Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Sore Throat For Months

Lebanon: Maronite drug dealer Boutros Habchi was in the car of a member Phalangist


arrested Boutros Habchi, dealer close to the "Lebanese Forces", while transporting cocaine in the car of a member


jeunempl Published by the February 23, 2010 El

Nashra television channel Al Jadeed "reported in a dispatch member's Caucus member "Lebanese Forces, Elie Kayrouz.
Source: http://mplbelgique.wordpress.com/2010/02/23/arrestation-de-boutros-habchi-dealer-proche-des-forces-libanaises-alors-quil-transportait-de-la-cocaine -in-the-car-dun-MP /




A drug dealer arrested in the car of MP Keyrouz
Dodz Published by the February 24, 2010 L'Orient le Jour
ISPs issued a statement yesterday evening highlighting the arrest of a man at 18 pm at Dahr al-Baydar. The text states that after "a spinning conducted over several days, the office Central Anti-Narcotics BH has managed to arrest a fugitive from justice on the basis of 51 warrants of arrest against him, relating in particular to packages related to drugs. The man, who was taken to the central office of counter-narcotics, was not at the time of his arrest in possession of narcotics. "
The New TV had reported earlier in the evening, that "Boutros
Habchi, a militant Lebanese Forces, was arrested at Dahr al-Baydar while he was in possession of drugs and was on board a car belonging to MP Becharre Elie Keyrouz
. The press office of the member Keyrouz issued a statement denouncing the way in which "some media reported the information." The text stresses that "as the member of North Lebanon was bedridden for several weeks following surgery on his leg, his bodyguards have asked permission to go aboard his own car with a plate Regular registration and unparliamentary to attend the funeral in Deir el-Ahmar. Once there and back, a local man, Boutros Habchi, asked if they could drop it in Beirut. Dam Dahr al-Baydar, ISPs have requested their identity documents to people in the vehicle. It turned out that there is an old arrest warrant on a drug possession case against Habchi. The man was arrested, while the bodyguards of Mr. Keyrouz continued on their way to Beirut. "
Source:
http://mplbelgique.wordpress.com/2010/02/24/un-trafiquant-de-drogue-arrete-dans-la-voiture-du-depute-keyrouz/



How Do They Laser A Cervical Erosion

Trivia: an idiot of Levantine Maronite put in his place by a brave Turkish police


Pierre Eid Interview with JG Malliarakis, Light
101, May 25, 2007: "(...)

I remember that I spent the Syrian-Turkish border in 1974, I was doing a ride in from Egypt, where I spent my Holiday home and ... Check the Syrian border, I waited two hours for the formalities are happening, then I arrive at the Turkish border, the Turkish police said, "but we are not here in Syria we are in Europe. "And it hit me." Source: http://lumiere101.com/2007/05/25/la-turquie-et-leurope/

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Which Mascara For Conditioning

The war criminal Samir Geagea Maronite and trafficking, Levantine

World 24/06/1995 at 5:57
The fall of a warlord in Lebanon. Accused of massacres, Samir Geagea, former head of the Lebanese Forces, awaiting the verdict of justice.


Christophe Boltanski
The Lebanese judiciary must now make its verdict in the trial against Geagea, who was one of the most powerful warlords, appeared in favor of the Lebanese civil war, denounced from the beginning of rigged trial, intended to shoot him because of his opposition to Syria's grip on Lebanon.

June 13, 1978, a group of 300 Christian militiamen have launched an attack of Ehden, the summer residence of the former head of the Lebanese state Suleiman Frangieh. During the fighting, his son Tony Franjieh, 36, wife of the latter, Vera, 32, daughter Jehane, just three years, the maid and the driver, were killed. Bashir Gemayel is, head of the Lebanese Forces militia, who ordered the attack to "punish" the pro-Syrian leanings fringes, a large clan Christian North. To direct the operation, he chose a young internal medicine, son of a corporal, already dubbed El-Hakim, the "Doctor" by his fellow soldiers: Samir Geagea. The two organizers of the killings will explain later that they were unaware of the presence of the heir of the clan Frangieh inside the palace. Samir Geagea, who was wounded at the first exchange of fire, barely disguise the fate he reserved for Tony: "Anyway, it could not fail to be killed one day or another," says he later (1).

