Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

Wow. S.A. hands down death sentences for witchcraft and magic. Did I accidentally step into a time machine and go back to the year 1692 (Salem Witch Trials)? That must be the case because there is no way any justice system in todays educated world could be so insanely retarded to do such a thing, right? Or do the S.A. courts have meth sessions and drop LSD before getting to the cases for the day?


BEIRUT, Lebanon - A leading human rights group appealed to Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah on Thursday to stop the execution of a woman accused of witchcraft and performing supernatural acts.
The New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a statement that the kingdom’s religious police who arrested and interrogated Fawza Falih, and the judges who tried her in the northern town of Quraiyat never gave her the opportunity to prove her innocence in the face of “absurd charges that have no basis in law.”
Falih’s case underscores shortcomings in Saudi Arabia’s Islamic legal system in which rules of evidence are shaky, lawyers are not always present and sentences often depend on the whim of judges.

The most frequent victims are women, who already suffer severe restrictions on daily life in Saudi Arabia: They cannot drive, appear before a judge without a male representative, or travel abroad without a male guardian’s permission.

What’s the crime?
Witchcraft is considered an offense against Islam in the conservative kingdom.
In Falih’s case, the judges relied on a coerced confession and on the statements of witnesses who said she had “bewitched” them to convict her in April 2006, according to the group.

Falih later retracted her confession in court, claiming it was extracted under duress, and said that as an illiterate woman, she did not understand the document she was forced to fingerprint.
“The fact that Saudi judges still conduct trials for unprovable crimes like ‘witchcraft’ underscores their inability to carry out objective criminal investigations,” said Joe Stork, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.
There was no immediate comment on the statement from Saudi Arabia, where government offices are closed on Thursdays, the start of the Muslim weekend.

“Fawza Falih’s case is an example of how the authorities failed to comply even with existing safeguards in the Saudi justice system,” he added.
The Saudi court cited an instance in which a man allegedly became impotent after being bewitched by Falih, the rights group said.
An appeals court ruled in September 2006 that Falih could not be sentenced to death for witchcraft because she had retracted her confession. But a lower court subsequently reissued the death sentence for the benefit of “public interest” and to “protect the creed, souls and property of this country,” the group’s statement said.

Forced divorce
Human Rights Watch’s statement came a day after Yakin Erturk, the U.N. special investigator for violence against women, wrapped up a 10-day visit to Saudi Arabia during which she highlighted another controversial case that has attracted international criticism.
Ertuk met with Fatima and Mansour al-Timani, who were forcibly divorced by the wife’s family on grounds she had married someone from a lesser tribe.
The couple learned of the divorce on Feb. 25, 2006, when police knocked on their door to serve Mansour the divorce papers.
At a news conference on Wednesday, Erturk said she met the wife and husband who were in a “terrible state of mind” and that Saudi officials had promised her arrangements would be made for the couple’s reunion, according to Saudi newspaper Arab News.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23162712/

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

Another great American ally. We should send them more military aid to ward off the Persians.

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

What? They are only 3 centuries behind the rest of the world? I would have guessed more.

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

So what does the U.S. have to do with this? The world is dependent on oil, great observation.

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

Do we need to send them military aid to get that oil? Surely we can do that through other forms of bargaining, being such a big and powerful economic powerhouse that we are.

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

This thread is about witches and S.A. killing them, not about the U.S. Open a new thread or pull an old one up if you want to post about U.S. Aid to S.A.

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

The problem is with existence of such law or its execution?

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

Oh ok. Saudi Arabia does kill "witches". Bad Saudis! Bad! Backwards people! Savages!

What else?

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

^
Just bringing attention to the issue and hope someone can explain wtf is going on with the courts over there.

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

theres more to this story then msnbc has printed, like the story in the pakistani press a year or so ago concerning the rishta (arranged engagement) of a girl given by her father after losing a bet to a fellow old man. the press reported it as if the old man was getting married to her himself but actually the rishta was for his son. as long as you are familliar with arranged marriages it wasnt too bad.

the probable unreported part of this story is what she actually did to harm the man. it 'may' have been a case of diy medicine or something like that.

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

c

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

^^ ah, 1811, only 200 years ago...brilliant observation JayR

what, not cut and paste this time?

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

UTD, you are absolutely right! Its all about the very bad Arabs and the most evil Muslims. How dare we question the USA?

Btw aren't Saudis best known for their black magic obsessions?
For such laws and prosecutions....more than half of Saudia Arabia would be no more!

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

Wonderful thought process. Why is it not OK to kill "witches"

Maybe we would need to legalise smoking hashish as well according you..

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

Do you even read what you write

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

c

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

It's not OK to kill witches but I don't give a damn about what those Arabs do in their own countries. Screw them.

And what's wrong with someone wanting to get high? Alcohol is legal, so why not pot?

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

^^

Then I think you should also not be worried about what is happening in Iraq, Palestine etc..

On a side note why are you in WA forum...

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

Whatever you think is actually quite irrelevant. I am worried about what is happening in Iraq and the greater Middle East, because our involvement there hurts us domestically in the US.

Re: Saudi Arabia to execute woman for 'witchcraft'

Human rights? What Human rights? And Americanists getting all teary eyes and concerned for a woman getting a death sentence for witchcraft? Wow...Reminds me of the concern that Ted Bundy must have shown his victims...

I wonder how concerned they must all be for this woman who will face a death penalty for witchcraft...I wonder how concerned they must be for the hundreds of incarcerated in Gitmo whose crimes have even yet to be unearthed and the thousands killed during the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq...

Man, these Americanists have so much concern for the rest of the world...Imagine, having so much anger and frustration at one woman being accused of witchcraft...

We must let all the world know how barbaric and inhuman these Arabs are with their outdated customs and laws...We should invade their country...Better yet, nuke them...These barbarians don't deserve to live...Unless they start living and treating other people like us...