The Political Correctness that has infested Britain since the open tap of needless immigration is now revealing itself as insidious as many predicted.Has anyone ever heard a senior policeman say, "No! Our task is to enforce LAW, not to stand aside whilst minorities live by their archaic rituals and rites?"
Having experience the modern police service, one has to wonder what their role is in this worsening society. An assault reported by a diminutive lady has been brushed aside, "for lack of evidence". Isn't that for a jury to decide? That same lady has been honoured with an interview with officials from the Ministry of InJustice, a treacherous exercise in whitewashing victims complaints into silence.
If we cannot uphold English Law, the Scots have outlawed forced marriage, then we should emigrate to the heart of the Canadian tundra and keep ourselves warm as we burn two thousand years of enshrined history.
Having experience the modern police service, one has to wonder what their role is in this worsening society. An assault reported by a diminutive lady has been brushed aside, "for lack of evidence". Isn't that for a jury to decide? That same lady has been honoured with an interview with officials from the Ministry of InJustice, a treacherous exercise in whitewashing victims complaints into silence.
If we cannot uphold English Law, the Scots have outlawed forced marriage, then we should emigrate to the heart of the Canadian tundra and keep ourselves warm as we burn two thousand years of enshrined history.
Amplify’d from www.bbc.co.uk
'Honour' attack numbers revealed by UK police forces
Banaz Mahmod left her violent husband to be with her boyfriend, but was killed by relatives in 2006
A freedom of information request by the Iranian and Kurdish Women's Rights Organisation (Ikwro) revealed that nearly 500 of these were in London.
Among the 12 forces also able to provide figures from 2009, there was an overall 47% rise in such incidents.
Honour attacks are punishments on people, usually women, for acts deemed to have brought shame on their family.
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Case study
In 2006, Iraqi Kurd Banaz Mahmod, 20, from Mitcham, south London, was strangled on the orders of her father and uncle because they thought her boyfriend was unsuitable.
They believed she had brought shame on her family after she left her violent husband and began the relationship.
Weeks before her death, Miss Mahmod had warned police her family were trying to kill her.
Cousins Mohammed Saleh Ali and Omar Hussain, both 28, were jailed last year for a minimum of 22 and 21 years respectively for killing their relative.
The victim's father Mahmod Mahmod and uncle Ari Mahmod were jailed for life in 2007.
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