Honor Killings in Islam
I would like to know what is the position of Islam concerning honor killings. Is it acceptable? Is it against it? I was searching about it and I found the following:
I didnt see any different opinion stated in that article. Honour killings are murder and unislamic full stop. Only the state has the permission to carry out any punishment and extra-legal punishment is not allowed.
However there is a slight complication in islamic law for punishment.
Murder is normally punished through a process of Qisas (retaliation). The family of the deceased is given the option whether to exact revenge in the form of capital punishment or to accept blood money. However in the case of honour killings normally it is a family member who commits the crime it becomes complicated for the family of the deceased because they may choose not to carry out retaliation and accept blood money instead.
Please elaborate on blood money. From Wikipedia I get:
QUOTE |
A common meaning in other contexts is the money-penalty paid by a murderer to the kinsfolk of the victim. These fines completely protect the offender (or the kinsfolk thereof) from the vengeance of the injured family. |
Good questions:
Qisas or retaliation is only carried out on the murderer not on the relatives of the murderer.
If the family of the victim choose to recieve blood-money then the murderer cannot be retaliated against and hence he is immune from punishment by death.
Blood-money can be one of the following:
100 camels
200 cows
1000 sheep
1000 dinars (approx 1dinar = 3.51g Gold although this is imprecise since Dinars are ancient)
10000 Derachem (1 Derachem approx = 2.45g silver still quite imprecise)
In modern currency the equivalent of the above is used.
Entitlement of blood-money I think goes to the heirs of the murder. Im not sure if that includes the husband or not Ill have to look that up.
Karbala:
QUOTE |
If the family of the victim choose to recieve blood-money then the murderer cannot be retaliated against and hence he is immune from punishment by death.. |
I cannot fully digest that we are in 2007 and people still murdering others in such a savage and barbaric way. Can you imagine being buried up to your waist (arms as well) and not able to defend yourself and die in the most cruel manner? My goodness! There is not such thing as Forgiveness in Islam?
QUOTE |
TEHRAN, Iran - In a rare confirmation, Iran on Tuesday said a man convicted of adultery was stoned to death last week in a village in the northern part of the country, Iran's judiciary spokesman said. Jafar Kiani was stoned to death in Aghchekand village, 124 miles west of the capital, Tehran, on Thursday, Ali Reza Jamshidi told reporters. It was the first time in years that Iran has confirmed such an execution. "This verdict was carried out Thursday," Jamshidi told reporters. Death sentences are carried out in Iran after they are upheld by the Supreme Court. Under Iran's Islamic law, adultery is punishable by stoning. Jamshidi didn't elaborate on how the stoning was carried out, but under Islamic rulings, a male convict is usually buried up to his waist while a female criminal is buried up to her neck with her hands also buried. Those carrying out the verdict start throwing stones and rocks at the convict until he or she dies... |
If we would only follow the wise words of a profit from many years ago...
Rather off topic, but... Let he is that without sin cast the first stone. |
Jordanian Journalist Rana Husseini on "Murder in the Name of Honor: The True Story of One Woman's Heroic Fight Against an Unbelievable Crime"
According to the United Nations, 5,000 women around the world are murdered each year in the name of preserving their family honor and reputation. We speak to Rana Husseini, one of the world's leading advocates against these so-called honor killings. In 1994, she was a young journalist with the Jordan Times and began uncovering dozens of stories of women killed by their own family members. Husseini has continued to investigate and speak out about this form of violence, whether in Jordan or other parts of the world. She's just out with a book chronicling some of these stories, Murder in the Name of Honor: The True Story of One Woman's Heroic Fight Against an Unbelievable Crime. Ref. Source 7