Saudi man, woman face flogging for research

KellysHeroes
By KellysHeroes

A Saudi appeals court is due this week to review the case of a biochemist and his female student sentenced to jail and flogging after a lower court ruled their research contact was a front for a telephone affair.

The man was sentenced to eight months in prison and 600 lashes and his student to four months in prison and 350 lashes last November for establishing a phone relationship that led her to divorce her husband.

London-based Amnesty International says it will consider the two as prisoners of conscience if the verdicts are carried out.

"The charges... do not correspond to recognisable criminal offences," the group said in a statement in April.

A spokesman for the government's Human Rights Commission said he was not immediately able to comment.

Rights groups and some Saudi reformers have criticised what they say is an arbitrary justice system unsuited to the needs of a country of 25 million people.

Judges who are religious scholars apply the rulings of an austere version of sharia, Islamic law, often termed Wahhabism.

The government, a key US ally, says the system ensures justice for Muslims and non-Muslims. It is in the process of overhauling the organisation of courts and codifying a formal penal code.

The hospital where the man worked in Al-Baha in the southwest of the kingdom put him in charge of the masters research the student was doing at the King Abdul-Aziz University in Jeddah in 2002.

The woman obtained a divorce seven months after she was married in 2004. Her husband then raised the court case, saying the supervisor's phone calls led to the break-up.

The supervisor, who asked to be identified only as Khalid, 32, told newswire Reuters that over 12 months of trial he and the woman were refused permission to use lawyers or bring witnesses to testify.

The woman was represented in court by her father because Wahhabi rules require a male legal guardian. (Reuters)

By PhillyEagles2007• 8 Jul 2008 11:07
PhillyEagles2007

There may be more to this story then the article suggests.

"I don't think so. Homey don't play dat."

Homey Da Clown

By Vasquez• 8 Jul 2008 10:31
Vasquez

I got 80 lashes last night - it felt good :o)

- I took the blue pill and found myself alive in Qatar - wish I had taken the red and stayed in Europe

By HAPPYDAY• 8 Jul 2008 10:12
HAPPYDAY

or maybe move all the low life who commit the crimes there!!

By Gypsy• 8 Jul 2008 10:03
Gypsy

Weren't some people just saying how Human Rights should be thrown out in another thread?? That law breakers should be severely (physically) punished? Hmmmm, maybe they should move to Saudi.

Visit www.qatarhappening.com

By realsomeone• 8 Jul 2008 09:57
Rating: 2/5
realsomeone

I think its a matter of country law. differnet countries have different rules and punishments so i think this is the saudi way.

Poverty is not for the sake of hardship. No, it is there because nothing exists but God. Poverty unlocks the door -- what a blessed key!

- Jalaluddin al-Rumi

By KellysHeroes• 8 Jul 2008 09:51
KellysHeroes

 

===================================== http://www.qatarliving.com/node/58409

By DaRuDe• 8 Jul 2008 09:30
DaRuDe

damn he will pass out on the 50th

 

 

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