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  1. #1
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    England 28th Jan 2010

    Published: Today
    MORE than 1,000 mourners turned out yesterday to say goodbye to murdered teen Asha Muneer.
    Asha's grieving family held her funeral in a leisure centre rather than at home because so many people wanted to pay their respects to the 18-year-old student.
    Mourners including the sixth former's classmates began arriving hours before the service started.
    Many hugged and comforted each other, while others said prayers or quietly wiped tears from their eyes. One weeping relative could not bear to watch as Asha's coffin, covered in green, was revealed at the Rivermead Leisure Centre in Reading, Berks.
    A green curtain separated men and women, as would normally happen at a mosque.
    Asha's taxi driver dad Mohammed, 67, her mum Nasreen, 47, brother and three sisters were too upset to talk after the service.
    But her uncle Saeed Iqbal thanked the local community for giving the family "wonderful support". He said: "Nobody can understand the hell we've been through. She was innocent and somebody took her life for no reason. It's terrible for the whole family."

    Mr Iqbal called for the reintroduction of the death penalty, saying: "We are looking for justice and justice is a life for a life."
    Tim Royle, head of Highdown School where Asha was studying English, sociology and economics, said: "Asha will be remembered with great affection."
    After the service her coffin was driven to a local cemetery.
    Asha's body was found last week next to the River Kennet in Reading.
    The part-time shop assistant had suffered 25 stab wounds.
    A 19-year-old is charged with murder.


    Well MMI that has shot your theory that no one involved in murders wants the death penalty as revenge and retribution. You also said that relatives would never want a life for a life, but normal people are not as forgiving as you, and when they are hurt, they want to hurt back. I would also like to point out to you that this is the actual murder that i was refering to in my original post in this thread. Good timing or what? All that we have to do is find out which TV channal her murderer will be watching inbetween his three top class meals that he will be getting for the next 12 - 15 years. Then we can give him some rehabilitation money and send if off to get upset and kill again.

    Regards ian 2411
    Last edited by IAN 2411; 01-29-2010 at 04:28 AM.
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  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by ian 2411 View Post
    How can you say they have rights that have to be respected, they should lose their rights at the same time they took away the right of another to live.
    That's one opinon. It goes against the principle of the European Convention on Human Rights, and because of that, it will have to remain no more than an opinion. Fortunately, I would add.

    Quote Originally Posted by ian 2411 View Post

    Demean.

    To reduce somebody to a much lower status in a humiliating way, degrades.

    Who the hell care if the killer that is being executed is degraded, humiliated, or feels that his status is lowered; and I am damn sure that England’s last hangman, [Pierpoint] never once felt that way and neither would I. And I very much doubt that all those people, that go and witness the executions of the killers of their loved ones in the States, would agree with you either. They don’t go to humiliate the killer, they go to see justice and get closure.
    I know what the words I use mean, thank-you. I was more concerned about the demeaning of a society which imposes the death penalty in the name of justice than I was for the feelings of the killer. But the killer still has basic rights and a just society will not take them away. Britain is a just society and will not bring back judicial murder to quieten reactionary calls for revenge on the part of the victims and their families.

    Quote Originally Posted by ian 2411 View Post
    You must have a very misguided view of mankind, because I don’t think you have a clue what you’re talking about ... . You are now speaking not for yourself but for all of mankind, and it is a careless remark at the least.
    From my perspective, calls for blood-justice are out-dated, counter-productive and not to be countenanced under any circumstances. I don't make that remark casually: I truly belive it. Once again, it is pleasing to note that every government in the EU subscribes to a similar point of view, and people are not being executed to avenge a victim's death, no matter how badly relatives lust after the killer's death.

    Quote Originally Posted by ian 2411 View Post

    Well MMI that has shot your theory that no one involved in murders wants the death penalty as revenge and retribution. You also said that relatives would never want a life for a life, but normal people are not as forgiving as you, and when they are hurt, they want to hurt back. I would also like to point out to you that this is the actual murder that i was refering to in my original post in this thread. Good timing or what? All that we have to do is find out which TV channal her murderer will be watching inbetween his three top class meals that he will be getting for the next 12 - 15 years. Then we can give him some rehabilitation money and send if off to get upset and kill again.

    Regards ian 2411
    How so? Mr Iqbal is asking for revenge but disguising it as a call for justice. As you clearly have a fascination for the meaning of words, why not compare "justice" with "revenge" to see if they are synonymous.

    One other thing, I would ask you not to attribute hare-brained notions to me in order to expose them as unsupportable. I never said no one involved in murders wants the death penalty as revenge and retribution (in fact it seems to me that those who do want it are seeking revenge and retribution), nor did I say relatives would never want a life for a life. What I did say was that a life for a life would not satisfy them, they would yearn for more.

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