The parents, uncle and aunt of a teenager of Bosnian Muslim origin will face trial in France on charges of violence against a minor for shaving her head over her relationship with a Christian Serbian boy, prosecutors said Friday.
The girl had her hair shaven off and was also beaten in the eastern city of Besancon on Monday, judicial sources said.
"Shaved and beaten because she 'loved a Christian'. Deeply shocked by
this act of torture on this 17-year-old girl," French Interior Minister
Gerald Darmanin wrote on Twitter.
"This barbarity calls for the most severe punishment," he added.
Police detained the two parents as well as the uncle and the aunt. They
were released under judicial control but are banned from contacting the
girl, who has been placed under protection. They are not aware of her
whereabouts.
They will be tried for "violence against minors", deputy prosecutor Margaret Parietti told AFP.
The girl, who arrived from Bosnia-Herzegovina two years ago with her
family, had for several months had a relationship with the young man,
aged 20, of Serbian origin who lived in the same building.
"The two families knew each other and (their relationship) was not a
problem, but when they started talking about marriage, the girl's
parents told her: 'We are Muslims, you cannot marry a Christian',"
Parietti said.
The family took away her phone and stopped her contacting her
boyfriend. The pair then fled for four days and on their return came to
the apartment of the girl's family along with the boy's parents.
"The first blow came from the mother, then there was an outbreak of
violence. She was taken to a room and beaten. She was shaved, according
to her testimony, by her uncle -- her father's brother -- while being
beaten", the prosecutor said.
The parents of the young man said they did not dare to intervene but he
left the house to report what had happened to police, prosecutors said.
Police arrived to find the girl had been made to hide in a room by her
aunt. But she was discovered and taken to hospital, the Est Republicain
newspaper reported.
She suffered a broken rib and bruises "everywhere", in particular "at the level of the ear", according to Parietti.
Head-shaving in this context has a particularly shocking context in France.
It was the punishment after World War II meted out to thousands of women who had relationships with Nazi occupiers.
Bosnia's 1992-1995 inter-ethnic war pitted Muslims, Serbs and Croats
against each other and left 100,000 people dead and displaced more than
two million.
photo
The historic Quai Vauban in Besançon