news

19-year-old Celine was found killed in her multi-million dollar home in a sickening crime.

When you hear the words ‘honour killing’ you think of some place far away. A different time. A culture that is backward and violent and hateful.

You don’t think of a 19-year-old girl in southwest London found dead in a £1.5 million (AUD2.5 million) home last Wednesday.

But today, tributes are flooding in for Celine Dookhran, 19, of Kingston who was allegedly raped and killed last week, in what is believed to be an ‘honour killing’.

The teenager was of Indian Muslim heritage and police allege she was murdered by a 33-year-old man known to the family, Mujahid Arshid, for being in a relationship with an Arab Muslim.

"The deceased was involved in a relationship with an Arab Muslim and the family members didn’t approve of this relationship because they are Indian Muslims," prosecutor Binita Roscoe told the court on Monday, Metro reports.

Dookhran's body was found after a second woman, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, alerted police. The second woman, who was also kidnapped and raped, was reportedly receiving treatment for knife wounds in a south London hospital when she informed authorities.

Metro reports police discovered Dookhran's body with her throat slit at home in southwest London. They arrested Arshid soon after, as well as another man, Vincent Tappu, 28, who has been charged for his alleged involvement in helping kidnap the women.

Dookhran was born in the London suburb of Wandsworth, BBC reports. She was passionate about cosmetics, and often shared makeup tips with her social media followers.

As tributes flow, people from all communities have been quick to point out: Honour killings are a cultural issue, not a religious one.

The two men have been remanded in custody, and both defendants will appear in court on August 21.

If you or someone you know is in need of help, please call the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service on 1800 RESPECT.

Listen: Mia Ayliffe-Chung was killed whilst trying to get her visa.

Related Stories

Recommended

Top Comments

Janelle Claire Berner 7 years ago

I've studied these types of events as part of my law degree and everytime they make me so sad. The bigger issue is that they've been happening for a very long time and far more often than you would think. It's usually all elaborately covered up by members of the family and yes it's domestic violence but specifically happens generally for the purpose of saving face and honour of a family. Often the families ship them off to relatives in far places where the crime is committed, girls are drawn out of school under the guise of a holiday but return married and abused or killed. And all in the name of protecting reputations. It's tragic.


nmn 7 years ago

if it was "honour" killing, why did he rape them. it does not sound honourable to me.

Janelle Claire Berner 7 years ago

For starters men in these cultures basically own their women- or so they think. They are brought up to see women as servants who are there for their every wish. This includes doing what they want with the women. Yes wrong but it's how it is. It's an honour killing because her actions are a risk to the family that they may be dishonoured in their own community. It's about saving face. That's how they view it anyhow