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  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    12:50pm, EDT

    Saudi court orders man to be paralyzed as an Islamic punishment

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    A young Saudi man faces being forcibly paralyzed as a punishment under Islamic sharia law for a crime that left his victim confined to a wheelchair – a ruling condemned by a human rights group Thursday.

    Ali al-Khawaher, 24, was convicted of stabbing a childhood friend in the spine during a dispute a decade ago, according to reports in Saudi Arabian media including Al Hayat and Al Watan (link in Arabic).

    Under sharia law, courts may set an eye-for-an-eye punishment for crimes – but victims may pardon convicts in exchange for so-called blood money.

    In this case, the victim requested $533,000 – an amount he later reduced to $266,000 – but al-Khawaher’s mother told Al Hayat she did not have even a fraction of this money, meaning the court can issue an order for retribution instead.

    Although the stabbing happened in 2003, the court order was only issued on Saturday.

    “Ten years have passed with hundreds of sleepless nights,” Al Hayat quoted al-Khawaher's mother as saying. “My hair has become grey at a young age because of my son’s problem. I have been frightened to death whenever I think about my son’s fate and that he will have to be paralyzed.”

    Amnesty International condemned the punishment.

    “Paralyzing someone as punishment for a crime would be torture,” said Ann Harrison, the organization’s Middle East and North Africa deputy director.

    “That such a punishment might be implemented is utterly shocking, even in a context where flogging is frequently imposed as a punishment for some offences, as happens in Saudi Arabia," she added. “It is time the authorities in Saudi Arabia start respecting their international legal obligations and remove these terrible punishments from the law.”

    Saudi judges have in the past ordered sharia punishments that include tooth extraction, flogging, eye gouging and -- in murder cases -- death, Reuters reported.

    U.K. Islamic commentator Ajmal Masroor told the U.K.'s Sky News channel that even most Muslims would be “startled” by the court ruling, adding: "I cannot fathom where they would find a doctor willing to carry out such an act."

    NBC News' Lubna Hussain contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Activists decry 'act of sheer brutality' after Saudi Arabia executes 7 young men

    2,080 lashes for Saudi man who raped daughter

    531 comments

    A horrific case of brutality. And, the Saudis are America's friends?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: middle-east, muslim, world, life, saudi-arabia, islam, featured, sharia
  • 13
    Mar
    2013
    8:35am, EDT

    Pakistani soldier stoned to death over romance; girlfriend may be shot

    By Saud Mehsud, Reuters

    DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — A Pakistani soldier was publicly stoned to death on the order of a tribal court in the country's northwestern Kurram region for having a relationship with a local woman, government officials and tribesmen said Wednesday.

    Such tribal justice is a stark reminder of the difficulty in establishing a credible civilian administration in Pakistan's semi-autonomous region bordering Afghanistan, despite a series of military operations in the area and Western nations pouring in millions of dollars to help build infrastructure.


    Punjab native Anwar Din, 27, was posted last year to the Parachinar area of Kurram agency where he met Intizar Bibi, 19, while manning a checkpost near her home.


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    The two embarked on a romantic relationship, tribal sources said, and he tried to elope with her when he was later posted to the disputed Kashmir region. It was not immediately clear what evidence there was, if any, of a romance.

    "The girl left her home on Monday and met Anwar Din when villagers saw them," said Munir Hussain, the head of the local jirga, or tribal court, that sentenced Din to death. "We took the girl into custody and took the boy to the local graveyard where he was stoned to death and buried."

    Din was killed on Monday, he added. A government official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the jirga had ruled the woman must be shot to death. It was not immediately clear if this had already taken place.

    The army was not immediately available for comment.

    Kurram, the only part of Pakistan's largely lawless border region that has a significant Shiite population, is racked by sectarian violence between Sunni and Shiite tribes. Anti-Shiite ideology from the Taliban and al Qaeda has meant years of bloody fighting.

    Bibi is Shiite while Din was Sunni, Hussain added.

    Tribal justice
    The Federally Administered Tribal Areas have never been fully integrated into Pakistan's administrative, economic or judicial system.

    Instead, families and tribes often take justice into their own hands, presiding over "jirgas" or "panchayats," gatherings of elders who hand down punishments including rape, killing and the bartering of women to settle scores and restore honor.

    In such tribal justice, women often fare far worse than men.

    Hussain said that the jirga had also requested that another Pakistani soldier, Saif Ullah, be handed over for helping the couple meet and coordinate the planned elopement.

    "The army is here for our security but if they engage in such activities we will not let them stay here," Hussain said. "This is an insult to tribal customs. We will revolt against this."

    Related: 

    A rare glimpse inside Pakistan's ground zero for terrorists

    Pakistan reeling from anti-Christian attack

    An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    739 comments

    Wow, she was shot instead of stoned. That is the height of compassion and enlightenment, where those savages are concerned. (Sarcasm).

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, women, execution, romance, stoning, featured, sharia, tribal-areas, kurram
  • 20
    Dec
    2012
    11:54am, EST

    Living with shariah law: Crime and punishment in Indonesia's Aceh

    Shariah policemen speak to a student who was caught playing games in an Internet cafe during school hours in Banda Aceh, in Indonesia's Aceh province. The boy was given a morality lecture and forced onto a shariah patrol truck to be taken back to school, where he faced humiliation from other students and teachers.

    Female members of the Wilayatul Hisbah shariah police get instructions from a commander before going on patrol in Banda Aceh.

    Photos and text by Damir Sagolj, Reuters — Indonesia is the world's most populous Muslim nation, but nowhere is the faith more strictly interpreted than in Aceh, sometimes referred to as the "verandah of Mecca" because it was one of the first parts of the archipelago to turn to Islam. 

