Saudis order 40 lashes for elderly woman for mingling

<http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/03/09/saudi.arabia.lashes/index.html?eref=rss_latest>http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/03/09/saudi.arabia.lashes/index.html?eref=rss_latest
 


Story Highlights
    * Saudi newspaper says religious officer found two men in Syrian 
woman's house
    * Khamisa Mohammed Sawadi said she breast-fed one of men when he 
was infant
    * Sawadi argues that under Islamic tradition, that makes man 
related to her
    * Men to receives lashes, too; case sparks outrage in 
conservative Saudi Arabia
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By Mohammed Jamjoom and Saad Abedine
CNN

(CNN) -- A Saudi Arabian court has sentenced a 75-year-old Syrian 
woman to 40 lashes, four months imprisonment and deportation from the 
kingdom for having two unrelated men in her house, according to local 
media reports.

According to the Saudi daily newspaper Al-Watan, troubles for the 
woman, Khamisa Mohammed Sawadi, began last year when a member of the 
religious police entered her house in the city of Al-Chamli and found 
her with two unrelated men, "Fahd" and "Hadian."

Fahd told the policeman that he had the right to be there, because 
Sawadi had breast-fed him as a baby and was therefore considered to 
be a son to her in Islam, according to Al-Watan. Fahd, 24, added that 
his friend Hadian was escorting him as he delivered bread for the 
elderly woman. The policeman then arrested both men.

Saudi Arabia follows a strict interpretation of 
<http://topics.cnn.com/topics/islam>Islam called Wahhabism and 
punishes unrelated men and women who are caught mingling.

The Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, 
feared by many Saudis, is made up of several thousand religious 
policemen charged with duties such as enforcing dress codes, prayer 
times and segregation of the sexes. Under Saudi law, women face many 
restrictions, including a strict dress code and a ban on driving. 
Women also need to have a man's permission to travel.


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Al Watan obtained the court's verdict and reported that it was partly 
based on the testimony of the religious police. In his ruling, the 
judge said it had been proved that Fahd is not the Sawadi's son 
through breastfeeding.

The court also doled out punishment to the two men. Fahd was 
sentenced to four months in prison and 40 lashes; Hadian was 
sentenced to six months in prison and 60 lashes. In a phone call with 
Al Watan, the judge declined to comment and suggested the newspaper 
review the case with the Ministry of Justice.

Sawadi told the newspaper that she will appeal, adding that Fahd is 
indeed her son through breastfeeding.

The case has sparked anger in Saudi Arabia.

"It's made everybody angry because this is like a grandmother," Saudi 
women's rights activist Wajeha Al-Huwaider told CNN. "Forty lashes -- 
how can she handle that pain? You cannot justify it."

This is not the first Saudi court case to cause controversy.

In 2007, a 19-year-old gang-rape victim in the Saudi city of Qatif 
was sentenced to 200 lashes and six months in prison for meeting with 
an unrelated male. The seven rapists, who had abducted the woman and 
man, received sentences ranging from 10 months to five years in 
prison. The case sparked international outrage and Saudi King 
Abdullah subsequently pardoned the "Qatif Girl" and the unrelated male.

Many Saudis are hopeful that the Ministry of Justice will be 
reformed. Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz announced in February a 
major Cabinet reshuffling in which many hard-line conservatives, 
including the head of the commission, were dismissed and replaced 
with younger, more moderate members.

The new appointments represented the largest shakeup since King 
Abdullah took power in 2005 and were welcomed in Saudi Arabia as 
progressive moves on the part of the king, whom many see as a 
reformer. Among ministers who've been replaced is the minister of justice.

The actions of the religious police have come under increased 
scrutiny in <http://topics.cnn.com/topics/saudi_arabia>Saudi Arabia 
recently, as more and more Saudis urge that the commission's powers 
be limited. Last week, the religious police detained two male 
novelists for questioning after they tried to get the autograph of a 
female writer, Halima Muzfar, at a book fair in 
<http://topics.cnn.com/topics/riyadh>Riyadh, the capital of the kingdom.

"This is the problem with the religious police," added Al-Huwaider, 
"watching people and thinking they're bad all the time. It has 
nothing to do with religion. It's all about control. And the more you 
spread fear among people, the more you control them. It's giving a 
bad reputation to the country."


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