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| Saturday, 26 January, 2002, 08:36 GMT Young Kurd's murder shocks Sweden ![]() Swedish TV highlighted Fadime Sahendal's case in 1998 The murder of a 26-year-old Kurdish woman in Sweden has shocked the nation and triggered calls for urgent action to protect young immigrants who fall out with their families. The murder, was allegedly committed by her father, Rahmi Sahendal, as an "honour killing" because of her relationship with a Swedish man. He was arrested soon after the shooting in the city of Uppsala, north of Stockholm, and has been charged with her murder. He is reported to have wanted her to return to Turkey and marry a Kurdish man in an arranged marriage, which Fadime refused to do.
Fadime became a symbol for the vulnerability of immigrant women after appearing on television to campaign against "honour killings" and her death has dominated the Swedish media. Flags have been flying at half-mast in Uppsala and activists have held memorial services to remember Fadime in several towns across Sweden. Immigrants' groups have called on the government to pass urgent legislation to protect the rights of immigrant women. Since her death, the Swedish Government has accepted that parts of its integration policy have failed and has promised to change the law so that young immigrant women under 18 will now require permission to get married. Harassment Fadime's killing followed years of threats and harassment by her father and brother. In a highly publicised trial in 1998, her father was given a suspended sentence and a fine for threatening to kill her, while her 17 year-old brother was sentenced to probation for one year. Her brother was later sentenced to five months in prison for continuing to abuse Fadime. Fadime's Swedish boyfriend, Patrik, died in a car crash shortly after that trial. The police have now said they will re-examine the circumstances of the accident. Campaigning In November last year, Fadime addressed the Swedish parliament on the problems facing immigrant women.
"I think that it's important not to shut your eyes to immigrant girls." Speaking to a women's group's conference last autumn, she said: "I have had to pay a high price. My friends have become my new family. I do not regret leaving my family, but I feel sad that I was forced to do so. My family lost both its honour and a daughter. "For my family the purpose of my life was that I would marry a Kurdish man. Suddenly I was transformed from a good Kurdish girl into a wasteful whore." BBC Monitoring, based in Caversham in southern England, selects and translates information from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages. | See also: Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Media reports stories now: Links to more Media reports stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||
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