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German Court Convicts Turk of "Honor Killing"

DW staff (jb)April 13, 2006

In a case that captured international attention, the brother of a young German woman of Turkish origin was sentenced to nine years in prison for murdering her in a so-called honor killing.

https://p.dw.com/p/8G90
Hatun Sürücü's brother said he regrets her murderImage: dpa - Bildfunk

A Berlin court convicted a 19-year-old Turkish man for gunning down his sister on a Berlin street last year but acquitted his two older brothers of involvement in her death on Thursday.

Ayhan Sürücü, who confessed to shooting 23-year-old Hatan Sürücü in the head in February 2005, was sentenced to nine years in prison. Under German law, the maximum he could receive was 10 years because he was a juvenile at the time of the murder.

Presiding judge Michael Degreif said that Hatin Sürücü had been killed "because she lived her life as she saw fit," and had adopted Western ideas of sexual equality.

His brothers, Mutlu and Alpaslan Sürücü, who were accused of conspiring to murder, were found not guilty. Ayhan Sürücü had long insisted they had no involvement.

The murder of the young, divorced mother of a five-year-old son shocked Germany, especially after Ayhan Sürücü said he killed his sister because he felt dishonored by her lifestyle. He added that he now regretted his actions.

Trying to break free

Hatin Sürücü grew up in Germany and was forced into a marriage with a cousin in Turkey in 1998. Her son was born in Berlin in May 1999, and she subsequently refused to return to Turkey. Six months later, she moved out of her parent's home and began to train as an electrician, turning her back on her conservative family. She even stopped wearing her headscarf.

Hatun Sürücü
She was trying to lead an independent lifeImage: Polizei Berlin

Ayhan Sürücü told prosecutors he was appalled by her Western lifestyle and concerned about his nephew. As a result, he had visited his sister at home before walking with her to the nearby bus-stop. When she defended her way of life, he pulled out the gun he said he had bought off a Russian seller and killed her.

"It was too much for me," he told the court. "I grabbed the pistol and pulled the trigger. I don't even understand what I did anymore."

Prosecutors initially believed it was the oldest brother who had procured the weapon. They thought that Ayhan Sürücü and the third brother then went to their sister's house and persuaded her to go with them under false pretences before Ayhan Sürücü shot her.

Triggered debate

Though such killings have occurred before in Germany, this case caused particular outrage and set off a heightened debate in Germany over immigrant integration: Germany has a Turkish population of 2.6 million, 800,000 of whom live in Berlin.

Hatun Sürücü
Education has to be improved for Turkish immigrants, German experts sayImage: dpa - Report

And while most of the debated focused on ghettoization and the compatibility of Islamic values with western ones, it was the reaction of a small group of Turkish students to the murder that rattled Germany.

Days after Hatin Sürücü was killed, some male students of Turkish origin at a high school near the scene of the crime reportedly downplayed the act. During a class discussion on the murder, one said, "She only had herself to blame," while another remarked "She deserved what she got -- the whore lived like a German."

Such reactions cause alarm also among Muslim leaders.

"It might be a minority but even one person applauding is unacceptable," said Kenan Kolat, head of the Turkish Association in Berlin and Brandenburg.

According to Papatya, a Berlin-based organization that seeks to help young Turkish women, there were 45 known honor killings in Germany from 1996 to 2004, of which 13 occured in Berlin.