Outrage in Iran Over 'Honour killing' of Girl Romina Ashrafi

Police in
northern Iran have arrested a man accused of murdering his 14-year-old daughter
in an "honour killing" that has sparked widespread outrage.
Romina
Ashrafi ran away from home in Gilan province with her 35-year-old boyfriend
after her father objected to their marriage, local media said.
The pair
were found by police and Romina was sent home despite reportedly telling them
she feared for her life.
Last
Thursday night, she was allegedly attacked by her father in her bedroom.
News outlet
Gilkhabar.ir reported that Romina was "decapitated" with a sickle,
and that afterwards the father walked outside the house "with the sickle
in his hand and confessed".
On
Wednesday, a number of national newspapers highlighted Romina's story on their
front pages.
"Insecure
paternal home", read the headline in the pro-reform Ebtekar, which
lamented the failure of existing legislation to protect women and girls.
Meanwhile,
the Persian hashtag #Romina_Ashrafi has been used more than 50,000
times on Twitter, with most users condemning the killing and the patriarchal
nature of Iranian society in general.
Shahindokht
Molaverdi, a former vice-president for women and family affairs and the current
secretary of Iran's Society for Protecting Women's Rights, wrote: "Romina
is neither the first nor will she be the last victim of honour killings."
She added
that such murders would continue "as long as the law and dominant cultures
in local and global communities are not deterring enough".
Iran's
Islamic penal code reduces punitive measures for fathers and other family
members who are convicted of murder or physically harming children in domestic
violence or "honour killings".
If a man is
found guilty of murdering his daughter, the punishment is between three and 10
years in prison, rather than the normal death sentence or payment of diyeh
(blood money) for murder cases.
There are no
statistics on the prevalence of "honour killings" in Iran, but human
rights activists reported last year that they continued to occur, particularly among
rural and tribal populations, according to the US state department.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-middle-east
No comments