First case against Saudi religious police
A Saudi civil court is to hear the first ever case brought against the kingdoms religious police charged with enforcing a strict Islamic moral code, the woman plaintiffs lawyer told AFP on Saturday.
The unnamed woman is seeking compensation after she and her daughter were allegedly wrongfully arrested in a shopping centre car park in 2004 for not wearing decent clothing, her lawyer Abderrahman Al-Lahm said. Women in Saudi Arabia must be covered from head to toe when they go out in public. The religious policeman in question arrested the pair, commandeered the car from their driver and drove them to his headquarters where the already sick mother suffered health complications, said Lahm.
The womans family is bringing the case before a civil court in Riyadh on Sunday after an Islamic court rejected the complaint, reportedly ruling that a member of the religious police cannot be judged, Lahm said. He said he hoped his clients case would help consolidate the role of justice in defending individual freedoms and human rights.
Posted by: Fred 2007-05-13 |