The fall from Ehden hit the country in amazement. For the first time, leaders Christians massacred them.
With this bloodbath, Samir Geagea links its fate to that of Bashir Gemayel.
When the second succeeds in establishing itself as the leading Maronite leader, Geagea naturally becomes his military commander. Bashir, as a cadet of Gemayel, knows he must if he wants to disrupt the tradition achieve its ends. To seize the Phalange, the old party founded by his father in the 30s on the model of European fascist movements, the young Bashir has created his own militia in 1976: Lebanese Forces (LF). Geagea naturally became the military leader. In August 1982, Bashir was elected President of the Republic, in the shadow of Israeli tanks entered the country. But three weeks later, he died in a bomb attack. His death leaves

Maronite militiamen orphans. Amine Gemayel succeeded his brother. He was elected head of state. But he is wary of FL, which make him well. At the same time, the Israelis, having served in Beirut, trying to extricate the Lebanese quagmire. In September 1983, they evacuated nearly without warning the Chouf mountains, leaving facing Christians and Druze. The Lebanese Forces, arrived in the van of the enemy, broke the atrocities by their fragile sectarian balance that had survived to war. At the head of his men, Samir Geagea is trying to defend the town of Deir el-Kmar, against fighters Druze Walid Jumblatt, then stalled. Chouf Christians fleeing in droves. After those of the mountain, it's time for Christians to take the coastal road to exile. The gap between Amin Gemayel and Samir Geagea, each making the other responsible for the loss of the Christian regions of the South. In 1985, the break is.
The President ordered the reopening of the coastal road north of Beirut, and the removal of the dam Barbara held by men of Geagea.
This military post to control access ports through which pass illegal weapons, drugs, and merchandise (2). Incidentally, the militiamen take their tithe. Samir Geagea refused to comply. It is excluded from the leadership of the Phalange. On 12 March 1985, he raised with the help of a veteran of Lebanese politics, Karim Pakradouni, and Elie Hobeika, head of intelligence and the LF responsible for the massacres against the Palestinian camps of Sabra and Shatila . Within hours, without firing a shot, the triumvirate conquers the Lebanese Forces. A year later, Elie Hobeika, spawning with Syria, is ousted (3).

Stripped of its rival, Samir Geagea becomes one of the most powerful warlords of Lebanon. He transforms his militia into a real army. He acquired an immense fortune from taxes it collects from one end to another of the "Marounistan" (the country Maronite). Above all, he knows reinvest its war chest in many successful companies. It controls the television's most watched LBC (Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation), and radio, the Voice of Lebanon. To complete his image of a monk-soldier, he likes to quote Teilhard de Chardin and dreams aloud of a mini-Christian state. But Amin Gemayel, in the final term, appoint the Prime Minister as Interim General Michel Aoun, Chief of Staff of the Army. Not recognized by Muslim leaders, it is difficult to reconcile with the small Christian Samir Geagea. Clashes erupted between the army and the LF. In 1989, General Aoun launched his "war of national liberation" against Syrian occupation. Samir Geagea rallied to his first fight, then the "coward" by adhering to agreements concluded by the Lebanese deputies in Taif (Saudi Arabia) to end the civil war. This reversal plunged the Christian camp in a terrible fratricidal war. Jounieh East Beirut, the army and the Lebanese clash with heavy weapons. Families are torn. The wound will never heal. In October 1990, Syria bears the final blow to General Aoun. A few days after his fall, one of his main Christian allies, Dany Chamoun, son of former president Camille Chamoun, was assassinated with his wife and two children. Samir Geagea released seems to be winning the war. Apart from him, all the major Christian leaders are dead or in exile.

He refuses, however, unlike other warlords, to return to the government and themselves as the leading opponent of Syrian domination of the country. In February 1994, a bomb exploded in a church north of Beirut: authorities accuse FL. Samir Geagea was imprisoned and his party dissolved. Justice unearthed, despite the amnesty, other cases against the "Doctor", in particular murder of Dany Chamoun. Following an expedited trial, during which several defendants say they were tortured, Samir Geagea is brought to trial before a High Court of Justice. The case of the Church deflates quickly, but the murder charge against Chamoun's residence, and may mark the end of the last warlord of Lebanon.

