Shafilea
Ahmed, 17, suffered years of abuse from her mum and dad before they decided to
end her life for bringing ‘dishonour’ to the family. Shafilea Ahmed was
murdered by her parents in front of her siblings for wearing a top that showed
off her arms. The couple pinned their daughter down on the sofa and stuffed a
carrier bag into her mouth until she turned blue and suffocated in September
2003.
Her
father, Iftikhar Ahmed, put her body in the back of his car and dumped it 70
miles away from their home in Warrington. The next day police were alerted when
Shafilea wasn’t seen at school – but her parents stated she had run away. Now
one of the teenager’s close family friends, Shanin Munir, has helped reveal the
extent of the abuse she went through before her death. In a new documentary
called ‘When Missing Turns into Murder’, she said Shafilea’s mum and dad would
often call her a ‘whore and a prostitute’ and beat her if they believed she was
misbehaving.
The
teenager dreamed of being a lawyer and had ‘texted boys’, although not on her
own phone because ‘her parents would check’, Shanin said. She told The Sun:
‘I’d heard there were physical beatings and a lot of emotional abuse. Her
sister told me her parents would lock Shafilea in the garden. ‘She wanted to escape
her home, for her it was hell.’ Shafilea was the oldest child of Farzana and
Iftikhar Ahmed, who met through an arranged marriage. As she got older, she
adopted a more Western way of living, taking an interest in fashion and wearing
make-up and false nails.
Her
parents tried to curb her ‘rebellious’ nature and one year arranged a holiday
to Pakistan, where they intended to marry her off to a cousin. Shafilea refused
to go and so her father drugged her with sleeping pills as a result. After
awaking in Pakistan, the teenager was so terrified about what would happen she
drank bleach in a suicide attempt, severely burning her throat and oesophagus.
She was rushed to hospital and kept there for two months, while her father and
siblings flew back home to the UK.
When
she was well enough to return, he told medical professionals in Warrington that
his daughter had mistaken the bleach for mouthwash. After that, the abuse grew
more intense and Shafilea’s parents planned an ‘honour killing’ as a way to end
the ‘shame’ she had brought on the family. During a furious row over her
short-sleeved top, they killed her in the living room and made her siblings
watch. Shafilea’s body was found five months after her death in the River Kent
near Sedgwick, Cumbria. The family put on a funeral and pretended to grieve,
but her sister Alesha later went to the police and bravely told them what had
happened.
She
described seeing Shafilea’s eyes going wide and her legs kicking frantically
before she urinated on the sofa in the struggle. In September 2011, Iftikhar
and Farzana were arrested and charged on suspicion of murder. After seeing the
case in the media, family friend Shahin decided to come forward as she had
received letters from Shafilea’s other sister talking about the night of the
murder.
The
sister asked for the letters to be burned but luckily Shanin made copies of
their contents. ‘She talked about this one chair where they would always sit
Shafilea, and the family would gather around,’ Shanin said. ‘That’s when they
started abusing her and beating her. One would hold her while the other would
physically abuse her.’ Iftikhar and Farzana were found guilty and were sentenced
to 25 years in prison with no parole in 2012. When Missing Turns To Murder is
on Crime and Investigation channel at 9pm on Monday April 15
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