    Aceh, which was hit by a tsunami in 2004 that killed an estimated 130,000 in the province, is Indonesia's only district to have implemented shariah, or Islamic law. This is something that occurred for complicated reasons, some of which go well beyond the religion itself and have more to do with Acehnese tradition, the long struggle for independence and conflict with outside forces, Jakarta included.

    Hard-line Indonesian police shave punks' mohawks in 'moral rehab' drive

    Formed to implement shariah law, Wilayatul Hisbah, which is the official name for the shariah police, is spread across the province working in small units, patrolling and conducting occasional raids. The units are made up of different kinds of people – some of them claim to be on a mission, others just needed a job.

    The set of laws in force in Aceh is just a smaller part of what would be full shariah implementation, covering all levels of society. At present, the shariah package in Aceh targets only those violating the Muslim dress code, illicit behavior, drinking and gambling.

    Shariah punishment for Indonesia coffee shop gambler

    Dating can be particularly hazardous — under shariah, it is a crime for an unmarried man and woman who are not related by blood to associate in an "isolated place." As a consequence, it has become increasingly popular for young couples to get to know each other using social networks like Facebook. Read more at Reuters' Photographers Blog.

    A shariah policeman shows dominoes found in the bag of a boy who ran away after a patrol spotted him and a friend during school hours in Banda Aceh. The dominoes were thrown in the mud and police continued their patrol after unsuccessfully chasing the boys.

    A young couple chat in the shade on a beach near Banda Aceh. Under shariah, it is a crime for an unmarried man and woman who are not related by blood to associate in an "isolated place."

    Members of the Wilayatul Hisbah speak to a young couple after they were caught sitting too close to each other in an isolated place in Banda Aceh.

    Winda Wahyuni kisses the hand of her husband, Ahmad Yasir Saputra, after they got married in a mosque in Banda Aceh. Winda and Ahmad Yasir, who met a year ago on Facebook, married in a religious ceremony in a local mosque. Dating on social networks has become increasingly popular in Aceh due to the restrictions that shariah places on unmarried men and women.

    Winda Wahyuni, center, and husband Ahmad Yasir Saputra, left, pray during their wedding ceremony in a mosque in Banda Aceh.

    A man is seen from inside a house in Banda Aceh that was destroyed in the 2004 tsunami. Some residents near the sea believe the tsunami that killed an estimated 130,000 people in Aceh province was a punishment from God for those who broke Islamic laws, and they fear it might happen again.

    Boys and girls meet at a cultural event in Banda Aceh.

    Muslim worshippers gather for an evening collective prayer outside a mosque in Banda Aceh.

    Acehnese Protestants attend an early Christmas mass in their church in Banda Aceh. Although it is complicated to build a new Christian church in the predominantly Muslim province, Father Amrin Sihotang of HKBP Protestant church said his community has no problems with strict Islamic laws as long "as we follow the rules."

    Young people relax at Ulhee Ilhue beach in Banda Aceh. The gates of the beach close every day at 6 p.m. to prevent people violating Islamic law. Asked about shariah police who often patrol the beach looking for violators, one of the youngsters said, "I don't like them. They simply disturb me."

    Female members of the Wilayatul Hisbah enter a public park as they search for those violating shariah law during their patrol in Banda Aceh.

    A female member of the Wilayatul Hisbah insists on inspecting the clothes of girls relaxing in a park in Banda Aceh.

    Members of a punk band named Trotoar Chaos are shown in Banda Aceh. Although they say they have been punished and had their hair shaved in the past by police, the young musicians remain defiant and insist they will stay in Aceh. One of them commented on a 2011 incident in which he was punished after being caught among 65 other punks at a concert: "There is a big change after that. Now I want to fight more."

    A member of the Wilayatul Hisbah tells a man he should stop eating his lunch and go to the mosque just before Friday prayers in Banda Aceh. Besides patrolling with their male colleagues every day looking for those who violate shariah, female police officers drive through the town just before Friday prayers urging businesses to close and demanding that men go to pray.

    A Muslim family enjoys nice weather on a beach in Banda Aceh.

    EDITOR'S NOTE: Images taken between Dec. 6 and Dec. 11, 2012, and made available to NBC News today.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    19 comments

    actually, shariah law is being implemented more often and in more places. I studied Islam as one of my primary focal points in college, and years later, ran into my history professor, who was an Egyptologist.

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    Explore related topics: human-rights, indonesia, asia, justice, aceh, world-news, featured, sharia, islamic-law, shariah
  • 5
    Oct
    2012
    8:21am, EDT

    Hotli Simanjuntak / EPA

    Shariah punishment for Indonesia coffee shop gambler

    Zulkifli, 43, stands on stage to be whipped by the shariah police executioner in Jantho, Aceh Besar, in Indonesia's Aceh province on October 5, 2012. He was one of three men to be punished after being caught gambling in a coffee shop.

    Aceh is the only province in Indonesia that has implemented shariah law. Read more in a Global Post report from February, 2012.

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Shariah police pull over female motorcyclists for wearing tight jeans
    • Hard-line Indonesia police shave punks' mohawks in 'moral rehab' drive

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    7 comments

    Zulkifli, 43, stands on stage to be whipped by the shariah police executioner in Jantho, Aceh Besar, in Indonesia's Aceh province on October 5, 2012. He was one of three men to be punished after being caught gambling in a coffee shop.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: human-rights, indonesia, asia, justice, aceh, sharia, islamic-law, shariah

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