Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Merry Christmas 2008.......Natalee we will never 4get.
Just want to wish you all a Merry Christmas and a safe holiday!
I have not given up on Natalee Holloway and Aruba should worry about
the negative reaction on their Island should they choose to FORGET
NATALEE HOLLOWAY...
A special message to Joran Van de Sloot and his croonies, Deepak and Satish
Kalpoe. You will not escape God's Judgement. The past will haunt you 4ever.
AND WE WILL HELP MAKE SURE YOU NEVER FORGET...
Autopsy shows teen died from 'neck compression'
A Mississauga, Ont. man charged with second-degree murder in the
death of his teenaged daughter showed little emotion during a court
appearance on Wednesday.
Muhammad Parvez, a 57-year-old cab driver, was ordered not to
communicate with his 26-year-old son Waqas, who is charged with
obstructing police during their investigation.
Dressed in an orange jumpsuit, Parvez mumbled "yes" when asked if
he understood the judge's order.
Parvez was remanded into custody until next month, when he will
apply for a bail hearing, his lawyer said.
Aqsa Parvez, 16, was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries
on Monday after police said a man called 911 and said he had killed
his daughter. The teen succumbed to her injuries on Monday night.
An autopsy determined the cause of death to be "neck compression,"
according to a police press release issued late Wednesday afternoon.
Friends of the girl said she had been involved in a family dispute
over her choice not to wear a hijab, the traditional Muslim head scarf.
Police have not commented on a motive or how the girl was attacked.
A publication ban was imposed on details that came out in court on
Wednesday.
Two of Parvez's sons, along with a friend, attended the hearing.
Outside court, one brother said he didn't believe there had been a
culture clash, CTV's John Vennavally-Rao reported.
Sean Muhammed Parvez told reporters he wasn't sure what exactly
led to his sister's death.
"We don't know so far; we are upset," he said.
Parvez's lawyer, Joseph Ciraco, told reporters that the family is
distraught.
"It's clearly a tragedy," Ciraco said. "You've got a sister that's gone
and a father and brother in jail."
Ciraco said his client has a heart condition and will have to see a
doctor before his next court date.
Aqsa Parvez The victim, an Applewood Heights Secondary School
student, often complained of her situation at home, her friends
told CTV News on Tuesday.
The students said Parvez no longer wanted to wear a hijab, a
shoulder-length head scarf worn by some Muslim women.
They also said Parvez would often change her clothing once
she got to school and then would change back before going home.
"People said her brothers and sisters followed her to see if
she was wearing her headscarf or not," one student said.
Parvez had recently been staying with a friend because of tension
at home, classmates said.
"Her dad was threatening her and she was getting scared and she
just didn't want to live there anymore," another student said.
Parvez's death has again raised the issue of so-called honour killings.
'Honour killings'
The United Nations estimates at least 5,000 women a year are
killed for committing adultery, defying tradition, or for simply talking
to the wrong man and thereby bringing shame upon relatives.
Exact numbers are impossible to know because the majority of such
murders -- women are the main victims -- go unreported and the
guilty unpunished.
United Muslim Women of Canada's Anisa Ali said the public
shouldn't assume that honour killings only happen in the Muslim
community.
"It's not an Islamic practice," Ali told CTV's Canada AM on Wednesday.
"There's nowhere in the Qur'an where it talks about honour killings.
It's more of a cultural phenomenon."
She said honour killings are not limited to Islamic countries like
Pakistan, Jordan, Syria and Afghanistan.
"There's Latin American countries, it has taken place in
Germany, in Britain," she said. "A lot of it is under the guise of
family honour or religious values."
Let's see what Canada does with this...
I have always said If you choose a Western country
to reside in expect your children to conform, after all
WE ALL SHARE WESTERN VALUES HERE.
death of his teenaged daughter showed little emotion during a court
appearance on Wednesday.
Muhammad Parvez, a 57-year-old cab driver, was ordered not to
communicate with his 26-year-old son Waqas, who is charged with
obstructing police during their investigation.
Dressed in an orange jumpsuit, Parvez mumbled "yes" when asked if
he understood the judge's order.
Parvez was remanded into custody until next month, when he will
apply for a bail hearing, his lawyer said.
Aqsa Parvez, 16, was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries
on Monday after police said a man called 911 and said he had killed
his daughter. The teen succumbed to her injuries on Monday night.
An autopsy determined the cause of death to be "neck compression,"
according to a police press release issued late Wednesday afternoon.
Friends of the girl said she had been involved in a family dispute
over her choice not to wear a hijab, the traditional Muslim head scarf.
Police have not commented on a motive or how the girl was attacked.
A publication ban was imposed on details that came out in court on
Wednesday.
Two of Parvez's sons, along with a friend, attended the hearing.
Outside court, one brother said he didn't believe there had been a
culture clash, CTV's John Vennavally-Rao reported.
Sean Muhammed Parvez told reporters he wasn't sure what exactly
led to his sister's death.
"We don't know so far; we are upset," he said.
Parvez's lawyer, Joseph Ciraco, told reporters that the family is
distraught.
"It's clearly a tragedy," Ciraco said. "You've got a sister that's gone
and a father and brother in jail."
Ciraco said his client has a heart condition and will have to see a
doctor before his next court date.
Aqsa Parvez The victim, an Applewood Heights Secondary School
student, often complained of her situation at home, her friends
told CTV News on Tuesday.
The students said Parvez no longer wanted to wear a hijab, a
shoulder-length head scarf worn by some Muslim women.
They also said Parvez would often change her clothing once
she got to school and then would change back before going home.
"People said her brothers and sisters followed her to see if
she was wearing her headscarf or not," one student said.
Parvez had recently been staying with a friend because of tension
at home, classmates said.
"Her dad was threatening her and she was getting scared and she
just didn't want to live there anymore," another student said.
Parvez's death has again raised the issue of so-called honour killings.
'Honour killings'
The United Nations estimates at least 5,000 women a year are
killed for committing adultery, defying tradition, or for simply talking
to the wrong man and thereby bringing shame upon relatives.
Exact numbers are impossible to know because the majority of such
murders -- women are the main victims -- go unreported and the
guilty unpunished.
United Muslim Women of Canada's Anisa Ali said the public
shouldn't assume that honour killings only happen in the Muslim
community.
"It's not an Islamic practice," Ali told CTV's Canada AM on Wednesday.
"There's nowhere in the Qur'an where it talks about honour killings.
It's more of a cultural phenomenon."
She said honour killings are not limited to Islamic countries like
Pakistan, Jordan, Syria and Afghanistan.
"There's Latin American countries, it has taken place in
Germany, in Britain," she said. "A lot of it is under the guise of
family honour or religious values."
Let's see what Canada does with this...
I have always said If you choose a Western country
to reside in expect your children to conform, after all
WE ALL SHARE WESTERN VALUES HERE.
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All About Me
- Zarina
- Too many missing people. Too many BAD relationships. Too many errors in judgement. If the infomation on this site prevents 1 mistake it has accomplished something.
Bossco- Family addition 3months 2 weeks
Bossco again
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