Monday, 30 January 2012
Jury finds Afghan family guilty in honor killings
A jury on Sunday
found three members of an Afghan family guilty
of killing three teenage sisters and another woman
in what the judge described as "cold-blooded,
shameful murders" resulting from a "twisted
concept of honor," ending a case that shocked and
riveted Canadians.
Prosecutors said the defendants allegedly killed the
three teenage sisters because they dishonored the
family by defying its disciplinarian rules on dress,
dating, socializing and using the Internet.
The jury took 15 hours to find Mohammad Shafia,
58; his wife Tooba Yahya, 42; and their son
Hamed, 21, each guilty of four counts of first-
degree murder. First-degree murder carries an
automatic life sentence with no chance of parole
for 25 years.
After the verdict was read, the three defendants
again declared their innocence in the killings of
sisters Zainab, 19, Sahar 17, and Geeti, 13, as well
as Rona Amir Mohammad, 52, Shafia's childless
first wife in a polygamous marriage.
Their bodies were found June 30, 2009, in a car
submerged in a canal in Kingston, Ontario, where
the family had stopped for the night on their way
home to Montreal from Niagara Falls, Ontario.
The prosecution alleged it was a case of
premeditated murder, staged to look like an
accident after it was carried out. Prosecutors said
the defendants drowned their victims elsewhere
on the site, placed their bodies in the car and
pushed it into the canal.
Ontario Superior Court Judge Robert Maranger
said the evidence clearly supported the conviction.
"It is difficult to conceive of a more heinous, more
despicable, more honorless crime," Maranger said.
"The apparent reason behind these cold-blooded,
shameful murders was that the four completely
innocent victims offended your completely twisted
concept of honor ... that has absolutely no place in
any civilized society."
In a statement following the verdict, Canadian
Justice Minister Rob Nicholson called honor killings
a practice that is "barbaric and unacceptable in
Canada."
Defense lawyers said the deaths were accidental.
They said the Nissan car accidentally plunged into
the canal after the eldest daughter, Zainab, took it
for a joy ride with her sisters and her father's first
wife. Hamed said he watched the accident,
although he didn't call police from the scene.
After the jury returned the verdicts, Mohammad
Shafia, speaking through a translator, said, "We
are not criminal, we are not murderer, we didn't
commit the murder and this is unjust."
His weeping wife, Tooba, also declared the verdict
unjust, saying, "I am not a murderer, and I am a
mother, a mother."
Their son, Hamed, speaking in English said, "I did
not drown my sisters anywhere."
Hamed's lawyer, Patrick McCann, said he was
disappointed with the verdict, but said his client
will appeal and he believes the other two
defendants will as well.
But prosecutor Gerard Laarhuis welcomed the
verdict.
"This jury found that four strong, vivacious and
freedom-loving women were murdered by their
own family in the most troubling of
circumstances," Laarhuis said outside court.
"This verdict sends a very clear message about
our Canadian values and the core principles in a
free and democratic society that all Canadians
enjoy and even visitors to Canada enjoy," he said
to cheers of approval from onlookers.
The family had left Afghanistan in 1992 and lived in
Pakistan, Australia and Dubai before settling in
Canada in 2007. Shafia, a wealthy businessman,
married Yahya because his first wife could not
have children.
Shafia's first wife was living with him and his
second wife. The polygamous relationship, if
revealed, could have resulted in their deportation.
The prosecution painted a picture of a household
controlled by a domineering Shafia, with Hamed
keeping his sisters in line and doling out discipline
when his father was away on frequent business
trips to Dubai.
The months leading up to the deaths were not
happy ones in the Shafia household, according to
evidence presented at trial. Zainab, the oldest
daughter, was forbidden to attend school for a
year because she had a young Pakistani-Canadian
boyfriend, and she fled to a shelter, terrified of her
father, the court was told.
The prosecution said her parents found condoms
in Sahar's room as well as photos of her wearing
short skirts and hugging her Christian boyfriend, a
relationship she had kept secret. Geeti was
becoming almost impossible to control: skipping
school, failing classes, being sent home for
wearing revealing clothes and stealing, while
declaring to authority figures that she wanted to
be placed in foster care, according to the
prosecution.
Shafia's first wife wrote in a diary that her husband
beat her and "made life a torture," while his
second wife called her a servant.
The prosecution presented wire taps and mobile
phone records from the Shafia family in court to
support their honor killing allegation. The wiretaps,
which capture Shafia spewing vitriol about his
dead daughters, calling them treacherous and
whores and invoking the devil to defecate on their
graves, were a focal point of the trial.
"There can be no betrayal, no treachery, no
violation more than this," Shafia said on one
recording. "Even if they hoist me up onto the
gallows ... nothing is more dear to me than my
honor."
Defense lawyers argued that at no point in the
intercepts do the accused say they drowned the
victims.
Shafia's lawyer, Peter Kemp, said after the verdicts
that he believes the comments his client made on
the wiretaps may have weighed more heavily on
the jury's minds than the physical evidence in the
case.
"He wasn't convicted for what he did," Kemp said.
"He was convicted for what he said."
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