Why? Does life mean so little? I'm angry!!!

adey
By adey

Girl, 17, killed in Iraq for loving a British soldier
By Sadie Gray

A 17-year-old Iraqi girl was murdered by her father in an honour killing after falling in love with a British soldier she met while working on an aid programme in Basra, it has been claimed.

Rand Abdel-Qader was stamped upon, suffocated and stabbed by her father, then given an unceremonious burial to emphasise her disgrace. Police released her father without charge two hours after his arrest.

"Not much can be done when we have an honour killing case," said Sergeant Ali Jabbar of Basra police. "You are in a Muslim society and women should live under religious laws. The father has very good contacts inside the Basra government and it wasn't hard for him to be released and what he did to be forgotten."

A total of 47 young women died in honour killings in the city last year, Basra Security Committee told an investigation into Ms Abdel-Qader's case by The Observer. This is believed to be the only case of an honour killing involving a British soldier.

The MoD had no official advice for troops on how to behave with Iraqi women. The serviceman involved would not have been told that any relationship with her could put her life at risk, the paper said.

Ms Abdel-Qader, a student of English at Basra University, had struck up a friendship with a 22-year-old British infantryman known only as Paul five months before her murder in March.

She was believed to have last seen him in January, and the pair, whose relationship was innocent, only ever met while working at the aid station. The soldier was helping deliver relief to displaced families as part of his regimental duties. Ms Abdel-Qader was a volunteer worker.

On the day her father, Abdel-Qader Ali, was told of their friendship by a friend, he accused her of having an affair with a British soldier and killed her in front of his wife, Leila Hussain, and their sons.

"I screamed and called out for her two brothers so they could get their father away from her. But when he told them the reason, instead of saving her they helped him end her life," Ms Hussain said. She then left her husband and has since divorced him. She has received threats from her husband's family and is in hiding. She now works for an organisation campaigning against honour killings.

The Independent 30/04/08

This makes my blood boil, and to think the father just walked away scot free!!!
This is in this forum under culture as I know it is not part of the religion (although some muslims think it is).
And as such I will be controversial and say IMHO not all cultures are equal.
I am glad the mother left the husband, though her life is now in danger, but how must she feel about her sons?

By heero_yuy2• 4 Jun 2008 20:52
heero_yuy2

...is if YOU try to stop them from doing this, they'll insist that you are also 'helping the wrong person' in terms of their culture, or whatever the hell it is their custom was.

Did you know how hard for us to prove people what is right but in the end they'll blame you for being wrong in their own sense?

Of course I know this incident is absolutely wrong in the meaning of life!...but what can we do about it? The girl is dead. Can we still save her? Can you STILL tell the father he was wrong? Where were we to prevent this?

Just like I said, let's save what's best for last as of now so that we can't have another 'misinterpretations' in the future

"Everything in this book may be wrong." Illusions: The Adventures of The Reluctant Messiah by Richard Bach

By Gypsy• 3 Jun 2008 10:47
Gypsy

I know. :( I bet you they would have had beautiful children.

Visit www.qatarhappening.com

By Shuaibkazi• 3 Jun 2008 10:46
Shuaibkazi

[img_assist|nid=96642|title=Prop|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=440|height=369]

By Gypsy• 3 Jun 2008 08:50
Gypsy

"millions of other ways of punishment." She shouldn't be punished at all! The girl fell in love, who cares who it was with! They should have been free to chose for themselves if they wanted to be together.

Visit www.qatarhappening.com

By TUNISIAN• 2 Jun 2008 22:44
TUNISIAN

Hi every one,

Just to insist that the honor killing has no relation with Islam. It is a social heritage only.

The other side of the problem is the fact of falling in love with who is conidered as COLONIZER and SOURCE OF ALL THE TROUBLES OCCURING THROUGH THE COUNTRY.

She was too young and adolescent otherwise she should have thought before having such ashaming relation.

Killing is not the solution at all and there are millions of other ways of punishment.

By adey• 2 Jun 2008 22:26
adey

please don't forget the mother also, who spoke out and was gunned down for it.

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 22:23
britexpat

You're right.. She was supposedly "friendly" with the guy.. One can interpr4et this in many ways.. obviously, her father took the extreme view..

Whatever, the interpretation or her intentions, I think we all agree that she didn;t deserve to die.

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 22:23
britexpat

You're right.. She was supposedly "friendly" with the guy.. One can interpr4et this in many ways.. obviously, her father took the extreme view..

Whatever, the interpretation or her intentions, I think we all agree that she didn;t deserve to die.

By brandylady• 2 Jun 2008 22:23
brandylady

but thought it was a long process, to think they can do it in such a short space of time is very frightening, I mistakenly thought it was not so easy to brainwash people, they say our minds are strong so to break them in a matter of weeks, I personally find quite disturbing

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 22:18
britexpat

It is the same with most of the suicide bombers. I suppose the same could be said about the people who join these cults and sects in the West...

By brandylady• 2 Jun 2008 22:14
brandylady

they brainwashed him??? Unnerving how they can do that in such a short space of time, no wonder this father is able in his own mind to justify what he did, he has brainwashed himself!!

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 22:08
britexpat

The rant is justified.. I recall a case a few years ago in a Middle Eastern Country.. (no names, but it begins with a S and has lots of oil)...

A guy studying abroad became a bit too vocal and pro human rights, democracy etc..

When he came home for vacation, he was met at the airport by some plain clothes guys and taken away, without the family's knowledge..

He turned up three weeks later singing the praises of the government and refusing to go back abroad. He had been successfully "de-programmed"

By adey• 2 Jun 2008 22:03
adey

well we agree on that.

There should be punishment for his crime also. Not the death penalty as it's too easy. I would have him spend the rest of his life in solitary confinement and made to learn that he is publicly expelled from the Ummah and there is no way back - he will spend eternity in hell for his crimes when he finally dies, and I would make sure he lived as long as possible thinking about that.

Then I would deprogram him of all religious thought with atheist propaganda so he realises that he has obliterated the life of his daughter for nothing, and let him think on that!!

