Sohane Benziane
Sohane Benziane (1984–October 4, 2002) was a French girl of Algerian ancestry who was murdered at the age of 17.
On October 4, 2002 in Vitry-sur-Seine, South of Paris, 17 year old Sohane Benziane, the daughter of Kabyle immigrants, was burned alive in front of her friends in a cellar by her former boyfriend, a local caid (gang leader). While a watch was kept outside, the aggressor, nicknamed Nono, who had bought the bottle of gasoline a day before, poured gasoline over Sohane and set her on fire with a lighter.
As Sohane, engulfed in flames, managed to run out screaming in agony, her death was witnessed by a dozen other students that were coming out of class.
The incident captured the attention of the French and International press and sparked outrage throughout France. It led to the founding of the feminist rights movement Ni Putes Ni Soumises.
A commemorative plate in her memory was later desecrated. On October 4, 2005 a platform was inaugurated in her memory, in presence notably of her sister Kahina Benziane. On April 8, 2006 a French court sentenced Jamal Derrar (22) to 25 years in prison. Tony Rocca (23) was sentenced to 8 years for complicity.
See also
Additional sources
- Liberation article on Sohane in French
- L'humanite : article on Sohane in her sister's words in French
- Time Europe: Acting on the outrage
- Time Magazine: Sisters In Hell
- CNN Transcript: Muslim Women Rebel In France
- Book review Neither whores nor submissives and In gang-rape hell
- Vanity Fair:Daughters of France , Daughters of Allah
- Newsweek: Sexism in the cites