Wednesday, December 14, 2011

TheMorningNews Wed Dec 14th 2011: The Feminist Corner


Wednesday Dec 14th 2011


The Feminist Corner
By  fromiMcLau

This is a section devoted to the rights of women in the world. Free the women and you will free the world!

The current state of affairs in some countries seems to be  a medieval nightmare in which slavery, torture, mutilation, stoning, hanging, beheading of women is common place. Sometimes children  as well as men are affected by those practices. And this is everyday because they live in a sick realm of constant fear. 
fromiMcLau at the
Dancing on My GRAVE Studio


This is really outrageous:

Stop the Barbarian!

Saudi Woman Beheaded for 'Witchcraft'
By RANDY KREIDER | ABC News (00:16 PST Dec 13rd 2011)  (  copy/pasted from Yahoo news)

A Saudi woman was beheaded after being convicted of practicing "witchcraft and sorcery," according to the Saudi Interior Ministry, at least the second such execution for sorcery this year.

The woman, Amina bint Abdulhalim Nassar, was executed in the northern Saudi province of al-Jawf on Monday.

A source close to the Saudi religious police told Arab newspaper al Hayat that authorities who searched Nassar's home found a book about witchcraft, 35 veils and glass bottles full of "an unknown liquid used for sorcery" among her possessions. According to reports, authorities said Nassar claimed to be a healer and would sell a veil and three bottles for 1500 riyals, or about $400.

According to the ministry, Nassar's death sentence was upheld by an appeals court and the Saudi Supreme Judicial Council.

Philip Luther, the interim direct of Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa program, condemned Nassar's killing, calling it "deeply shocking."

"The charges of 'witchcraft and sorcery' are not defined as crimes in Saudi Arabia and to use them to subject someone to the cruel and extreme penalty of execution is truly appalling," Luther said.

Luther said that a charge of sorcery is often used by the Saudi government as a smokescreen under which they punish people for exercising freedom of speech.

Nassar was not the first person to be executed for alleged witchcraft by the Saudi government this year. In September, a Sudanese man was publicly decapitated with a sword in the city of Medina after he was found guilty of the same crime.

According to Amnesty International, at least 79 people have been executed in Saudi Arabia so far in 2011, more than three times as many as in 2010. The human rights group condemned the kingdom's reliance on capital punishment.  


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