Then, and only then, if he wishes to take his own life I would hand him a gun.

The guy makes me sick.

Wow that was a rant!

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By adey• 2 Jun 2008 21:47
adey

"...and we don't know who's right or wrong in this matter..." !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

WHAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

If you really can't see what's right or wrong in this situation (or they are equally valid) your membership of the human race should be suspended.

Apologies if I have misinterpreted what you meant as I can't believe you meant what I have just read.

"All culture was based on religion..." and visa versa - ever wondered why the hell of the desert god is really hot yet the hell of the Viking god, Odin, was really cold?

peace

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 21:43
britexpat

I agree with you 100%. My point was that I didn't see those in your posting.. Reading the posting, he seemed to imply that he felt her having an affair was against Islam..

Anyway, it's true that this type of thing has to be stamped out and the main people who can help are religious leaders and society elders that these people look up to.

By heero_yuy2• 2 Jun 2008 21:37
heero_yuy2

All culture was based on religion...

...so if there're more 'interpretations' of religion, there's also going to be tons of culture...

...and we don't know who's right or wrong in this matter...

Whether it's a Bible or Qu'ran or Torah or Vedas...

...life just goes on with it. Let's just save what's best for last so that 'misinterpretations' never happen again in the future...

"Everything in this book may be wrong." Illusions: The Adventures of The Reluctant Messiah by Richard Bach

By brandylady• 2 Jun 2008 21:31
brandylady

by a gay relationship, this father by whatever reasons he chooses to give, is a by product of over zealous religious and cultural fanatics, there is always the exception to the rule and most muslims want to live decent and peaceful lives

By adey• 2 Jun 2008 21:14
adey

Here are direct quotes from those involved:

" 'Death was the least she deserved,' said Abdel-Qader. 'I don't regret it. I had the support of all my friends who are fathers, like me, and know what she did was unacceptable to any Muslim that honours his religion,' he said."

&

" 'I have only two boys from now on. That girl was a mistake in my life. I know God is blessing me for what I did,'"

&

" 'They will have the same end [as Rand] if they become contaminated with any gay relationship. These crimes deserve death - death in the name of God,' he said."

& from the murdered mother:

"'But they have sent a message saying that I am wrong for defending Rand and that I should go back home and live like a blessed Muslim woman,' said Leila,"

& from a survivor of the shooting:

'I could hear people talking on the corridors and the only thing that they had to say was that Leila was wrong for defending her daughter's mistakes and that her death was God's punishment.

These people think this has EVERYTHING to do with religion.

You and I know that this is not mentioned in the Qu'ran or hadith BUT they have been interpreted by some Muslims as religiously permissible from their readings. In a way you are right, it is cultural, but they get this culture from THEIR interpretation of Islam. They are linked and it is up to Muslims to sever this link.

Peace

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 20:32
britexpat

My apologies, but I am missing something. I cannot see that statement in your posting...

By adey• 2 Jun 2008 20:09
adey

Sorry but you are wrong. The father explicitly said it was his Islamic duty to kill his daughter. Now you may successfully and correctly argue that this is forbidden in Islam but someone should tell that to the father and the millions that think like him.

This may not be your Islamic culture but it IS HIS Islamic culture - think about it, what is it that could drive millions of people to believe that killing your own daughter is the right thing to do? I suggest the answer is the deluded belief that an all powerful supernatural entity demands it of his slaves to quench some perceived slight, or that it is written by said god, and who is this mere human to go against the wishes of the all powerful creature who controls your after-death "destination for all eternity?

It may not be Islamicly correct to pursue such courses but it does denote what happens when one is blinded and deluded by religious fervour, of whatever religion.

This man killed in the name of his god whether YOU think it right or not.

It is the duty of Muslims to teach those Muslims that think this is religiously justified that it is not. I know many do but the standard response is always - "this is cultural, Islam has nothing to do with this" - well clearly in the minds of people that carry out these crimes it has everything to do with religion.

This is a problem within the Islamic society and Muslims need to address it pro-actively and not just dismiss it as 'cultural'.

It is 'your' mothers, daughters, sisters and cousins that are dying because of these crimes, not 'ours'. Especially in Islam you can't separate religion from culture, so we are always told, so if some muslims are perpetrating these(Islamic) crimes in the name of Islam it is your duty to stand up and not just bleat, "it's cultural!".

"Men never commit evil so fully and joyfully as when they do it for religious convictions." - Blaise Pascal

"With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.: - Steven Weinberg

"Of course these people are insane, but this insanity is fueled by their ideologies" - Anon.

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By diamond• 2 Jun 2008 20:05
diamond

Never mind Shuaib. You've missed my point.

-------------------------------------

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 18:42
britexpat

Here there was no claim that the honour killing was carried out in the name of Islam..

DEFINITELY A CULTURAL ISSUE

By goaboy• 2 Jun 2008 18:32
goaboy

mad people

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 16:07
anonymous

I hope from this incident others will learn that there are many ignorant Muslim who commit sins in accordance to their cultures but claim its done in the name of Islam. This is just sheer stupidity culture.

By Shuaibkazi• 2 Jun 2008 14:53
Shuaibkazi

Qatar is not the benchmark,

We have the Quran and the Sahih Hadeeth for that

Dont u agree?

By Shuaibkazi• 2 Jun 2008 14:51
Shuaibkazi

Britexpat thanks for the explaination, yes i meant under the shariah.

BTW just FYI

Though the beheading looks gory, its the least painful for the person,

The most painful is the firing squad followed by the hanging,

When the person is beheaded, the persons nervous system is severed so that the pain signals arent sent to the brain

even in the west beheading was reserved for the nobles, the commoners were hung,

While Lethal injection cant be surely called the least painful it surely looks the least painful.

By diamond• 2 Jun 2008 14:33
diamond

I know. But he was referring to 'our system' meaning Muslim system of justice and I did not wish to be included in an incorrect generalisation. In Qatar, although we have the death penalty, it is not done in the form of public hangings. And the US in 'the west' has the death penalty.

