Sunday 8 December 2013

Judge: "I Fear for any Female Child You May Father."

Nearly eight years after the hoffific murder of poor Banaz Mahmod yet another of her revolting relatives has been convicted of conspiring in her death, as reported by The Telegraph on Friday (hat-tip to The Religion of Peace):

Cousin 'still proud' of disposing of honour killing-victim's body, judge says

Banaz Mahmod's "crime" was to divorce her first husband from an arranged marriage and fall in love with another man

The cousin of honour killing victim Banaz Mahmod who helped to dispose of her body is "still proud of what he did", a judge said on Friday as he sentenced him to eight years in prison.

Dana Amin, 29, helped Banaz's father and two other men now convicted of murdering the 20-year-old bury her corpse in a Birmingham garden.

The Muslim's body was shoved into a suitcase before being driven to the Midlands and dumped in a make-shift grave in January 2006, where it lay undiscovered for three months.

Judge Martin Beddoe told Amin: "[Banaz's] death had been planned for about a month or so before it actually took place. There had even been an attempt on her life already.

"I am sure you were aware of all these matters and you knew not only of what had gone on but what was intended to happen.

"The reason is that, like other members of this family, you subscribe to this perverted code in that a grown woman cannot choose how to live her life.

"I fear for any female child you may father."

Banaz had been strangled with a shoe lace at her family home in Morden, south London, just hours before she was burried, Southwark Crown Court heard.

Her only crime was to divorce her first husband from an arranged marriage and fall in love with another man.

The new romance incurred the wrath of her relatives who believed she had brought shame on their family.

Terrified Banaz had repeatedly told police of her fears her life was in danger.

Her father, Mahmod Mahmod, and uncle, Ari Mahmod, were jailed for life in 2007 for her murder, together with henchman Mohamad Hama in what became one of Britain's most notorious honour killings.

Banaz's cousins, Mohammed Ali, and Omar Hussain, were also locked up after being extradited from Iraq in 2010.

Daddy
Uncle Ari
Mohammed
Omar

Amin, on his uncle Ari's orders, joined Hussain and Hama at Ali's Brixton home to discuss plans to kill Banaz on the eve of her death.

All four men later travelled to Birmingham in Amin's black Lexus to get rid of the corpse.

Amin denied being involved in the plot but was convicted by a jury on Thursday following a week-long trial.

Judge Martin Beddoe added: "Your assertion of regret was just another part of a trail of falsity that you began all those years ago.

"I fear you are proud of the role you played and that you are proud to be considered a real man by your uncle - a real man, you are not."

Amin, of Mitcham, south London, denied intending to pervert the course of justice and preventing the lawful burial of a corpse.

This vermin will be out of prison in six years & will be allowed to start a family. Surely social workers will be keeping an eye on any family this animal starts? Surely any daughter he fathers will be taken any from the home if there is any sign of something untoward? Given the state of our social services, perhaps not.

One thing to bear in mind with regard to the issue of honour killing: Muslims will insist that honour violence has nothing to do with Islam & that it originates from tribal customs in the hills Waziristan & other such hellholes.

This is not true. Were this true then we would expect the practice to be absent from Saudi Arabia, where Islam has held sway for longest & no other practice is permitted. Yet there is the case of Princess Masha'il, whose execution, at the hands of her own relatives, & for the crime of falling in love with someone she shouldn't have fallen in love with, was fictionalised by British television, causing something of a brouhaha with the Saudi government.

Due to the rage that Death of a Princess causes the Saudi royal family you can find it embedded below:

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