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Manchester: Battered wife killed husband

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  • Manchester: Battered wife killed husband

    Manchester Evening News, UK
    May 13 2005


    Battered wife killed husband

    A MOTHER of three stabbed her violent husband to death and then set
    fire to his body after enduring years of beatings, sexual abuse and
    humiliation.

    Armenian-born Lana Yadgari, aged 32, of Northridge Road, Blackley,
    was jailed for four years at Manchester Crown Court on Wednesday.

    The sentence was condemned by the Justice for Women organisation, who
    said after Mrs Yadgari's conviction that she had suffered from
    battered wives' syndrome and should have been freed to go home to her
    children, aged 13, 12 and 10.

    But the judge, Mr Justice Cooke, said although he accepted that she
    suffered from battered wives' syndrome, the offence was so serious
    she had to go to jail.

    The court heard how Mrs Yadgari lost control and killed her husband
    when he forced her into the family car and drove to a secluded spot
    where he threatened to kill her.

    Mrs Yadgari had spent nine days in hosital after being badly beaten
    by her husband just weeks before killing him.

    She had denied murder, but admitted manslaughter on the grounds of
    diminished responsibility.

    She wept throughout the hearing, which had to be interpreted for her.
    She will now spend another 17 months in prison before she can be
    paroled.

    Her counsel, Mr Rock Tansey QC, said the couple married in 1990 and
    her husband became violent the following year because their first
    child was a girl and not a boy.

    Mr Tansey said: `She was a Christian and he was a Muslim, and he
    blamed her because the child was not a boy. He would hit and punch
    her, and after the second child, another girl, was born he again
    became angry and blamed her.'

    He said although her third child was a boy, Mrs Yadgari was still
    constantly abused physically and sexually.

    The family came to Britain in 2002 when Mr Yadgari tried to seek
    asylum, but he continued to abuse her.

    By the time of the killing Mrs Yadgari had a lover, but had not
    reported the beatings to police.

    On the day of the killing she had been forced into the family Astra
    and she saw a knife and a petrol can. Believing she was going to be
    murdered she fought back for the first time in her life.

    She said: `It goes against what I believe and I am horrified by what
    happened that night.'
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