Iraqi Girl Killed By Father For Loving A British Soldier
The Guardian:
When 17-year old Rand Abdel-Qader met a British soldier in Basra, she dreamt of romance. But five months later she was murdered in a savage attack by her father. But there will be no trial: this was an ‘honour killing’. Investigation by Afif Sarhan in Basra, Mark Townsend and Caroline Davies.
and Abdel-Qader, 17, told her closest friend that she was in love from the moment she set eyes on the young British soldier working alongside her in Basra, and she dreamed of a future with him.
t was an innocent infatuation but five months after Rand, a student of English at Basra University, met Paul, a 22-year-old soldier posted to southern Iraq, she was dead. She was stamped on, suffocated and stabbed by her father. Several brutal knife wounds punctured her slender, bruised body - from her face to her feet. He had done it, he proclaimed to the neighbours who soon gathered round, to ‘cleanse his honour’.
And as Rand was put into the ground, without ceremony, her uncles spat on her covered corpse because she had brought shame on the family. Her crime was the worst they could possibly imagine - she had fallen in love with a British soldier and dared to talk to him in public.
Rand was murdered last month. That the relationship was innocent was no defence. She had been seen conversing intimately with Paul. It was enough to condemn her, because he was British, a Christian, ‘the invader’, and the enemy. The two met while he was helping to deliver relief aid to displaced families in the city and she was working as a volunteer. They continued to meet through their relief work in the following months.
Rand last saw Paul in January, two months before her death. It was only on 16 March that her father, Abdel-Qader Ali, learned of their friendship. He was told by a friend, who worked closely with police, that Rand had been seen with Paul at one of the places they both worked as volunteers. Enraged, he headed straight home to demand an explanation from his daughter.
‘When he entered the house, his eyes were bloodshot and he was trembling,’ said Rand’s mother, Leila Hussein, tears streaming down her face as she recalled her daughter’s murder. ‘I got worried and tried to speak to him but he headed straight for our daughter’s room and he started to yell at her.’
‘He asked if it was true that she was having an affair with a British soldier. She started to cry. She was nervous and desperate. He got hold of her hair and started thumping her again and again.
‘I screamed and called out for her two brothers so they could get their father away from her. But when he told them the reason, instead of saving her they helped him end her life,’ she said.
She said Ali used his feet to press down hard on his own daughter’s throat until she was suffocated. Then he called for a knife and began to cut at her body. All the time he was calling out that his honour was being cleansed.
‘I just couldn’t stand it. I fainted.’ recalled Leila. ‘I woke up in a blur later with dozens of neighbours at home and the local police.’
According to Leila, her husband was initially arrested. ‘But he was released two hours later because it was an “honour killing”. And, unfortunately, that is something to be proud of for any Iraqi man.’
At the police station where the father was held Sergeant Ali Jabbar told The Observer last week: ‘Not much can be done when we have an “honour killing” case. You are in a Muslim society and women should live under religious laws.
‘The father has very good contacts inside the Basra government and it wasn’t hard for him to be released and what he did to be forgotten. Sorry but I cannot say more about the case.’
Rand, considered impure, was given only a simple burial. To show their repugnance at her alleged crime, her family cancelled the traditional mourner ceremony.
Two weeks after the murder, Leila left Ali. She could no longer bear to live under the same roof as her daughter’s killer and asked for a divorce. ‘I was beaten and had my arm broken by him,’ she said. ‘No man can accept being left by a woman in Iraq. But I would prefer to be killed than sleep in the same bed with a man who was able to do what he did to his own daughter, who, over the years, had only given him unconditional love.’
Now she works for a women’s organisation campaigning against honour killings. ‘I just want to try to stop other girls having the same fate as my beloved Rand,’ said Leila who is forced to move regularly from friend to friend
A colleague of Leila’s said: ‘We prefer to change places each two weeks to prevent targeting. She has been threatened again by her husband’s family and is very scared.’
Throughout her friendship with Paul, Rand confided in only one person, her best friend Zeinab, 19. ‘She used to say that her charity work had more than one meaning now. From the first time she saw him, she was helping needy families but also that Paul was helping her. With just a simple, caring smile, he was able to give her the sense of love, making her forget all about the hard and depressing life in Iraq,’ said Zeinab.
The two teenagers had spent hours talking about him,’ she said. ‘She loved to speak about his blond hair, his honey eyes, his white skin and the sweet way he had of speaking.
‘He was very different from the local men who usually are tough and illiterate. I was in heaven when she was speaking about him. Everything looked so beautiful.
‘But, I always had to remind Rand that she was a Muslim and her family was never going to accept her marrying a Christian, British soldier’.
‘Unfortunately she never wanted to hear me. Her mind was very far from reality, but closer to an impossible dream.’
Paul gave Rand gifts. She kept them - and him - secret from her family and asked Zeinab to take care of these small tokens of his affection for her. He gave her a charming cuddly animal. ‘She couldn’t take it home so she asked me to keep it for her,’ said Zeinab. ‘It’s hard to look at it every day,’ she said.
Rand told Zeinab she and Paul had met only four times, though Zeinab doubts this. Their meetings were always in public and through the voluntary work that Paul carried out as part of his regiment’s peacekeeping duties.