(1) A Thousand Years of War, by Jonathan Randal. Grasset, 1984. (2) War Maronite Sneifer by Regina-Perri. L'Harmattan, 1995. (3) Le Piège, par Karim Pakradouni. Grasset, 1991.
Source : 
http://www.liberation.fr/monde/0101145710-la-chute-d-un-seigneur-de-la-guerre-du-liban-accuse-de-massacres-samir-geagea-ancien-chef-des-forces-libanaises-attend-le-verdict-de-la-justice



Emu Difference Stinger And Bronte

Ramallah: A Palestinian Christian victim of a crime of honor from his father



Murdered in name of family honour


Chris McGreal in Ramallah reports on a rise in killings of Palestinian women
    * The Guardian, Thursday 23 June 2005 00.01 BST     * Article history All he asked was that Faten return home.
Hassan Habash even gave his word to an emissary from a Bedouin tribe traditionally brought in to mediate in matters of family honour, a commitment regarded as sacrosanct in Palestinian society. But the next weekend, as Faten watched a Boy Scouts parade from the balcony of her Ramallah home, the 22-year-old Christian Palestinian was dragged into the living room and bludgeoned to death with an iron bar. Her father was arrested for the murder.


"He gave me his word she would not be harmed," said Ibrahim Abu Dahouq, the Bedouin mediator. "He was crying and begging her to come home. They were even telling me that for their daughter to leave their house as a bride would be an honour for them. We never believed that love would lead to death in this ugly way."

Two days later, another ritual of killing unfolded a few miles away in Jerusalem.

Maher Shakirat summoned three of his sisters to discuss a family uproar after one of them, Rudaina, was thrown out by her husband for an alleged affair. Maher listened to Rudaina's denials, and her sisters' pleas that they were not covering up the affair. Then he forced the three women to drink bleach before strangling Rudaina, who was eight months pregnant. The other sisters tried to flee but Maher caught and strangled Amani, 20. The third, Leila, escaped but was badly injured by the bleach. Maher, a bus driver in his 30s, is in hiding but his parents were arrested for allegedly ordering the murders and his wife was detained as an accomplice. As he was taken into custody, Rudaina's father, Amin, was asked why his daughters were killed. "Because they dishonoured the family," he said. "A married woman who goes with another man isn't good."

The murders of Faten Habash and the Shakirat sisters last month were the latest in a series of brutal "honour killings" that have shaken the Palestinian community over recent weeks. The deaths have prompted demands for a change to laws inherited from the days of Jordanian rule that deem all women to be "minors" under the authority of male relatives and that provide a maximum of six months in prison for killings in defence of "family honour."

But those calls have met with resistance in parliament where religious Palestinian MPs argue that reform will lead to a collapse in the moral fabric of society. According to the Palestinian women's affairs ministry, 20 girls and women were murdered in honour killings last year and about 50 committed suicide - often under coercion - for "shaming" the family through sex outside marriage, refusing an arranged marriage or seeking a divorce. Another 15 women survived attempts to kill them.

The ministry says that dozens of other killings are covered up each year. "We had one woman of 26 who was certified as dying of old age," said Maha Abu Dayyeh Shamas, director of the Women's Centre for Legal Aid and Counselling. "Putting 'falling into well' on the death certificate is very common. We find that the women were strangled and then dumped in the well."

Faten Habash's murder was unusual because she came from the Christian minority in the Palestinian territories. Her desire to marry a young Muslim, Samer Hamis, so infuriated her family that the couple decided to elope to Jordan.

Faten's father enlisted the family priest to stop his daughter on the grounds that, even though she was 22, all women are legally regarded as minors under the authority of their male relatives. The Palestinian authorities returned Faten to her home where she was beaten and her pelvis broken as she was either thrown from a window or jumped trying to escape. She spent six weeks in hospital. She sought protection under an ancient Bedouin formula for resolving disputes, known as Tanebeh. Abu Dahouq, a lawyer for the Dawakuk tribe, negotiated with the Habash family.

Mr Dahouq said: "Faten believed she had received a guarantee of security." Two days later she was murdered. "This family had no honour, no manners, no ethics," he said. "And the girl was as honourable as could be. All she wanted to do was marry this man she loved. I think the people in her church also have responsibility for this killing. They told this family that their daughter brought shame, so that makes them part of the crime." The family priest, Father Ibrahim Hijazin, declined to talk about Faten's killing other than to say he called the Palestinian authorities to prevent her from reaching Jordan. But he says other families would have reacted as hers did. "There is no interfaith marriage among Arabs. Catholics here are Christian by faith and Muslim by culture, and in this community it is forbidden for Christians to marry Muslims. It's not good. It's a tribal mentality. I don't accept it, but it is the culture," he said.

