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How Noor Faleh Almaleki's Father Took Her Life

Faleh Hassan Almaleki left his country, Iraq, in the mid-1990s and moved to America, where he lived in the Phoenix area of Arizona.


Hassan insisted his family follow the tenets of his religion. He called his daughter a rebel for getting Americanized; her lifestyle was his headache. He wanted her to live the life of a typical Muslim woman

She was still a child when her father sent her to Iraq to get married to her older cousin in an arranged marriage. She defied his orders, flew back to Arizona in 2008, and got herself a boyfriend.

Her father targeted her on October 20, 2009; he hit her with his car in a hit and run incident. She was admitted to the emergency care unit, where she died a few days later.

How Noor Faleh Almaleki's Father Took Her Life


Nov. 3, 2009— -- An Arizona woman allegedly run over by her Muslim father for becoming "too Westernized" has died.

Police in Peoria, Ariz., expect to upgrade the charges against the woman's father, Faleh Hassan Almaleki, currently being held on two counts of aggravated assault after a 10-day manhunt ended Friday in London.

Noor Faleh Almaleki, 20, clung to life for nearly two weeks after being run down by her father's car. Her boyfriend's mother, 43-year-old Amal Edan Khalaf, was also injured in the attack and remains hospitalized with serious, but non-life threatening injuries.

"It occurred because her not following traditional family values. We've been told that by everybody," Peoria Police spokesman Mike Tellef told ABCNews.com last month. "He felt she was becoming too westernized and he didn't like that."

Faleh Hassan Almaleki, 48, was arrested by U.S. Marshals in Atlanta after he arrived at the airport there, having been sent back to the country from London.

Tellef said that Faleh Hassan Almaleki fled to Mexico after the incident and abandoned the Jeep Cherokee in Nogales, where police there eventually found and seized it, according to Peoria police.

Almaleki made his way to Mexico City, where he boarded a plane to London, but U.K. authorities refused to allow him into the country, and after U.S. officials were contacted, he was put on a plane back to the United States, the Peoria police said.

Honor Killings and Islam
Noor Almaleki had backed out of an arranged marriage about a year ago, police learned, and had been living with Khalaf and her son in a nearby town.

Tellef said the young woman dressed in American clothing and was wearing typical Western attire when she was struck.

The family were all American citizens, though Tellef said he believes the parents were born in Iraq.

He said it was unclear if Faleh Almaleki intended to kill his daughter, but "it was definitely intentional that he ran them down."

While Tellef had heard of so-called "honor killings" in other parts of the United States, this was the first such crime in Peoria.

The notion of an honor killing -- Muslim men murdering female relatives for dishonoring the family by violating Islamic tenets -- made the news over the summer when 17-year-old Rifqa Bary ran away from her parents in Ohio and turned up in the Florida home of Christian pastors Blake and Beverly Lorenz. Rafqa Barry claimed that her Muslim father had threatened to kill her for converting to Christianity.

Rifqa made tearful television appearance, crying on the Lorenzes shoulders, describing how she had to sneak around to attend church.

"They have to kill me because I'm a Christian. It's an honor [killing]. If they love me more than God, then they have to kill me," she told ABC's Orlando affiliate WFTV last month.

Blake Lorenz pointed to other honor killings, including the January 2008 murders of two Texas sisters who were believed to have been murdered by their Muslim father in a religion-fueld rage.

But Rifqa's father, Mohamed Bary, denied the accusation and said that while he preferred his daughter be a Muslim, she was free to practice whatever religion she chose.

"I don't believe my daughter would say this," Bary told "Good Morning America." "She's completely being coached -- I mean trained, influenced by these people. It's so sad."

A Florida judge this month said he planned to send Rifqa back to Ohio after determining there was no evidence that her life was in danger.

A Florida judge this month said he planned to send Rifqa back to Ohio after determining there was no evidence that her life was in danger.

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