Rand had an excellent command of English and spoke it fluently and that, said Zeinab, allowed them to communicate freely without others around understanding what they were saying. ‘She was the only one who could speak English and it made it easier for her to get closer “through words” to him,’ she said.
Soon Rand began giving different and elaborate excuses to her family to enable her to continue her voluntary work. She persuaded her father that her work was vital in helping families. And she began paying daily visits to displacement camps, local aid agencies and hospitals in the hope of bumping into Paul.
‘He used to tell her all about England. She told me his father had died from a disease and that it was a really sad story,’ said Zeinab.
‘She liked to speak about how couples could live together in his country. He told her that flowers could be found on every corner and he promised to take her one day to buy some in the streets of London. She was a fan of London and he told her about all the tourists attractions there.’
‘But the thing she used to like talking about best was how he praised her beauty and her intelligence. She told me he called her “princess”.’
Despite knowing how dangerous the consequences of her actions could be, and the punishment she faced if caught, her passion for Paul grew stronger, said Zeinab. ‘She never did anything more than talk to him. She was proud to be a virgin and had a dream to give herself to the man she loved only after her marriage. But she was seen as an animal,’ said Zeinab.
‘What they did to her was ugly and pathetic. Rand was just a young girl with romantic dreams. She always kept her religion close to her heart. She would never even hurt a petal on a rose.’
Last year 133 women were killed in Basra - 47 of them for so-called ‘honour killings’, according to the Basra Security Committee. Out of those 47 cases there have been only three convictions for murder.
Since January this year, 36 women have been killed.
No romance no nothing. Can’t even have something as simple as an innocent crush. Void of all human emotion.
The little lady is with the real Father now & not some little shit-bag pretending to be one.
April 26th, 2008 at 11:58 pmI AM SO GOD DAMN MOTHER FUCKIN’ PISSED OFF AFTER READING THIS ARTICLE….
HOW COULD ANY FATHER DO THIS TO ONE OF HIS CHILDREN…
HIS SONS HELPED HIM…
47 HONOR KILLINGS IN 2007…
THIS CULT NEEDS TO BE PUT INTO THE GROUND, IF YOU KNOW WHAT I MEAN…
IF YOUR OFFENDED…TOUGH SHIT, GROW A THICKER SKIN AND LARGER BRAIN!
April 26th, 2008 at 11:59 pmWhere are our pathetic feminists and code pink-er’s now?
April 27th, 2008 at 12:01 amoh, right. Not THEIR problem
April 27th, 2008 at 1:08 am
Vote “YES” on carpet bombing.
April 27th, 2008 at 1:09 amTHIS IS NOT HONOR THIS IS MURDER We should not be defending people who think like this, they do not deserve it.
April 27th, 2008 at 2:27 amHow could any parent even think about killing their child. This is MURDER and someone need to step in and change this so called religion law. Abdel-Qader Ali and sons BEWARE .
April 27th, 2008 at 4:53 amalexjensentx quote
April 27th, 2008 at 4:57 amWhere are our pathetic feminists and code pink-er’s now?
oh, right. Not THEIR problem!
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More like my friend is it is easier to protest against those who will allow it protected by our constitution then to protest against those who have knives/guns and will kill you for being an Infidel! For that is why I will NEVER respect the so called feminist and code pink-ers!
alexjensentx
Where are our pathetic feminists and code pink-er’s now?
oh, right. Not THEIR problem
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That says it all about them and why I NEVER go along with any of their brainless crap.
April 27th, 2008 at 6:01 amThere are so many real problems for women across the world and they never say boo about any of it.
They are self serving vain pieces of crap only interested in their own deluded thoughts of whats important. Looking for a life they got caught in the 15 minutes of fame trap and decided they know whats best for everyone everywhere.
What could a stupid pig fucker who could murder his own flesh and blood possibly know about honor? These so called “honor killings” are nothing more than reprisals for petty pride and damaged fragile Muslim male egos.
April 27th, 2008 at 6:47 amI gotta bump RQ’s comment on this one.
April 27th, 2008 at 7:05 amSo much for the myth of “freedom” in Islamomania.
April 27th, 2008 at 8:57 amHere are a couple ideas:
1. Why don’t we start economically boycotting countries that continue to treat their women like this and the companies that do business with them? We could do for women what the boycott of South Africa did for blacks when they were living under apartheid.
2. Why don’t we write to our representatives and leaders and demand that they withhold some meaningful portion of our aid to these countries unless and until they materially, measurably, sustainably improve their human rights track records?
Ellen R. Sheeley, Author
April 27th, 2008 at 11:15 am“Reclaiming Honor in Jordan”
Jesus Christ is the only answer for a people as trapped as these are.
April 27th, 2008 at 2:19 pmshe had brought shame on the family.
This father apparently doesn’t know the meaning of “shame.” Sad story, but Richard Quinn hit it on the head…the self-loathing amongst Muslim men is all-consuming.
April 27th, 2008 at 3:39 pmI hope the british soldiers will find that asshole and kill him
It was only a crush?!
June 9th, 2008 at 4:35 amwhat’s wrong with the fucking muslim men