examining Forensics
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