Hina Saleem

Hina Saleem (19 December 1985 – 11 August 2006[1]) was a Pakistani woman resident in Italy who was killed in an honour killing,[2] in Zanano di Sarezzo, province of Brescia, Lombardy, Italy.[3]

Hina Saleem
Born(1985-12-19)19 December 1985
Gujrat, Pakistan
Died11 August 2006(2006-08-11) (aged 20)
Resting placeCimitero monumentale di Brescia, Brescia, Italy
NationalityPakistani
OccupationServer at a pizza parlour
Known forHonour killing victim

Background

Saleem was born in Gujrat, Pakistan. Her father Mohammed Saleem began living in Italy circa 1996 and worked in a saucepan factory there. Hina worked as a server at a pizza parlour and had an Italian boyfriend, a carpenter,[4] who she cohabitated with.[2]

Mohammed expressed disagreement with Hina's life choices after the family arrived in Italy, complaining about her Westernisation due to the Western boyfriend and her habit of smoking cigarettes, and he instead wanted her in an arranged marriage.[2] Authorities stated that the family gave considerable pressure against Hina to get her to return to Pakistan for marriage. Peter Popham of The Independent wrote that in regards to Hina and her family, "Her relations with them had been strained for years."[4]

While Saleem was of immigrant origins and resident in northern Italy, honour killings had been an issue with the native southern Italian population; the laws previously allowed for pardoning of crimes for honour reasons, but this was removed in 1981.[4][5]

Crime

Mohammad contacted her and asked her to come to the house in Brescia to meet a cousin visiting in the area.[4] There Mohammad slit Hina's throat twenty-eight times.[2] Hina's boyfriend reported her missing on Saturday 19 August 2006 and the Carabinieri searched the house, finding the body buried in the garden and blood in Hina's bedroom.[4][6]

Aftermath

Saleem was buried in the Muslim section of Cimitero monumentale di Brescia (a.k.a. Cimitero Vantiniano) in Brescia.[7] Mohammad received a prison sentence of 30 years.[2] In 2016 Saleem's mother stated that she forgave her husband, and that the media articles inaccurately portrayed the family as being against western culture when this was not the case.[3]

On 11 August 2007, the Centro di salute internazionale e medicina transculturale (Centre of International and Intercultural Health) of Brescia, was dedicated to Hina.

Italian Interior Minister Giuliano Amato stated that the event made him reconsider a plan to reduce the waiting period for Italian citizenship; he previously proposed reducing it from ten to five. Popham wrote the event "has sparked a fierce debate in Italy about how to deal with the "clash of civilisations"."[4] L'Osservatore Romano criticised the event.[4]

Marco Ventura and Giommaria Monti co-wrote a book called Hina: questa è la mia vita ("Hina: This is my life").[2]

See also

Bibliography

  • Monti, Giommaria; Marco Ventura (2011). Hina: questa è la mia vita (in Italian). Edizioni Piemme. ISBN 978-88-566-1488-6.

Honour killings of people of Pakistani heritage outside of Pakistan

References

  1. Cittadini, Andrea (2017-10-06). "Hina e quella tomba abbandonata senza volto e avvolta nell'erba". Giornale di Brescia (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-12-06. - The gravestone in the article shows her birth and death dates.
  2. Kennedy, Duncan (2011-02-10). "Murdered by her father for becoming a Western woman". BBC. Retrieved 2019-12-03. The BBC has been given access to that interview which gives a rare insight into the mind of a perpetrator of "honour killing".
  3. Fasano, Giusi (2016-01-22). "Hina, Murdered in 2006 by Father. Mother "Forgives Him"". Corriere della Sera. Translated by Simon Tanner. Retrieved 2019-12-06. - Original Italian version: "Hina, sgozzata 10 anni fa dal padre La mamma: «Ma io lo perdono»"
  4. Popham, Peter (2006-08-20). "Murder of Muslim girl 'rebel' by her father shocks all Italy". The Independent. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  5. Nunzia, Vallini (2006-08-19). "Mi hanno tolta da scuola perchè fumo. E mi picchiano perchè faccio la cristiana". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). p. 17. Archived from the original on 2015-11-22. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
  6. Corvi, Luigi (2007-11-14). "Hina, il padre e due cognate condannati a trent'anni". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). p. 27. Archived from the original on 2015-10-18. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
  7. "Al Vantiniano la sua tomba nel campo musulmani". Bresciaoggi (in Italian). Edizioni Brescia S.p.A. 2016-08-11. Retrieved 2017-12-13.

Further reading


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