Study: Jordan teens support 'honour killings' Researchers at Cambridge University say sizeable section of teenagers interviewed found "honour killings" justified. Last Modified: 20 Jun 2013 06:27 In all, 33.4 percent of respondents 'agreed' or 'strongly agreed' with situations depicting 'honour killings' [EPA] The belief that so-called "honour killings" are justified continues to be common among Jordanian teenagers, a new Cambridge University study says. The study by researchers from the university's Institute of Criminology found that almost half of boys and one in five girls interviewed in the capital, Amman, believe that killing a daughter, sister or wife who has "dishonoured" or shamed the family, is justified. "Researchers surveyed over 850 students, and found that attitudes in support of honour killing are far more likely in adolescent boys with low education backgrounds," a statement said, adding that the reesearch is published in the criminology journal Aggressive Behavior. "Importantly, the study found that these disturbing attitudes were not connected to religious beliefs." So-called "honour" murders claim between 15 and 20 women's lives, on average, every year in the Arab kingdom. The main factors behind these crimes "include patriarchal and traditional worldviews, emphasis placed on female virtue and a more general belief that violence against others is morally justified", according to the study. "We noted substantial minorities of girls, well-educated and even irreligious teenagers who consider honour killing morally right, suggesting a persisting society-wide support for the tradition," said Professor Manuel Eisner, who led the study with graduate student Lana Ghuneim. 'Cultural support' In all, 33.4 percent of all respondents either "agreed" or "strongly agreed" with situations depicting honour killings. "Boys were more than twice as likely to support honour killings: 46.1 percent of boys and 22.1 percent of girls agreed with at least two honour killing situations in the questionnaire." Sixty-one percent of teenagers from the lowest level of educational background showed supportive attitudes towards "honour killing", as opposed to only 21.1 percent where at least one family member has a university degree, said the study. "While stricter legislation has been introduced - despite conservative fears - cultural support for violence against women who are seen as breaking norms has remained widespread," it added. Murder is punishable by death in Jordan, but in "honour killings", courts can commute or reduce sentences, particularly if the victim's family asks for leniency.
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melia_star posted on 20-6-2013 03:08 PM
dorang ni Islam ke...syiah ker....ke kapir....sesuka ati jer nk bunuh org....
Fieza-mira posted on 20-6-2013 03:50 PM
Honor killing ialah budaya Arab jahiliah sama dgn tanam bayi pompuan hidup2 sebab takut bayi tuh bil ...
melia_star posted on 20-6-2013 03:57 PM
ya rabbi....mcm peel pariah gamaknya....yg aku tau bangsa2 di India sana yg gemar menghukum mcm ni ...
Fieza-mira posted on 20-6-2013 03:50 PM
Honor killing ialah budaya Arab jahiliah sama dgn tanam bayi pompuan hidup2 sebab takut bayi tuh bil ...
melia_star posted on 20-6-2013 04:19 PM
budaya di India sana lah....selalu gak ada citer Tamil atau hindustan pasai honour killing ni....s ...
chinatsu posted on 20-6-2013 04:32 PM
ini adalah adat mereka tiada kena mengena dengan agama..tp macam biasa di CI ni ada je mubaligh2 kri ...
Lejen posted on 20-6-2013 04:25 PM
tak jugak budaya India dan Arab. sejak zaman Hammurabi dan Assyirian tribe dah ada since 1200 SM. ...
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