http://www.euronews.com/2013/04/05/man-sentenced-to-paralysis-in-saudia-arabia/

Man to be paralysed in Saudi ‘eye-for-an-eye’ punishment 
05/04 11:21 CET



Saudi Arabia has sentenced a man to paralysis for a crime he committed when he 
was 14.

Ali al-Khawahir, now 24, has already served 10 years in prison after a Saudi 
court found him guilty of stabbing a childhood friend, who was paralysed from 
the waist down after the attack. 

Khawahir was sentenced to ‘Qisas’, or retribution, which means the victim can 
demand the offender suffers the same punishment as he caused. The sentencing 
follows Saudi Arabia’s Islamic Sharia law that takes an ‘eye-for-an-eye’ 
approach to many crimes. 

However the system also allows offenders to buy their way out of the punishment 
if they can compensate the victim a stated amount. In this case the amount has 
been set at one million riyals (200,000 euros).

International condemnation
The sentencing has been condemned internationally: a spokesperson for the 
British Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) said: “We urge the Saudi 
authorities to ensure that this grotesque punishment is not carried out. Such 
practices are prohibited under international law and have no place in any 
society.”

Amnesty International have also denounced the sentence, saying: “Paralysing 
someone as punishment for a crime would be torture…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.” 

The Saudi punishment system
In Saudi Arabia flogging is a mandatory sentence for many offences and can also 
be implemented at the discretion of a judge. Amputation of hands is sometimes 
used for the crimes of theft, while in cases of ‘highway robbery’ the 
punishment has been cross amputated (right hand and left foot). 

In similar cases of ‘retribution’, sentences have included eye-gouging, tooth 
extraction, and in murder cases, execution.

According to Amnesty International, at least 17 people have been executed so 
far in 2013 and at least 82 people were executed in 2011. Their website reports 
that the death penalty has been given for a wide range of crimes, including 
drug offences, apostasy, sorcery and witchcraft.

If carried out, the paralysis sentence would contravene the UN Convention 
against Torture, which was signed by Saudi Arabia.

In the past, several British governments have struggled to balance their 
concerns over Saudi Arabia’s human rights record with the fact that they are 
key allies and customers of British weaponry.

More about: Crime, Execution, Human Rights, Saudi Arabia 
Copyright © 2013 euronews


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