After Faten's murder, several hundred Palestinian women held a vigil in Ramallah to demand an end to honour killings.

The Palestinian women's affairs minister, Zuhaira Kamal, called for a change to the law to allow women over 18 to marry without the consent of a male relative and reform of the old Jordanian legislation that frees the killers after a few months. But MPs have resisted the move.

"They're very traditional there," said Mrs Abu Dayyeh Shamas. "They say these are our traditions, that a man who is in a moment of anger is driven to do these things. It gives a message to the community that you can kill without punishment. We have a lot of complaints from women that their husbands are having affairs. We ask these MPs if they think these women should be allowed to kill their husbands. They can't answer that question."

Although honour killings have a long history in Palestinian society, women's rights groups say the rise in these murders cannot be separated from the resurgent violence of the past four years of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. "Things are breaking down because of the changing relationship between men and women. Increased numbers of women are the main source of income while her husband sits around. That is the kiss of death for that family," said Mrs Abu Dayyeh Shamas.

"Men feel they have lost their dignity and that they can somehow restore it by upholding the family's honour. We've noticed recent cases are much more violent in nature; attempts to kill, rape, incest. There is an incredible amount of incest."

Amira Abu Hanhan Qaoud murdered her daughter, Rafayda, because she became pregnant after being raped by two of her brothers.

"My daughter fell over and broke her knee. I took her to hospital and there the doctor told me she was pregnant. So I killed her. It's as simple as that," said Mrs Qaoud on her doorstep in Ramallah. Mrs Qaoud waited until the baby was born and given up for adoption. Then she presented her 22 year-old daughter with a razor blade and told her to slash her wrists.

She refused so her mother pulled a plastic bag over her head, sliced her wrists and beat her head with a stick. The brothers were sentenced to 10 years for the rape. Mrs Qaoud spent two years in prison for killing her daughter. She has purged her home of all pictures of her older children, and declines to discuss the killing, saying all she wants is to forget about it.


The repercussions of Faten Habash's murder are still being felt; the man she loved is in protective custody after threats from the Habash family.


The Bedouin mediator says the Habashes have dishonoured his tribe by breaching the pledge that Faten would not be harmed. "The crime is not against the girl, the crime is against our family," said Mr Abu Dahouq. "Since they have broken their word, we have the right to retaliate. There will be a reaction for betraying their religion and betraying us."
Source : 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/jun/23/israel



Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Chinese Curry Sauce Nutritional Values

The Army of South Lebanon (Maronite-dominated) and drug trafficking


Hassane Makhlouf,
Culture et trafic de drogue au Liban , 1994, p. 142 :

"Dans la région du Liban South, chain drug trafficking were held between Lebanon and Israel. Traffickers were also in the ranks of the Army militia in southern Lebanon cooperating with Israel, and a laboratory for the production of heroin was built Marjéoun south. The drugs were transported to Israel through the armor of the Israeli army, as stated in the newspaper "Yadohot Aharonot", which led the leaders of this country to decide to withdraw its army from Lebanon soon. "

Wat Dbz Episode Does Vegetta And Bulma Kiss

Sydney: the DK's Boys Lebanese bloodthirsty gang led successively by two Maronites


End of a violent era

Les Kennedy
May 9, 2010

The last chapter is about to be written in the bloody tale of ''DK's Boys'' - the drug gang that killed its own boss, Danny Karam. Its new leader, Michael Kanaan, was badly wounded.
On May 28 Saleh Jamal, 35, will be sentenced in Parramatta District Court as the only gang member to be prosecuted over the infamous drive-by shooting at Lakemba police station in November 1998.


Originally Kanaan was also charged over the attack in which bullets from semi-automatic pistols passed through the station's foyer window, narrowly missing five officers.
One round struck a computer screen on the front counter but the case against Kanaan was dropped. Jamal fled to Lebanon, where he was subsequently arrested and jailed for passport and terrorism offences.

In October 2006 he was extradited to Sydney, where he was convicted, with Kanaan, for shooting a man at Greenacre in 1998. Last November Jamal was found guilty of shooting with intent to cause grievous bodily harm to officers at the Lakemba police station.