-------------------------------------

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 14:24
Rating: 2/5
britexpat

Shuaibkazi probably meant death under Shariah law. however, different countries use different methods. in pakistan it is hanging, in many countries it is by firing squad, in Saudi , it is beheading.

By the way, i witnessed a beheading in Saudi.. Not a pretty sight and would not recommend it to anyone.. Definitely a detterent though!

By Gypsy• 2 Jun 2008 14:22
Gypsy

Seeing as how rapes, child molestation, etc still happen in countries were people are hung in public, I don't think it gives them much of a second thought.

Visit www.qatarhappening.com

By diamond• 2 Jun 2008 14:20
diamond

This one:

"The rulings may be different, i mean in ur system the rapists, child molesters, murderers are put in safe houses or in other words given a "TIME OUT"

Where as in our system they are hung in public places so that the next guy thinks twice before he makes the same mistake."

I was referring to your words above.

-------------------------------------

By Shuaibkazi• 2 Jun 2008 13:38
Shuaibkazi

My generalization may have been misunderstood by you -

"Laws may stipulate different penalties for capital offences but the jurisdiction of each System (Islamic or non islamic) clearly dictates that the decision for penalizing such a crime rests with the Capital body and not any individual"

This is a fact of any System which has a sound doctrine to back it up.

It goes without saying that this is regardless of how u or I feel about it.

By diamond• 2 Jun 2008 11:50
diamond

Don't make me repeat myself. Just read my last post. My point is that you are making incorrect generalisations.

-------------------------------------

By Shuaibkazi• 2 Jun 2008 11:16
Shuaibkazi

Is there a point to ur argument?

I am talking about the shariah rulings in general for crimes such as murder and rape (not being country specific).

What is it that u want to prove by the way?

By Gypsy• 2 Jun 2008 10:59
Gypsy

Shuab the death penalty is to easy a punishment for such a person. I say put him in an Iraqi prison for the rest of his life. I can't imagine those are very pleasant.

Visit www.qatarhappening.com

By diamond• 2 Jun 2008 10:55
diamond

I wondered what penal systems you were referring to when you said 'your system' and 'our system'. In 'my system' people are not hung in public places. And if 'your system' meant 'the West' then the penal system is quite different between the UK and the US, for example. There is no death penalty in the UK, but in the US, the death penalty exists in 37 states.

-------------------------------------

By Shuaibkazi• 2 Jun 2008 10:40
Shuaibkazi

I am not speaking for anybody but the way a legal system works in any country, u have a jurisdiction according to which laws are laid.

Death penalty or no death penalty - a single person on his own cannot become the decision maker. the punishment has to be decided by the Law of the land.

Now according to me the death penalty is the least punishment what some people deserve!

For instance this father,

Who the hell told him that he cud do what he did,

I for one am sure that many in QL would agree with me that the death penalty is a very light punishment for such a person.

By consciouseffort• 2 Jun 2008 10:38
consciouseffort

Basically this is not actually with any particular tribe or nation its with almost every nation & every country. Culture & its values are slowly fading away. Terrible things are into culture these days. What makes me more worried is the fate of women in such tribes. If a woman commits / make mistake she is killed for honour but if a man does he gets free easily. This is one of the most barbaric things I have seen / heard in my life. Few months back, in Gulf Times, I read about one Iraqi lady in UK (if I am not wrong). Her murder was ordered by her father & her brother arranged the whole drama. They murdered that poor gurl & cut her into pieces & put her in a suitcase which went un noticed for a long time. Is this the value of a woman in this world? I still dont understand why do we have such educated illiterates among us.

=========================================================

If you cannot convince, CONFUSE them

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 10:35
britexpat

As I said previously, this is nothing to do with religion.. This is a cultural aspect which needs to be "outlawed"..

Firstly, governments must legislate against this and call it MURDER.

Secondly, they must apprehend and prosecute the person involved.

Thirdly, society in general must stand up against this practce and these mindless idiots.

By diamond• 2 Jun 2008 10:16
diamond

Please don't speak for every Muslim Shuaibkazi. I am a Muslima and I am against the death penalty. And I don't like your sweeping incorrect generalisations of penal systems.

This story makes my heart weep. Why is life so cheap? How can people think they have the right to kill someone? I am thankful every day to have been born where I was born and raised by people who are loving and compassionate.

-------------------------------------

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 10:08
anonymous

I wonder why people go to the extent of killing someone. Even if the act is as disgraceful as adultery, there is government and laws which no one can't take in his own hands. You must be an unimaginably ruthless person to dare take a life.

Sorry for being off the topic, but the sentiments shown above by brandylady and Mr. Paul are exactly the ones Iraqi and Afghani people feel when they are bombed and their relatives are killed by US and allied forces. According to CIA website, in 3 years of war in Afghanistan (2001-2004), US carried out 57,800 air attacks on Afghani soil and just imagine the number of civilians killed during these disasters. How often we read about a bomb killing 30 or so people ON THE SUSPICION that there was a terrorist (aimal alzawahri or whatever) among them. Wonderful justice! and now from your posts, I understand where this terrorist (or revenge seekers?) production house is and why the world is facing more of them.

By Shuaibkazi• 2 Jun 2008 09:43
Shuaibkazi

The only default setting for any human is choice,

What he makes up of this choice is his own decision,

I am a fundamental muslim because i follow the fundamentals of Islam which tells me that the law is not in my Hands but in the hands of the government in power who decide on cases on the basis of the jurisdiction provided by the shariah,

Just like any other country - isnt it?

The rulings may be different, i mean in ur system the rapists, child molesters, murderers are put in safe houses or in other words given a "TIME OUT"

Where as in our system they are hung in public places so that the next guy thinks twice before he makes the same mistake.

But one thing remains common, there are manipulators (Like this nutcase who killed his daughter), who can escape the prisons in ur case and escape the hangings in mine.

Pretty simple now aint it?

[img_assist|nid=96642|title=Prop|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=440|height=369]

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 07:58
britexpat

Got to agree with you there Brandylady.. Nothing whatsoever justifies this type of action..

