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Fox News’ Honor Killing Report Disappoints « Limits to Growth

Fox News’ Honor Killing Report Disappoints

On Saturday I watched the Fox News Special, “A Question of Honor,” and while it added interesting details about a case I’ve followed since the beginning, the news doc was unsatisfying. The film recounted the 2009 Arizona murder of a young woman, Noor Almaleki (shown), by her Iraqi immigrant father because she wanted to live as a free individual in America rather than a submissive Muslim female.

The theme throughout was that of “honor” as the title indicates. But there was no deeper explanation that the honor referred to is not what we Westerners mean when we use the word. Faleh Almaleki killed his daughter because he has the typical Islamic male view belief that women are worth less than men as he learned from the Koran and other Islo-texts, and when females disobey the laws of Mohammed, then they must be murdered to restore “honor” to the family. The idea that “honor killings” are accepted in Islamic societies as a normal behavior is correctly considered barbaric in the West, where women are full citizens with civil rights.

Interestingly, Judge Roland Steinle took a common-sense approach in the sentencing and did not care much about the Islo-honor aspect. He figured that a man who murdered his daughter, even in a lesser second-degree crime, deserved a long sentence in the slammer whatever the motivation, and sent Almaleki to state prison for 34 years.

The film could have shown that honor killings are common in the Middle East and Islamic countries like Pakistan, but it did not. The program could have gently suggested to viewers that Muslim immigration has imported a vile crime, earlier unknown in this country, as part of the absurd pursuit of diversity as the highest good, but it did not.

Not only does Muslim immigration endanger our national security, it has opened up our society to deeply alien cultures with social norms that are repulsive to our values.

Part 1 of “A Question of Honor” follows:

A Question of Honor: Police Say Iraqi Immigrant Father Targeted Daughter in Honor Killing, Fox News, August 05, 2011

An audio tape obtained by Fox News sheds new light into the 2009 murder of an Iraqi-born woman who was killed in Arizona after her father drove over her in what police believe was an honor killing.

According to the tape, as Noor Al-Maleki, 20, clung to life in intensive care, Peoria police believed that her father, Faleh Al-Maleki, had targeted her for an honor killing – and that other members of her family might try to kill her in her hospital bed.

The audio tape records a telephone conversation between Seham Al-Maleki – Noor’s mother – and Peoria police detective Bill Laing. In it Laing informs Seham that her husband had run down Noor and her friend Amal Khalaf with his Jeep Cherokee, as the two women were leaving an Arizona welfare office. The incident occurred on October 20, 2009 in a parking lot in Peoria, a suburb of Phoenix.

The tape was obtained by Fox News as part of an 8-month-long investigation into Al-Maleki’s killing, which will be the focus of a one-hour program, Fox News Reporting: A Question of Honor, is hosted by Bill Hemmer that premieres on Saturday at 10 p.m. ET.

“I want to see my daughter!” Seham Al-Maleki screams on the tape.

“Until he [Noor’s father] is located, we are not mentioning where she is at,” responds Laing, who told the mother that witnesses in the parking lot identified her husband as the driver.

“This woman, she is lying, because she is dirty,” Seham says, referring to Noor’s friend Khalaf, who survived being hit by Al-Maleki’s jeep.

“You are a sick person,” Laing snaps.

Al-Maleki fled while his daughter was taken to the hospital, in critical condition. Seham was eventually allowed into the hospital to see her daughter, who was removed from life support on November 2, 2009.

Mohamed El-Sharkawy, a member of The Arizona Muslim Police Advisory Board confirmed to Fox News that the Peoria police worried another family member would try to kill her, too.

“They were afraid that — because he did not succeed, that somebody else, his son or a relative, will go and finish the job,” said El-Sharkawy, who was called in to the investigation after Noor was run down.

Al-Maleki reached the United Kingdom before he was captured and extradited back to the U.S. and charged with murder. No other family member was ever charged in the case.

An honor killing is a crime that is almost invariably focused on women. It occurs when a husband, father, or brother murders a wife, daughter or sister because she is believed to have shamed the family.

The United Nations has found that honor killings are all too common in Islamic countries. A number of recent assaults in the U.S. have some in law enforcement worried the practice may be spreading to America.

Prior to the deadly incident at the Arizona welfare office, police investigators say Noor refused to go along with an arranged marriage to a relative in Iraq.

At Al-Maleki’s trial, Maricopa Deputy County attorney Laura Reckart argued that this was indeed an honor killing – committed on American soil, meriting a guilty verdict on the charge of first-degree murder.

To try to prove her theory she played tapes of Al-Maleki’s police interrogation as well as recorded prison phone calls in which he and his wife discuss how “an Iraqi without honor is nothing” and lament that while Faleh is suffering in jail, Noor “is comfortable now” in her grave.

Fox News obtained those tapes as well for its report.

Defense attorneys dismissed the idea that Al-Maleki intended to kill his daughter. On February 22, 2011 the jury – in a defeat for the prosecution — found Al-Maleki not guilty of first degree murder, although it did convict him of murder in the second degree.

Jury foreman Jeff Van der Zweep, in his first-ever television interview, told Fox News’ Bill Hemmer that the jurors didn’t agree on whether Al-Maleki’s attack on his daughter was premeditated – and motivated, as the prosecution argued, by a twisted sense of honor.

“The jury was split on whether he was angry at his daughter and he just saw her and– and– in his anger, killed her, or if it was for honor,” Van der Zweep said.

Maricopa County Judge Roland Steinle – who sentenced Al-Maleki to 34 ½ years — told Fox News that it was wrong to call the crime an honor killing.

“I think it sensationalizes what is nothing more than a parent killing a child,” Steinle told Hemmer in an exclusive interview.

Reckart – saying she “failed Noor” — told Hemmer the jury got it wrong.

“I’m not going to say I respect their verdict,” she said.

Reckart recently spoke at a conference focusing on the practice of honor killing spreading to the United States and she may be teaching about Honor Killing as a motive in the fall.