Kanaan is in Goulburn jail's Supermax, serving three terms of life plus 50 years for killing Karam and the murders in July 1998, of Adam Wright, 23, Michael Hurle, 24, and the attempted murder of a third man at Five Dock.
Before
Karam's ambush murder by his own drug runners outside
a Surry Hills gang safe house in December, 1998,
Kanaan was alleged by police in court to have led the gang in two other drive-by shootings
- on the EP1 night club in Kings Cross (formerly The Tunnel - then promoted by John Ibrahim), and a shoot-up of Eveleigh Street, Redfern.

Those charges against him and other gang members were later dropped by the Director of Public Prosecutions. After the White City shoot-out, police alleged in court that ''DK's Boys'' were involved in a war with a rival Kings Cross crime syndicate.

Police alleged Kanaan and two other gang members set out that night to kill Ibrahim's long-term lieutenant, ''Tongan'' Sam Ngata, as a ruse make other drug figures think Ngata murdered their boss. Source :  http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/end-of-a-violent-era-20100508-uku4.html
La biographie du meurtrier maronite Michael Kanaan (successeur de Danny Karam, fondateur maronite du gang en question) :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Kanaan



Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Brazilian Waxing For Men Images

Sweden: a band of young rapists Assyrian-Chaldeans in Södertälje

Sweden: Christian rape gang?
Earlier this month Swedish news reported about
a rape gang which systematically raped girls in Södertälje. Four young men appeared in court on Thursday charged with involvement in a series of gang rapes in Södertälje in eastern Sweden.
A total of seven young men between the ages of 19 and 23 are being held in custody for the rapes.


The men are believed to belong to a network of several smaller groups who have systematically raped young women and girls in the town.
Six of them have been charged and four of them stood trial in Södertälje district court on Thursday for aggravated rape, among other charges, in one of the four cases.

The girls have said the men took turns raping them while the others held them down, newspaper Länstidningen Södertälje reports.


(more)

Source: The Local (English)



Södertälje has a very large community of Assyrian Christians,
and more recently Iraqis. 
According to one Swedish newspaper, all the rapists belonged to the same association and worked in restaurants, where they met the girls.  Some are Swedish citizens and some are facing extradition. 
(SV)  In other words, they are not ethnically Swedish.


Swedish blog Politisk Inkorrect, suspecting they are Assyrians, dug deep and discovered the names of the rapists (SV).   Apparently, they are all Iraqi and some needed an Arabic translator in court.  However, it seemed to me quite unlikely that Muslims have started naming their children after the Christian apostles.
 
And indeed, according to Assyrian/Syrian forums in Sweden, the rapists are all Iraqi Christians,
though there is still a discussion as to what specific ethnic group they belong to.  As for the girls who were raped,
I saw some claims that a couple were Assyrian, but other claims that they were all Swedish.
Generally I don't report about crimes committed by non-Muslims, as they're out of the scope of this blog.  However, since it is quite easy to jump to conclusions and assume all immigrants are Muslim, I thought this is worthy of posting.  Source : http://islamineurope.blogspot.com/2009/04/sweden-christian-rape-gang.html

Les noms des violeurs en question : * Ibrahim Ramaz Philip, born 1985. Iraqi citizen. Address Södertälje. * Markus Milad Naji, born 1989. Swedish citizen. Address Södertälje. * Pols Mihka Simon, born 1986. Iraqi citizen. Address Södertälje. * Asfar Sanar Soheil Salim, born 1990. Swedish citizen. Address Södertälje.
* Shabo Savio Najeb, born 1988. Unknown Citizen. Address unknown. * Mark Sulak
Rahim, born 1986. Iraqi citizen. Address Södertälje.
Source: http://worldreviewer.wordpress.com/2009/04/30/childrapists-convicted/

Indeed, there is little doubt (given name Ibrahim is also that Arabic version of Abraham, the biblical prophet).

Melena Velba After The Party

Gangsterism Assyrian Chaldean Sydney



Assyrian gang leader linked to murder

By Justin Norrie Police Reporter April 11, 2006 AdvertisementAdvertisement

ONE Of The State's most wanted murder suspects IS Linked To The shooting of a 21-year-old Greenfield Park man on Sunday night, police believe. Ramon Youmaran, wanted for the 2002 shooting murder of a man outside a Sefton hotel and linked to a fatal drive-by shooting outside Fairfield's Babylon Cafe in October, is a person of interest in the police inquiry into the shooting of Ashoor Audisho.

Youmaran, 27, is the alleged leader of the "dlasthr" gang, an Assyrian crime syndicate
whose members wear a distinctive clenched fist tattoo across their backs with the letters AK or "dlasthr".

