Showing posts with label public flogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public flogging. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Teenagers Flogged for Saudi Shops Rampage

MAIL ONLINE: Twenty Saudi teenagers who ransacked shops and restaurants have been publicly flogged.

Human rights activists and liberals condemned the beatings in Khobar and Dammam in eastern Saudi Arabia.

It was not clear what lay behind the rampage other than possible frustration at the strict laws and traditions of the Islamic kingdom.

'This terrible event reflects the need to allow more space for the youth in terms of sport clubs, movie theatres and recreation facilities,' said Abdullah al-Alami, a columnist who lives in Khobar.

Newspapers reported that the teenagers received at least 30 lashes each in a public square.

They gave different accounts of the incident, with some journals saying teenagers had urged officials to give more attention to youngsters with little to do.

Others reported that the youths had targeted Western brands thinking they had links to Israel.

The rampage took place on Saudi national day last week.

A police spokesman in the eastern province declined to comment, saying he was not authorised to talk to foreign media.

The interior ministry also declined to comment.

The Eastern Province is home to most of the country's massive oil wealth.

The bulk of Saudi Arabia's Shi'ite minority, which has long complained of discrimination, also lives there.

The staunch U.S. ally is a monarchy which has no parliament and where public protests are banned. >>> | Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

Protests at Sudan Woman's Trial

BBC: Police have fired tear gas at supporters of a Sudanese woman charged with wearing "indecent clothing" shortly before her trial was postponed.

The trial in the capital Khartoum was delayed for a month.

Under Khartoum's Sharia law, Lubna Ahmed Hussein could face up to 40 lashes in public if convicted.

Earlier, she told the BBC she was not afraid to be flogged publicly, saying: "Flogging is not pain, flogging is an insult to humans, women and religions."

She says she was wearing trousers when arrested and has resigned from a UN job that would have given her immunity to take on the case.

"If the court's decision is that I be flogged, I want this flogging in public," she told the BBC's Today programme.

She says she has invited 500 people to attend the hearing. >>> | Tuesday, August 04, 2009

From the Today programme