this one is making me think long and hard about the death penalty. It's just utterly heinous, despicable. and very very sad.
The story has been rocking our area since her remains were discovered. I'd wanted to post it before...but in the international climate I hadn't wanted it to denigrate into a racial issue. I really just feel for this girl. The parents are on trial now, so it's back on people's minds, and I thought it'd be a good time to share this one.
If we had capital punishment here, the guy could die, and fade to black...as it stands, he can suffer for life in prison...I keep coming back to that, and thinking the suffering is soooooo much better a punishment.
aaaaaanyway you can see by my babbling that this one is troubling...so go ahead and have a read, but it's disturbing, so be warned.
the rest of the long sad story
The story has been rocking our area since her remains were discovered. I'd wanted to post it before...but in the international climate I hadn't wanted it to denigrate into a racial issue. I really just feel for this girl. The parents are on trial now, so it's back on people's minds, and I thought it'd be a good time to share this one.
If we had capital punishment here, the guy could die, and fade to black...as it stands, he can suffer for life in prison...I keep coming back to that, and thinking the suffering is soooooo much better a punishment.
aaaaaanyway you can see by my babbling that this one is troubling...so go ahead and have a read, but it's disturbing, so be warned.
Farah Khan was just settled into senior kindergarten and bracing for her first Canadian winter in early December, 1999. She was 5 years old and, at only 35 pounds and a shade under 40 inches tall, tiny even for her age.
She'd arrived in Toronto from Pakistan that April, and though her middle name was Jahan, it might easily have been change. In her short life, Farah Khan had already been taken from her birth mother, had her given name changed from the original Maryam, had been moved halfway across the world and, in less than eight months in Canada, had already moved three times.
That fall, Farah had pictures taken with her schoolmates in Miss Cartwright's class at Second St. Public School in Etobicoke. She was wearing a peach dress with white frills. And she apparently loved those pictures.
A Superior Court jury was told yesterday — at the opening of the first-degree murder trial of her father and stepmother — that Farah's passion to own them may have cost her her life.
On Dec. 7, 1999, her dismembered body parts were found buried in green garbage bags in two Etobicoke parks.
A few weeks later, in the apartment in which her father and stepmother were living, police found the peach dress cut into more than 100 pieces.
Crown Attorney David Fisher told the jury that evidence he plans to call will show that "under our law, both Kaneez Fatima and Muhammad Arsal Khan are criminally responsible for the first-degree murder of Farah Khan."
the rest of the long sad story