"He is still running criminal operations in the Fairfield area after evading police in a high-speed pursuit in February," said Detective Superintendent Henney, who heads Task Force Gain, set up to tackle gun violence among Middle Eastern gangs.


Mr Audisho, an Iraqi-born man of Assyrian descent, had been a DJ at the Assyrian Australian Association Nineveh Sports and Community Club at Edensor Park.
Staff told the Herald he left unexpectedly before 6pm after taking a call on his mobile phone. Yesterday detectives took the names of people who had signed into the club on Sunday. Mr Audisho, who police said had no criminal record and who was not carrying a weapon, was shot three times after being confronted by three men of Middle Eastern appearance in Hamilton Road, Fairfield West. He died later at Liverpool Hospital.

Witnesses reported "seeing the three men … argue with the victim and then heard shots fired. Those three men then left the vicinity in a black Jeep Cherokee," Superintendent Henney said. Police were searching for links to the drive-by attack at the Babylon Cafe in late October. Mr Audisho's killing was not related to the murders of Bassam Chami, 26, a boxer, and his friend Ibrahim Assad, 27, who were shot dead in Granville on March 29.

"We're not looking at gangs connected to that [Granville], but we are looking at the operations of criminal gangs in the Fairfield area and shootings dating back some time," Superintendent Henney said.

On Sunday night police executed a search warrant at a home in Edensor Park, seizing a car, which is undergoing forensic analysis. No arrests were made but investigators have spoken to a man and two women, who they say are helping with inquiries. Superintendent Henney said police had not identified the people Mr Audisho had been with before his shooting.

Local Assyrians, who did not wish to be identified, said the victim was a respected member of his local church, St Zaia Cathedral in West Hoxton Park.
Source : 
http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/assyrian-gang-leader-linked-to-murder/2006/04/10/1144521269860.html


Pour en savoir plus sur ce gang assyro-chaldéen nommé "Dlasthr" :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dlasthr



Army Ball What To Wear

Egypt: a Muslim victim of a crime of honor by his brother



Muslim Victim Of Christian Honour Killing Buried Today Oct.09, 2008 in Christianity, Crime
Earlier on in the week I reported on the case of
Mariam Atef Khilla an Egyptian Coptic Christian who had converted to Islam three years earlier and married a Muslim man. Her brother Rami Atef Khella tried to convince her unsuccessfully to divorce her Muslim husband . When she refused Rami Atef Khella broke into her Cairo apartment and sprayed his sister and her family with gun-fire.In the resulting carnage Ahmed Saleh, Mariam’s husband was killed.
Ahmed Saleh’s funeral was conducted today and his wife Mariam Atef Khilla and daughter 18-month daughter Nora remain hospitalised in a serious condition:
“Hundreds lined up for the funeral of a
Muslim man killed by his Christian brother-in-law,
which was held amid tight security Wednesday night. Security forces shut off the street from both ends and ordered the closure of all the shops lining the funeral’s pathway.
Ahmed Saleh was killed by his wife’s brother Rami Atef Khella, 28, who was angered by his sister’s conversion to Islam three years earlier. Khella also shot his sister, Miriam, 25, and the couple’s 18-month daughter, Nora, who are in critical condition in the hospital.
The shooting occurred in the suburb of Al-Ameriya Tuesday when Khella cut the electricity of Ibrahim Abdulrahman street causing a blackout before descending on the couple’s apartment and opening fire on the family.

Khella was arrested in the early hours of Wednesday morning and confessed to the killing. He stated that his father and uncle did not participate in the actual crime, but it was his uncle, Raafat Khella, who drove him away from the scene after waiting for him in a car at the end of the road. The accused told police that he had purchased the gun used in the crime after failing to convince his sister to divorce Saleh.

AFP had reported that “Khella had been searching for his sister for about two years, after she left her home province with her Muslim husband and came to Cairo.”

Saleh’s father told Al-Dostour newspaper, “I want justice for my son because he did nothing wrong. All he was guilty of was marrying the woman he loved.” He added that after his son married Miriam her family threatened to kill them which caused him to report the affair to the state security apparatus, which made Miriam’s family sign an affidavit to not come near her or her husband.” (Source: Daily Egypt News)
Source :
http://islam-west.com/2008/10/muslim-victim-of-christian-honour.html