By brandylady• 2 Jun 2008 07:55
brandylady

at least most animals hunt and kill for the survival of the species, there is no justification in culture or religion to excuse this behaviour

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 07:52
anonymous

      animals r better than these people...

they dont know how to respect a women....

[img_assist|nid=13716|title=|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]

[img_assist|nid=26062|title=|desc=|link=none|align=center|width=|height=0]  

   "Imagination is more important than knowledge"

By brandylady• 2 Jun 2008 07:45
brandylady

am now upset more than I first was, such a beautiful young girl and such brutality, made worse by the fact that people were actually filming this outageous behaviour, a very sad ending indeed to a vibrant young human being

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 07:41
anonymous

[img_assist|nid=103941|title=.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 07:39
anonymous

     

[img_assist|nid=13716|title=|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]

[img_assist|nid=26062|title=|desc=|link=none|align=center|width=|height=0]  

   "Imagination is more important than knowledge"

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 07:38
britexpat

Chill.. it's too early..

These morons are set in their ways.. Blood feuds and honour killings are part of their culture and upbringing.. Violence wouldn't cure anything..

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 07:35
anonymous

Jeez, im so angry now. and i thought today was gonna be a nice calm, winding down day.

[img_assist|nid=103941|title=.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]

By britexpat• 2 Jun 2008 07:32
britexpat

Sad ending .. may the mother , daughter find peace together in heaven.. This is a cultural, not religious issue.. Last year, research in the UK showed that most of the "Honour Killings" were within the kurdish community... mostly all to do with culture. Remember that this guy is probably being protected by his family and tribe.

It is difficult to change, but we must educate people as to the futility of taking such actions, especially when ALL religions are against the taking of innocent life..

By thexonic• 2 Jun 2008 07:30
thexonic

This topic is repeated.

"There's good in everyone, sometimes people just get diverted to the wrong path"

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 07:26
anonymous

[img_assist|nid=103941|title=.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]

By brandylady• 2 Jun 2008 07:24
brandylady

what you meant about if anyone touched your little boy, my two sons are 30 & 28 and my daughter is 22 but in my eyes they are still my babies and I would kill to protect them.

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 07:20
anonymous

Wakefield jail.....

[img_assist|nid=103941|title=.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]

By brandylady• 2 Jun 2008 07:18
brandylady

without protection would soon sort the b***ard out, even criminals don't condone this behaviour!!!

Too many wrongs are justified by religion.

By anonymous• 2 Jun 2008 07:16
anonymous

I will show him what pain and suffering is....

I have a little boy, and if ANYONE touched him, i would hunt them down and pull their heads off and crap down their necks...

This story makes me so angry, again, its another "done in the name of Islam" jobs, which again, will only skew the western worlds perception of Islam and Muslims even more.

If their were any decent people in that area, they should take that man and his sons, and make them "dissapear" one night in the desert.

Sad, very sad !

[img_assist|nid=103941|title=.|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]

By brandylady• 2 Jun 2008 06:28
brandylady

too often used as a sheild behind which evil people do evil things in the name of their particular God or Gods

By mr_rob• 2 Jun 2008 06:26
mr_rob

It's terrible to see religion warped and twisted to justify the evils of men. Sadly, it's happening everywhere, every day.

"Never argue with idiots. They'll drag you down to their level, then beat you with experience."

By flanostu• 2 Jun 2008 00:02
flanostu

probably one of the sadest stories i've ever heard.

By adey• 1 Jun 2008 23:59
adey

"How can religion be so abused????"

I think if you look throughout history it is the default setting and not the exception.

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By adey• 1 Jun 2008 23:52
adey

Forgive me for pasting the whole article but just putting a link seems inappropriate to mark this brave woman's sad demise.

Mother who defied the killers is gunned down

Five weeks ago Leila Hussein told The Observer the chilling story of how her husband had killed their 17-year-old daughter over her friendship with a British soldier in Basra. Now Leila, who had been in hiding, has been murdered - gunned down in cold blood. Afif Sarhan in Basra and Caroline Davies report on the final act of a brutal tragedy

Leila Hussein lived her last few weeks in terror. Moving constantly from safe house to safe house, she dared to stay no longer than four days at each. It was the price she was forced to pay after denouncing and divorcing her husband - the man she witnessed suffocate, stamp on, then stab their young daughter Rand in a brutal 'honour' killing for which he has shown no remorse.

Though she feared reprisals for speaking out, she really believed that she would soon be safe. Arrangements were well under way to smuggle her to the Jordanian capital, Amman. In fact, she was on her way to meet the person who would help her escape when a car drew up alongside her and two other women who were walking her to a taxi. Five bullets were fired: three of them hit Leila, 41. She died in hospital after futile attempts to save her.

Her death, on 17 May, is the shocking denouement to a tragedy which had its origins in an innocent friendship between her student daughter, Rand Abdel-Qader, 17, and a blond, 22-year-old British soldier known only as Paul.

The two had met while Rand, an English student at Basra University, was working as a volunteer helping displaced families and he was distributing water. Although their friendship appears to have involved just brief, snatched conversations over four months, Rand had confided her romantic feelings for Paul to her best friend, Zeinab, 19.

She died, still a virgin, four months after she had last seen him when her father, Abdel-Qader Ali, 46, discovered that she had been seen talking 'to the enemy' in public. She had brought shame on his honour, was his defence, and he had to cleanse his family name. Despite openly admitting the murder, he has received no punishment.

It was two weeks after Rand's death on 16 March that a grief-stricken Leila, unable to bear living under the same roof as her husband, found the strength to leave him. She had been beaten and had had her arm broken. It was a courageous move. Few women in Iraq would contemplate such a step. Leila told The Observer in April: 'No man can accept being left by a woman in Iraq. But I would prefer to be killed than sleep in the same bed as a man who was able to do what he did to his own daughter.'

Her words were to prove prescient. Leila turned to the only place she could, a small organisation in Basra campaigning for the rights of women and against 'honour' killings. Almost immediately she began receiving threats - notes calling her a 'prostitute' and saying she deserved to die like her daughter.

