A 23-year-old transgender woman, Doski Azad has been killed by her brother in a so-called ‘honour killing’ in Iraqi Kurdistan.
According to the police, the deceased, who was a make-up artist, was shot dead by her long-lost brother, Chakdar Azad.
Police heard about Ms. Azad’s death three days later, after receiving a call from a man who identified himself as another brother of the victim. Ms. Azad was found dead in the village of Mangesh, around 12 miles north of the city centre of Duhok.
Ekurd Daily reported that no arrests have been made and the suspect fled the country.
Ms. Azad, who left home more than five years ago, had received multiple threats from her family because of her identity despite establishing her own life as a woman and working in a salon.
Speaking to Rudaw, her uncle Dlovan Sadiq said: ‘She left the house five to six years ago, I had not seen her ever since. Doski made a mistake.’
A friend of hers also told the publication that Ms Azad’s father had taken her ID and passport from her but that she ‘seemed to have received it back because she spent New Year’s in Dubai’.
Another source also sad that her brother fled the country on January 30, and drove north to Turkey to avoid tracking, Rudaw reports.
The US Consulate General in Erbil, the Iraqi Kurdish capital, yesterday condemned the killing in a statement which read: ‘We categorically condemn this violence and the discrimination that is undoubtedly at the root of this crime
We ask the authorities to thoroughly investigate this murder and prosecute the perpetrator to the fullest extent of the law.’
Duhok police have said it was Ms Azad’s family who told them she was killed by her brother, and reported where her body was.
Speaking to local media, district director Brendar Dosky had said that the motive behind the killing is likely Ms Azad’s transgender identity but ‘this is preliminary information and it needs a detailed investigation.’
Ms. Azad’s body was last understood to have been examined by forensic teams.
Her family called the police around 3pm on January 31. Ms Azad’s brother is thought to have returned to Kurdistan in January.
An arrest warrant for the suspect, who allegedly lives in Germany, has been issued, VOA reported.
Activists have said this killing in particular, has been ‘gravely concerning’ for transgender people in the area, a woman’s rights activist told the publication.
Hafya Doski said: ‘They already feel discriminated against in our society and attacks like this only exacerbate those fears.’