Fidan, her hair dyed blonde, is in hiding from her husband, who she says beats and rapes her. She is terrified her family will kill her if she goes home to eastern Turkey. Back in Anatolia, the 19-year old's relatives believe she has brought shame on them by leaving her 50-year old Turkish husband, who is also in Germany.
She will not say exactly where he is. "I won't go back. I am afraid. Death awaits me there," said Fidan, nervously biting her fingers and fiddling with her long hair. She has only basic German language skills and her lawyer interprets her broken sentences from Turkish. Dressed in scruffy jeans and a red anorak, she looks like any other 19-year old Turkish girl living in Germany.
But Fidan is alone in Berlin, looking for a job and understanding little of what goes on around her. She says she has no friends and, with a cover name to prevent her husband finding her, she has even lost her identity.
Worst of all, she fears becoming an 'honour-killing' victim. United Nations' bodies have said about 5,000 women die in honour killings globally every year. Many more commit suicide. But little is done to discourage the practice, which in Europe is hardly discussed.
"The family's honour depends on the woman and if it is damaged, the woman is destroyed," said Evrim Baba, who represents the far-left Linke party in Berlin's city parliament. She is a Kurd who came to Germany when she was 11. "Many girls in immigrant communities are trapped in rigid patriarchal structures and live in fear of their families."
In Germany, which has the second largest Muslim population in western Europe after France, 55 attempted honour killings took place between 1996 and 2005, say police. A case last year propelled the issue into the headlines. A man of Turkish descent was jailed for shooting dead his sister at a Berlin bus stop after she left her husband to live alone. His brothers were acquitted of conspiracy to murder.
Cases like this eat at Fidan, who grew up in rural a village in Turkey's region of Anatolia where cultural traditions still play a big role. "I didn't have a childhood. All I remember is beating and subjugation," she said. "I have no happy memories."
At 14, she was betrothed to a cousin. When she said she did not want to marry him, Fidan was beaten. Only after she took handfuls of pills, hoping to die, was the Rumours started circulating the engagement was cancelled because she had lost her virginity, a charge Fidan denied but which would also damage her family's honour. Fidan, unwilling to talk about these painful memories, rubs her forehead and lowers her gaze as her lawyer tells the story.
After about four months of continual beatings she fled, encouraged by her German teacher. Her husband says if he finds her he will report Fidan to the authorities to be sent back to Turkey. "The message from Turkey is: something had better happen to you en route, or you will die here," said Fidan's lawyer Canan Bayram.
All Fidan wants now is to build a life in Germany. "God willing, I can be happy here. I want to find a job and a flat, but no husband, no children," said Fidan with a smile. But it isn't easy. Fidan, who wants to take her husband to court for beating , has to wait another year before she can act without risk of deportation.
In Germany, immigrant women have to be married for two years before they can divorce and stay in the country independently. A ruling in Frankfurt last month highlighted the conflicting attitudes which enable honour crimes to continue, say Muslim women. A judge refused a quick divorce to a battered wife of Moroccan descent saying it was not unusual for a man with a Moroccan background to physically punish his wife.
"Women need greater legal protection," said Bayram. "The EU and Germany are helping women in forced prostitution and people-trafficking, but little is being done about protecting women from honour crimes."
Many women say the failure of Germany, home to about 3.2 million Muslims, to face up to honour crimes is a result of the lack of an integration policy in the past followed by half-hearted attempts to engage with Muslim communities.
Most of Germany's 2.5 million people of Turkish origin are "guest workers" and their descendants, whose labour helped fuel the post-war economic miracle. "There was no integration policy for decades and parallel societies developed," said lawmaker Baba. "Many immigrants reverted to traditional systems."
As fears grew about the radicalisation of disillusioned young Muslims, politicians decided a couple of years ago they had to improve integration and engaged with Islamic groups.
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