Don't mess with Saudi women!

Olive
By Olive

Saudi woman beats up religious police officer who stopped her for walking with a man

By Mail Foreign Service
Last updated at 9:28 AM on 18th May 2010

An unidentified Saudi woman is being hailed a hero after beating up a virtue cop who stopped her for walking with a man

When a Saudi religious policeman questioned a young couple walking together in an amusement park he got a painful surprise - when the woman suddenly attacked him.

The officer, from the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, asked the pair to confirm their identities and relationship to one another.

Unmarried men and women are barred from mixing under Saudi Arabia's strict Islamic rules.

The young man immediately collapsed for reasons that have not been made clear, the Jerusalem Post reported.

But before the policeman could do anything else, the woman - believed to be in her mid-twenties - laid into him.

He was punched repeatedly about the head and upper torso during the attack in the eastern city of Hofuf Mubarraz.

The assault was so severe and sustained, the officer was eventually taken to hospital suffering from severe bruising.

Neither religious nor local police have commented on the incident, which was widely played out in the Saudi media.

If the woman is charged with assaulting the officer, she could face a lengthy prison term, or a lashing, or both.

But public opinion appears to have been firmly behind her.

'People are fed up with these religious police, and now they have to pay the price for the humiliation they put people through for years and years,' Saudi human rights activist Wajiha Al Huwaidar told the Media Line news agency.

'To see resistance from a woman means a lot... This is just the beginning and there will be more.'

The incident took place in the city of Mubarraz in Saudi Arabia

Saudi's archaic laws mean that, in addition to being barred from socialising with men in public, Saudi woman are also banned from driving.

They cannot divorce, inherit, or gain custody of their children, and they must be chaperoned in public by a male relative at all times.

The Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice - known locally as the Hai'a - are tasked with enforcing these laws.

But resistance to the draconian measures - fuelled and empowered by the internet - has been growing in recent months.

'There is some sort of change taking place,' Nadya Khalife, the Middle East women’s rights researcher for Human Rights Watch, told The Media Line.

'But it’s not quite clear what’s happening and it’s not something that’s going to happen overnight.'

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1279299/Saudi-woman-be...

By anonymous• 19 May 2010 09:21
anonymous

perhaps it was her under complete veil...bad day for officer.

By Confus3d• 19 May 2010 09:17
Confus3d

I think it was really a bold move but she has to pay the price.

She has really put her self in a very dangerous situation.

I agree with olive "hope she does not get found"

By anonymous• 19 May 2010 09:05
anonymous

Good on her.

By Rizks• 19 May 2010 09:00
Rizks

Jalebi but i am not a Cop and i dont bother if a gal and a boy are holding hands OR a boy and a boy are holding hands and walking in a park ?

By Olive• 19 May 2010 08:58
Olive

I say more power to her. Hope she doesn't get found.

By ajmani• 19 May 2010 08:57
ajmani

It just might happen more often, who knows!

By mjamille28• 19 May 2010 08:57
mjamille28

LOL Rizks, did you not read the title? it says, "DONT' MESS", do you wanna be the next victim?

By Dennic• 19 May 2010 08:56
Dennic

@ Rizks.. LOL!!

By Rizks• 19 May 2010 08:49
Rizks

was it a women or a MAN under Abaya ?

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