Even her sons Hassan, 23, and Haydar, 21, whom she claimed aided their father in their sister's killing, disowned her. Meanwhile, her husband, a former government employee, escaped any charges, and even told The Observer that police had congratulated him on what he had done.

It is not known who killed Leila. All that is known is that she was staying at the house of 'Mariam', one of the women's rights campaigners, whose identity The Observer has agreed not to reveal. On the morning of 17 May, they were joined by another volunteer worker and set off to meet 'a contact' who was to help Leila travel to Amman, where she would be taken in by an Iraqi family.

'Leila was anxious, but she was also happy at having the chance to leave Iraq,' said Mariam. 'Since the death of her daughter, her own life was at serious risk. And this was a great opportunity for her to leave the country and to fight for Iraqi women's rights.

'She had not been able to sleep the night before. I stayed up talking to her about her plans after she arrived in Amman. I gave her some clothes to take with her and she was packing the only bag she had. She was too excited to sleep.'

Mariam said that when she awoke Leila had already prepared breakfast, cleaned her house and even baked a date cake as a thank-you for the help she had been given. After the arrival of 'Faisal', the volunteer (whose identity is also being protected), the three left the house at 10.30am and started walking to the end of the street to get a taxi. They had walked less than 50 metres when they heard a car drive up fast and then gunshots rang out. The attack, said by witnesses to have been carried out by three men, was over in minutes. Leila was hit by three bullets. Mariam was hit in her left arm and Faisal in her left leg. 'I didn't realise I had been shot for a few seconds, because as I heard the gunfire I saw Leila falling to the ground and saw blood pouring from her head,' said Mariam. 'I was so shocked, I didn't immediately feel the pain.'

Two men ran from their homes to help. They rushed Leila to hospital and a passing taxi took the other two. But Leila died at 3.20pm, despite several operations to save her. As she lay in her own hospital bed receiving treatment, Mariam said that she heard someone saying that Leila had been shot in the head. But there were other mutterings that were clearly audible. 'I could hear people talking on the corridors and the only thing that they had to say was that Leila was wrong for defending her daughter's mistakes and that her death was God's punishment.

'In that minute I just had complete hatred in my heart for those who had killed her.'

Police said the incident was a sectarian attack and that there was nothing to link Leila's death to her family. 'Her ex-husband was not in Basra when it happened. We found out he was visiting relatives in Nassiriya with his two sons,' said Hassan Alaa, a senior officer at the local police station in Basra. 'We believe the target was the women activists, rather than Mrs Hussein, and that she was unlucky to be in that place at that time.'

It is plausible. Campaigners for women's' rights are not acceptable to many sections of Iraqi society, especially in Basra where militias have partial control in some districts and impose strict laws on locals, including what clothing they should wear and what religious practice they should follow.

Since February 2006, two other activists from the same women's organisation have been killed in the city. One of them was reportedly raped before being shot. The other, the only man working for the non-governmental organisation (NGO), and a father of five who was responsible for the organisation's finances, was shot five months ago.

There could be many with a grudge against such organisations. However, Mariam believes Leila was targeted, pointing out she had been hit by three bullets. 'When we were shot, they focused on Leila, not us,' she said.

Since the attack the NGO has stopped its work in Basra. 'We daren't answer the phones because we have received so many threats since we gave our support to Leila's case,' said Mariam. 'Most of our members are preparing to leave the city and even Iraq if they can raise the money.'

A single mother since her husband was killed for refusing to join a militia, she too intends to move when she can. Faisal, who also survived her injuries, is still suffering post-surgical infection. She preferred not to speak, but her mother, who wished to remain anonymous, said: 'My daughter is very shocked at what happened, and my two grandsons can't stop crying since they saw her in hospital.'

Leila's burial was arranged within hours of her death by the husband of one of her cousins and Mariam's father.

The Observer visited Rand's father and two brothers at their Basra home, but they refused to talk beyond Hassan proclaiming his father's innocence. When asked if he would be visiting his mother's grave, he shrugged: 'Maybe in the future.'

Leila was an orphan, raised by an uncle who died in the Shia uprising against Saddam Hussein in the early 1990s. Hamida Alaa, 68, a friend of the uncle, said: 'The poor woman was killed and now her name and history is buried with her. No one wants to speak about it. She is just one more woman killed in our country who has already been forgotten by the local society.'

In the last days of her life, Leila was suffering from the pressure of having gone against her husband. 'She was sleeping with the help of sedatives,' said Mariam. 'She would wake up at night with terrible nightmares, even dreaming of being suffocated as her daughter was. She had been threatened so many times and that's why she was so scared. Her indignation over Rand's death is what led her to her own coffin. Their history ends here. But Leila was a hero. A woman who was strong enough to say no to Iraqi men's bad attitudes. Sadly most Iraqi women do not have the same strength and they will stay in their homes.'

Mariam has moved out of her home. But within hours of speaking to The Observer a close friend went to her new address to deliver a message that had been left for her at her front door. It read: 'Death to betrayers of Islam who don't deserve God's forgiveness. Speaking less you will live more.' She believes it was sent by Leila's killers.

'They want this story to be buried with Leila,' she said. 'But I cannot close my eyes to all this.'

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By Shuaibkazi• 12 May 2008 12:16
Shuaibkazi

Anyway i dont care for such swivel,

I have a daughter and i cant believe that anyway and anyone can do this to their own flesh and blood let alone someone elses

But then i cudnt believe the story of the famous austrian nut job either

It all looks so untrue but alas all this still exists because people like to believe that they have a valid reason for doing so,

Be it religion, creed, culture.

In the bitter end what we do is all dependent on our Egos which i believe have run out of control and will go to any lenghts to justify our individual belief systems.

By diamond• 12 May 2008 12:00
diamond

Abdulraheem, I have to assume you are joking in order to keep my temper. At best, a very very sick joke.

I see this was your first post on QL. what an atrocious start.

