How many honour killings in canada




















The judge said the murders were committed in the name of a "notion of honour that is founded upon the domination and control of women, a sick notion of honour that has absolutely no place in any civilized society. The jury heard that Shafia was furious with how his daughters dressed and behaved. Jurors heard recordings made after their deaths, where the girls' father called them "treacherous" and "whores.

Entries from Amir's diary were also presented during the trial, in which she wrote that Yahya "took the power of the household" from her and that Yahya was indifferent to a suicide attempt made by Sahar, the middle daughter.

Shafia had been married to both women, though the family had claimed that Amir was a cousin when she immigrated to Canada. Throughout the trial, the accused maintained they were never at the locks when the Nissan Sentra carrying the four victims plunged into the canal. But at the hearing in which Yahya requested to visit her mother's grave, she offered a different version of those events.

Yahya told the board that, on the night of the killings, she was in the Nissan with the victims while Shafia and Hamed went to find a motel in their Lexus SUV. According to Yahya's new story, Shafia told her to get in the Lexus when they returned. As he drove the SUV into the Nissan, she asked him what he was doing, and he replied he was "going to kill them.

Women killed by partners are known as domestic homicides, and, unless especially gruesome, are barely worth a mention in the media. Maybe there's just too many of them to be newsworthy.

I've never come across these figures anywhere else. Let me rush to be clear here. I don't for a moment minimize the horror of 12 girls and women in Canada murdered by members of their immediate family. To steal a phrase, one would be far too many. There is no conceivable excuse or justification for doing anything but condemning such murders in the most unequivocal way. There is no cultural tradition, no sensitivity to the different values of other societies, that can ever justify or even "understand" how a father or brother can kill their daughter or sister, or how a mother can be a sympathetic witness to such a savage act.

It is beyond any rational understanding. What accounts for the high profile of these relatively small number of murders in Canada? Why do we know little or nothing about the larger epidemic of women killed, almost routinely it sometimes seems, by boyfriends or husbands?

Is it less terrible to be strangled to death or shot or have your throat slit by them than by family members? Is it just too commonplace to bother paying attention to?

Do we still harbour that sneaking suspicion that women murdered by partners have somehow brought it on themselves? Yet both kinds of murders have a common root. Both are honour killings, reflecting a twisted, pathological male sense of honour. Both are executed by men who feel they haven't received their due deference, men who consider "their" women, whether daughter or partner, to be their chattel, to do with as they choose. Have we smug white Canadians forgotten that you don't have to be a Muslim or South Asian to regard women this way?

We are still very much a patriarchal society, she notes. Morris outlines that link in a report she wrote using Department of Justice Figures. Is it going to be more programming? The awareness has been raised, but we still need to make the actual changes.

Regrettably, even now, Lise Martin says it feels like we move one step forward and two steps back. We need to make sure there are comparable service levels across the country, Martin says. Every new Tweet, new report, new headline comes with backlash. World Canada Local. At least women were killed in Canada last year. How do we keep them safer?

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