She wanted to live a free life. Her father, Jamal Mansour, killed her. He got 22 years. Not nearly enough. Honor murder should be a capital offense.

Tahani had been dating a non-Muslim boyfriend for about a month and worked to keep it a secret from her father who would not have approved.

Apparently not: he killed her in cold blood.

Tahani came home after midnight and the two argued. She brushed him off, went upstairs and fell asleep, Rogalski said. Mansour grabbed the gun he often took with him while making large bank deposits and followed her upstairs, Rogalski said. He told investigators that he grabbed the gun and thought: “If she doesn’t respect me, then she’ll respect this.”

Honor killing and violence is in accordance with Islamic mores and tradition. A recent survey showed that 91 percent of honor killings worldwide are committed by Muslims, and 84 percent of honor killings in the United States were done by Muslims. This is no surprise. A manual of Islamic law approved by Al-Azhar, the most respected authority in Sunni Islam, stipulates that “retaliation is obligatory…against anyone who kills a human being purely intentionally and without right.” However, “not subject to retaliation” is “a father or mother (or their fathers or mothers) for killing their offspring, or offspring’s offspring.” In other words, Islamic law sets no penalty for a parent who kills his child. Also, the legal codes of Jordan, Syria, and other Muslim countries have substantially reduced penalties for honor murders as compared to other murders, and Islamic clerics have resisted efforts to stiffen penalties for honor killings. (Source)

Rocky River dad killed his daughter because of ‘disrespect’ Updated on October 17, 2017 at 2:33 PM Posted on October 17, 2017 (thanks to Brian): CLEVELAND, Ohio — A Rocky River father admitted Tuesday that he shot his 27-year-old daughter to death because he felt she disrespected his rules about coming home late and failing to clean up her room. Jamal Mansour, 64, pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and felonious assault for the Sept. 27 death of Tahani Mansour, a pharmacist at University Hospitals Ahuja Medical Center and the youngest of seven kids. Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Nancy Margaret Russo sentenced him to 22 years in prison. Prosecutors and defense attorneys recommended Russo sentence him to between 15 and 25 years. Mansour cried throughout the hearing. He apologized to his family members who wept in the seats in the back of the courtroom. He waved to them and blew them a kiss as he left the courtroom in handcuffs. “I hope that they can forgive me,” he said through tears. “I miss her so much. I wish I was the one that was dead.” Mansour, who owns several gas stations throughout Northeast Ohio, spent his life providing for his family and had no criminal history or any prior allegations of abusing his children, defense attorney Angelo Lonardo said. Rocky River police had only been called to his home one other time, in 2012 when Mansour threatened to kill himself because his daughter was on a business trip in Las Vegas. “All his life he’s been an ideal father,” Lonardo said. “He was always working and he worked very hard for his children.” Assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Andrew Rogalski said the father and daughter had several issues with each other in the months leading up to the shooting. He said Tahani had been dating a non-Muslim boyfriend for about a month and worked to keep it a secret from her father who would not have approved. “When she was with him, she had to pretend like she was with other people,” Rogalski said. “She was worried about what would happen if he found out.” They also fought regularly about the state of Tahani’s room, which included piles of clothes all over the room and half-eaten meals left under her bed. Mansour went on a month-long trip to Jerusalem before the shooting. Tahani stayed in Ohio. She didn’t spend any of her nights at her home and her father found out, Rogalski said. A few nights after Mansour returned home, Tahani came home after midnight and the two argued. She brushed him off, went upstairs and fell asleep, Rogalski said. Mansour grabbed the gun he often took with him while making large bank deposits and followed her upstairs, Rogalski said. He told investigators that he grabbed the gun and thought: “If she doesn’t respect me, then she’ll respect this,” Rogalski said.

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