 

 

 

[img_assist|nid=57389|title=|desc=peace|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0] _______________________________________________

www.nfcr.org

By britexpat• 12 May 2008 11:45
britexpat

Nothing whatsoever justifies the intentional taking of a human life!

By someonenew• 12 May 2008 11:40
someonenew

Please answer adey's n super's questions! I'm too angry to respond to what you've just said... I might get banned. I haven't really ever been in a conversation with a person who could take another person's life. I'm very much interested how they justify themselves. Looks like we've got one of them among us.

I dream of a better tomorrow where Chickens can cross the Road without having their motives questioned - Unknown

By adey• 11 May 2008 22:16
adey

On whose authority would you be happy to kill a female member of your family for tainting your family's honour?

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By princess habibah• 11 May 2008 21:56
princess habibah

Unfortunately this is very common in Iraq. With the kurds as well. One time I told a kurdish friend of mine (educated and very modern) about some of the things I got up to as a kid (nothing serious) and she was so horrified it would happen to her daughter (no judgement of me) she moved back to Iraq for a year.

I very much saw in her the mentality people have when they talk about family honour and honour killings. It is very sad that people justify their actions or are so paranoid about their daughters when they have no problem to go against the basic fundamentals of their religion in daily life. (like shirk). Whats worse is that it usually only applies to women and men are patted on the back for such things.

Although I am not aware this would take one out of the fold of Islam! Murder is certainly one of the major sins.

Maryum : Umm Hasan bint Abdullah Alshabrawishi

By anonymous• 11 May 2008 21:54
anonymous

abdulraheem, please explain your comment i'd be interested to hear the other side of the story.......now listen folks! Theres two sides to every story!......mmmm

"It is dangerous to be sincere unless you are also stupid."

- George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)

By Dracula• 11 May 2008 21:53
Dracula

Eli Eli Lema Sabachthani?

By DohaSteve• 11 May 2008 21:51
DohaSteve

Religion is in the time of the human, and will be the end of humanity

By anonymous• 11 May 2008 21:50
anonymous

her father had done a very good job.

By anonymous• 11 May 2008 21:46
anonymous

These people are bloody nutcases......uneducated, ferral people.....an who is going to re-educate them? No one because it is done in the name of 'religion'..

"It is dangerous to be sincere unless you are also stupid."

- George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)

By harsha• 11 May 2008 21:41
harsha

the laws dont make ppl like em stop.. so i wud say nothing surprising in it.. you may hear it again in future..

By thexonic• 11 May 2008 21:30
thexonic

Thats messed up...

IF EVERYONE WAS TO TAKE AN EYE FOR AN EYE, THE WHOLE WORLD WOULD'VE BEEN BLIND TODAY - MAHATMA GANDHI

By adey• 11 May 2008 21:08
adey

A landmine would be too quick!

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By someonenew• 11 May 2008 20:56
someonenew

Cant anyone do anything to this guy? I mean isnt it against some human rights law or something? I hope he steps on a land mineo or something. I mean how can u murder your own daughter??? I just dont get it!

I dream of a better tomorrow where Chickens can cross the Road without having their motives questioned - Unknown

By someonenew• 11 May 2008 20:53
someonenew

Its pathetic! I'm so pissed!

I dream of a better tomorrow where Chickens can cross the Road without having their motives questioned - Unknown

By Snowstorm• 11 May 2008 20:48
Snowstorm

 

YOU DONT KNOW ME, DONT EVEN TRY !!!

[img_assist|nid=98090|title=New|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]

By bookworm• 11 May 2008 20:46
bookworm

Noone is worth killing for.

Grinning......not

By adey• 11 May 2008 20:43
adey

It is just a sense of powerlessness.

It is just that tis animal has got away with this and is now boasting about it!

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By diamond• 11 May 2008 20:36
diamond

To kill in retaliation lowers one to the level of the murderer.

Having said that if anyone ever did anything remotely harmful to my daughter I would hunt them down to the ends of the earth and tear their head off myself.

The poor Mother's life is in ruins.

How long will it take before these kind of murders will cease to be 'culturally acceptable' to the small amount of people that they currently are?

 

 

 

[img_assist|nid=57389|title=|desc=peace|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0] _______________________________________________

www.nfcr.org

By adey• 11 May 2008 20:28
adey

I agree with you, WE call it murder but unfortunately the perpetrators call it honour, that's how they justify it in their heads.

I can't believe I am saying this, but surely the British Army could make this animal 'disappear'? And take along time doing it!!!

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By diamond• 11 May 2008 20:13
diamond

I am sick to my stomach. Despair. Utter despair over such evil EVIL men. Sorry, they and anyone who thinks like them is NOT a Muslim. 99%+ of society think this is MURDER.

And please, the crime is murder, not honour killing. I refuse to call them that.

 

 

 

[img_assist|nid=57389|title=|desc=peace|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0] _______________________________________________

www.nfcr.org

By adey• 11 May 2008 20:08
Rating: 2/5
adey

I have always been opposed to the death penalty but maybe this 'father' could meet with an accident.

As honour killing is not mentioned in the Qu'ran perhaps our fellow muslims here could re-iterate this to their Ummah, as this 'father' clearly believed it was his religious duty.

* Afif Sarhan in Basra and Caroline Davies

* The Observer,

* Sunday May 11 2008

This article appeared in the Observer on Sunday May 11 2008 on p8 of the News section. It was last updated at 00:03 on May 11 2008.

For Abdel-Qader Ali there is only one regret: that he did not kill his daughter at birth. 'If I had realised then what she would become, I would have killed her the instant her mother delivered her,' he said with no trace of remorse.

Two weeks after The Observer revealed the shocking story of Rand Abdel-Qader, 17, murdered because of her infatuation with a British solider in Basra, southern Iraq, her father is defiant. Sitting in the front garden of his well-kept home in the city's Al-Fursi district, he remains a free man, despite having stamped on, suffocated and then stabbed his student daughter to death.

Abdel-Qader, 46, a government employee, was initially arrested but released after two hours. Astonishingly, he said, police congratulated him on what he had done. 'They are men and know what honour is,' he said.

