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Arabia
Pleas for condemned Saudi 'witch'
2008-02-16
Human Rights Watch has appealed to Saudi Arabia to halt the execution of a woman convicted of witchcraft. In a letter to King Abdullah, the rights group described the trial and conviction of Fawza Falih as a miscarriage of justice.

The illiterate woman was detained by religious police in 2005 and allegedly beaten and forced to fingerprint a confession that she could not read. Among her accusers was a man who alleged she made him impotent.
Laughed at his privates, did she? Well, she might have if she'd seen 'em. Probly would have, in fact. Sounds guilty to me ....
Human Rights Watch said that Ms Falih had exhausted all her chances of appealing against her death sentence and she could only now be saved if King Abdullah intervened. The US-based group is asking the Saudi ruler to void Ms Falih's conviction and to bring charges against the religious police who detained her and are alleged to have mistreated her.

Its letter to King Abdullah says the woman was tried for the undefined crime of witchcraft and that her conviction was on the basis of the written statements of witnesses who said that she had bewitched them. Human Rights Watch says the trial failed to meet the safeguards in the Saudi justice system. The confession which the defendant was forced to fingerprint was not even read out to her, the group says.

Also Ms Falih and her representatives were not allowed to attend most of the hearings. When an appeal court decided she should not be executed, the law courts imposed the death sentence again, arguing that it would be in the public interest.
Posted by:john frum

#5  Unfortunately she doesn't stand a chance because all Saudi men are impotent and they'd rather burn some "whitches" than admit it in public.
Posted by: Elder of Zion   2008-02-16 13:02  

#4  Unfortunately she's toast.
Posted by: Icerigger   2008-02-16 12:57  

#3  What "safeguards"?

The bakshish promised to the judge, Ms Skolaut.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2008-02-16 11:34  

#2  "the trial failed to meet the safeguards in the Saudi justice system"

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

What "safeguards"?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2008-02-16 11:07  

#1  On the bright side, Saudi "civilization" has advanced hundreds of years - from the seventh century to the sixteenth.
Posted by: DMFD   2008-02-16 11:02  

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