“Whitewashing the murder of Aqsa Parvez” by Michelle Malkin

Earlier we posted about a Muslim teen, in Canada, who was murdered by her father over her refusal to wear the hijab, the Islamic headscarf.
The press has acted deplorable in this situation with a constant attempt to “whitewash” this terrible crime.
Michelle Malkin has this to say:

What is it with our craven mainstream media? They simply cannot give you the news straight when it comes to bloody sharia and bloody jihad. A Muslim girl was murdered over her refusal to wear a hijab, for crying out loud, and this is how it’s headlined:

Canadian Teen Dies; Father Charged

Meantime, the Canadian press is pulling out its “Broad Strata” card again.

Five Feet of Fury and Halls of Macadamia spotlight the press quoting spin doctor Mohamed Elmasry, President of the Canadian Islamic Congress, claiming it was a “teenager issue.”

“I don’t want the public to think that this is really an Islamic issue or an immigrant issue,” said Mohamed Elmasry of the Canadian Islamic Congress. “It is a teenager issue.”

Blood pressure rising yet?

Keep reading.

Jihad Watch catches the National Post in the act with this quote:

“The strangulation death of Ms. Parvez was the result of domestic violence, a problem that cuts across Canadian society and is blind to colour or creed.”

The only ones blinded here are the dhimmi journalists wielding the whitewash brush over Aqsa Parvez’s dead body.

Meanwhile TheStar uses this whitewash:

Hijab can divide families
But tension can also be caused by girls who chose to adopt headscarf against parents’ wish, say some

The suggestion of violent disputes between a 16-year-old girl in Mississauga and her father over her desire to show her hair and live a “normal” lifestyle raises questions about tensions between parents and children in the Muslim community.

But members of the community – particularly young Muslim women – say the tension can exist both ways.

Ausma Khan, the editor-in-chief of Toronto-based Muslim Girl magazine, said research into the readership of her publication shows that the decision to wear the hijab – the traditional Muslim headscarf – is almost always a choice the girl makes on her own.

“We have also heard from other girls saying that they don’t know if they want to wear it and that they’re unsure and that there is community or family pressure to wear it,” she said, but stressed that type of response was in the minority.

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