Rand, who was studying English at Basra University, was deemed to have brought shame on her family after becoming infatuated with a British soldier, 22, known only as Paul.

She died a virgin, according to her closest friend Zeinab. Indeed, her 'relationship' with Paul, which began when she worked as a volunteer helping displaced families and he was distributing water, appears to have consisted of snatched conversations over less than four months. But the young, impressionable Rand fell in love with him, confiding her feelings and daydreams to Zeinab, 19.

It was her first youthful infatuation and it would be her last. She died on 16 March after her father discovered she had been seen in public talking to Paul, considered to be the enemy, the invader and a Christian. Though her horrified mother, Leila Hussein, called Rand's two brothers, Hassan, 23, and Haydar, 21, to restrain Abdel-Qader as he choked her with his foot on her throat, they joined in. Her shrouded corpse was then tossed into a makeshift grave without ceremony as her uncles spat on it in disgust.

'Death was the least she deserved,' said Abdel-Qader. 'I don't regret it. I had the support of all my friends who are fathers, like me, and know what she did was unacceptable to any Muslim that honours his religion,' he said.

Sitting on a chair by his front door and surrounded by the gerberas and white daisies he had planted in the family garden, Abel-Qader attempted to justify his actions.

'I don't have a daughter now, and I prefer to say that I never had one. That girl humiliated me in front of my family and friends. Speaking with a foreign solider, she lost what is the most precious thing for any woman. 'People from western countries might be shocked, but our girls are not like their daughters that can sleep with any man they want and sometimes even get pregnant without marrying. Our girls should respect their religion, their family and their bodies.

'I have only two boys from now on. That girl was a mistake in my life. I know God is blessing me for what I did,' he said, his voice swelling with pride. 'My sons are by my side, and they were men enough to help me finish the life of someone who just brought shame to ours.'

Abdel-Qader, a Shia, says he was released from the police station 'because everyone knows that honour killings sometimes are impossible not to commit'. Chillingly, he said: 'The officers were by my side during all the time I was there, congratulating me on what I had done.' It's a statement that, if true, provides an insight into how vast the gulf remains between cultures in Iraq and between the Basra police the British army that trains them.

Sources have indicated that Abdel-Qader, who works in the health department, has been asked to leave because of the bad publicity, yet he will continue to draw a salary.

And it has been alleged by one senior unnamed official in the Basra governorate that he has received financial support by a local politician to enable him to 'disappear' to Jordan for a few weeks, 'until the story has been forgotten' - the usual practice in the 30-plus cases of 'honour' killings that have been registered since January alone.

Such treatment seems common in Basra, where militias have partial control, especially in the districts on the outskirts where Abdel-Qader lives.

While government security forces and British troops have control over the centre, around the fringes militants can still be seen everywhere on the streets or at the checkpoints they have erected. And they have imposed strict laws of behaviour for all the local people, including what clothing should be worn and what religious practices should be observed. There are reports of men having their hands cut off for looting and women being killed for prostitution.

Homosexuality is punishable by death, a sentence Abdel-Qader approves of with a passion. 'I have alerted my two sons. They will have the same end [as Rand] if they become contaminated with any gay relationship. These crimes deserve death - death in the name of God,' he said.

He said his daughter's 'bad genes were passed on from her mother'. Rand's mother, 41, remains in hiding after divorcing her husband in the immediate aftermath of the killing, living in fear of retribution from his family. She also still bears the scars of the severe beating he inflicted on her, breaking her arm in the process, when she told him she was going. 'They cannot accept me leaving him. When I first left I went to a cousin's home, but every day they were delivering notes to my door saying I was a prostitute and deserved the same death as Rand,' she said.

'She was killed by animals. Every night when go to bed I remember the face of Rand calling for help while her father and brothers ended her life,' she said, tears streaming down her face.

She was nervous, clearly terrified of being found, and her eyes constantly turned towards the window as she spoke. 'Rand told me about the soldier, but she swore it was just a friendship.

'She said she spoke with him because she was the only English speaker. I raised her in a religious manner and she never went out alone until she joined the university and then later when she was doing aid work.

'Even now, I cannot believe my ex-husband was able to kill our daughter. He wasn't a bad person. During our 24 years of marriage, he was never aggressive. But on that day, he was a different person.'

The mother is now trying to raise enough money to escape abroad. 'I miss my two boys,' she said. 'But they have sent a message saying that I am wrong for defending Rand and that I should go back home and live like a blessed Muslim woman,' said Leila, who is now volunteering with a local organisation campaigning for better protection for women in Basra.

One of those running the organisation, who did not want to be identified, said that Rand's case was similar to so many reported in Basra, with the only difference being she was in love with a foreigner, rather than an Iraqi.

'There isn't too much to say. Rand is dead. It is a tragedy and will be a tragedy for many other families in Iraq in the days to come.

'According to information we have been given, some from Rand's colleague, we have doubts that her love was reciprocated. We have the impression that Rand was in love, but the English soldier wasn't. But, for a girl to be paid nice compliments about her beauty and her intelligence, it was enough for her to think she was in love.

'She isn't here any more for her mother to ask any of the questions she would like to. Rand's case had repercussions because she fell in love with a foreigner. But what about the other girls murdered through "honour" killings because they fell in love with some of a different sect, or lost their virginity, or were forced to become prostitutes?'

Rand's mother used to call her 'Rose'. 'That was my nickname for her because when she was born she was so beautiful,' she said.

'Now, my lovely Rose is in her grave. But, God will make her father pay, either in this world ... or in the world after.'

THIS SIGNATURE HAS NEVER BEEN MORE APPROPRIATE:

"Deaths in the Bible. God - 2,270,365

not including the victims of Noah's flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, or the

many plagues, famines, fiery serpents, etc because no specific numbers

were given. Satan - 10."

By brandylady• 5 May 2008 09:30
brandylady

Poor innocent girl, life ended so young

anger is too small a word

 

If you spend all your time judging people, you will have no time to love them.

By King Edshel• 5 May 2008 09:16
King Edshel

falling in love is not allowed in this region :( ... as really falling ... don't think that her father killed her for just waving at the guy or telling him that she loves him [not trying to justify this as there is no reason for killing anyone and even god stated that no one should kill any for any reason and if you killed someone then it is the equivalent to kill all people on earth]

These people doing that in the name of old traditions, not in the name of religion ... religion is innocent of these people and they are really so far from understanding it ...

btw Iraq is full with Christians as well and the same goes for them ...

 

Do not dwell in the past, do not dream of the future, concentrate the mind on the present moment. (Gautama Buddha)

By dragonfly212• 4 May 2008 13:54
dragonfly212

killing is not the answer.

 

Everybody is right everybody is wrong it depends where you stand.

By owen• 4 May 2008 13:52
owen

how sad...and unfair....

 

why take the life of someone simply because of love????? its not in anybody's hand...wanted to say more.. but i don't indulge comments about religion.. this story breaks my heart... :(

[img_assist|nid=12867|link=none|align=left|width=|height=0]Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.

By stealth• 4 May 2008 13:45
stealth

falling in love with you enemy justifies the killing isnt it?

By casanova• 3 May 2008 13:42
casanova

My reply to this post lies in my signature below 

 

 

“Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men.”

 

Martin Luther King.

By britexpat• 3 May 2008 13:36
britexpat

This has nothing to do with Islam. It is a cultural issue. Islam doe not condone the taking of a life.

By Shuaibkazi• 3 May 2008 13:34
Rating: 5/5
Shuaibkazi

An honor killing or honour killing is generally a punitive murder, committed by members of a family against a female member of their family whom the family and/or wider community believes to have brought dishonor upon the family

However the killing of females by their own family members is rare except in tribal cultures of the Middle East and South Asia. Honor killing of female family members occurs among some rural Muslim communities with a strongly feudal tribal culture, as well as Druze and Christian tribes in some Arab countries and Pakistan. It also occurs among other South Asian communities, including Hindu and Sikh adherents in India, the United Kingdom and Canada. However, it is much rarer or non-existent in the Muslim communities of most of Central Asia (including Kazakhstan and Kyrghyzstan), Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, sub-Saharan Africa, Malaysia and Indonesia due to its cultural roots.

By greentea• 2 May 2008 23:12
greentea

thank you nadt and eco-savvy for your reply...  

 

If you believe, you will receive what you ask for in prayer

By anonymous• 2 May 2008 22:57
anonymous

NO

By nadt• 1 May 2008 22:46
nadt

This is disgusting,and its cultural. Honour killings is NOT allowed in Islam..

By denbonggerald• 1 May 2008 18:38
denbonggerald

 "Be of good courage and HE shall strengthen thine heart..."

By greentea• 1 May 2008 18:36
greentea

is honour killing allowed in Quran?

 

before anybody start thinking that this will lead to religious bashing or whatever, let me make it clear that im not intending it to be.... it's just out of curiosity that im asking it. so plz, just answer the question with a simple YES or NO.

 

If you believe, you will receive what you ask for in prayer

By denbonggerald• 1 May 2008 18:23
denbonggerald

 "Be of good courage and HE shall strengthen thine heart..."

By mufy• 1 May 2008 18:21
mufy

she would have died some other day in a missile attack or a bomb attack..

 

 

[img_assist|nid=17892|title=http://braveatheart.blogspot.com/|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=180|height=135]

By Gypsy• 1 May 2008 15:12
Gypsy

 Disgusting. 

 

Visit www.qatarhappening.com

By Ragnarock Raider• 1 May 2008 15:06
Ragnarock Raider

Regarding the powerlessness against the stupidity of people:

the fact that most people are so ready to accept it as "part of life" leaves little hope that the human race may ONE day evolved from our primitive and barbaric state!

 

Stay safe.

 

Perfection does not exist. The question therefore, is: what level of imperfection are we willing to settle for?

By anonymous• 1 May 2008 07:22
anonymous

yep, thats the way it is I'm afraid! Thats life! Same thing happens all the time in the UK....

By paul• 1 May 2008 07:04
paul

Killing, anyway it cannot be justified.

Log in or register to post comments

More from Qatar Living

Qatar’s top beaches for water sports thrills

Qatar’s top beaches for water sports thrills

Let's dive into the best beaches in Qatar, where you can have a blast with water activities, sports and all around fun times.
Most Useful Apps In Qatar - Part Two

Most Useful Apps In Qatar - Part Two

This guide brings you the top apps that will simplify the use of government services in Qatar.
Most Useful Apps In Qatar - Part One

Most Useful Apps In Qatar - Part One

this guide presents the top must-have Qatar-based apps to help you navigate, dine, explore, access government services, and more in the country.
Winter is coming – Qatar’s seasonal adventures await!

Winter is coming – Qatar’s seasonal adventures await!

Qatar's winter months are brimming with unmissable experiences, from the AFC Asian Cup 2023 to the World Aquatics Championships Doha 2024 and a variety of outdoor adventures and cultural delights.
7 Days of Fun: One-Week Activity Plan for Kids

7 Days of Fun: One-Week Activity Plan for Kids

Stuck with a week-long holiday and bored kids? We've got a one week activity plan for fun, learning, and lasting memories.
Wallet-friendly Mango Sticky Rice restaurants that are delightful on a budget

Wallet-friendly Mango Sticky Rice restaurants that are delightful on a budget

Fasten your seatbelts and get ready for a sweet escape into the world of budget-friendly Mango Sticky Rice that's sure to satisfy both your cravings and your budget!
Places to enjoy Mango Sticky Rice in  high-end elegance

Places to enjoy Mango Sticky Rice in high-end elegance

Delve into a world of culinary luxury as we explore the upmarket hotels and fine dining restaurants serving exquisite Mango Sticky Rice.
Where to celebrate World Vegan Day in Qatar

Where to celebrate World Vegan Day in Qatar

Celebrate World Vegan Day with our list of vegan food outlets offering an array of delectable options, spanning from colorful salads to savory shawarma and indulgent desserts.