November 20, 2007...1:08 pm

Let’s Punish the Victim!

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DuaI was just browsing around when I ended up at cnn.com and saw this story gracing their front page. I don’t know what to do when I read stuff like this. It makes me so sick…it seriously makes my stomach turn, when I see this kind of injustice…and having Islam blamed for this crap. WHERE IN ISLAM DOES IT SAY TO PUNISH THE VICTIM OF RAPE??????????? Why the hell would you punish someone who has already been through such a hellish ordeal???

This is truly barbaric, not only because of the way these so-called Islamic governments (Saudi Arabia, Pakistan) are punishing the victim, but also how they use Islam to justify their inhumane actions. It makes me sick. It really does.

I pray for these women (and men) who are being abused in the name of Islam. I really hope and pray that Allah (subhan wa tala) eases their pain and suffering, forgives their sins, and gives them peace. I also pray that the Muslims wake up and realize the extent of damage that is being done in the name of their beautiful religion. Realize it and actually do something about it.

Here’s the story:

Saudi lawyer in rape victim plea

  • Story Highlights
  • Woman sentenced to 200 lashes and six months in jail under Islamic law
  • Judge more than doubled 19-year-old’s sentence for speaking to the media
  • Woman’s lawyer loses law license for speaking to Saudi-controlled media
  • Human rights group: Lawyer faces three-year suspension and disbarment

(CNN) — A Saudi Arabian human rights attorney is asking the government to allow him to represent a woman who was gang-raped — and then sentenced to prison for speaking out about the case.

The attorney, Abdulrahman al-Lahim, had his license revoked last week by a judge for speaking to the Saudi-controlled media about the case, al-Lahim told CNN.

The judge more than doubled the sentence against al-Lahim’s 19-year-old client because she spoke to the media about the case, a court source told Arab News, an English-language Middle Eastern daily newspaper.

The woman — who was initially sentenced in October 2006 to 90 lashes — had her sentenced increased to 200 lashes and was ordered to serve six months in prison under Saudi Arabia’s strict Islamic law.

“We were shocked,” al-Lahim said of the increased sentence.

CNN has been unable to reach Saudi government officials for comment on this report, despite repeated requests.

Al-Lahim had petitioned the court to sentence the attackers to the death penalty, but instead the court agreed to increase their jail sentences, which had been two to three years, to two to nine years, al-Lahim said.

The case has sparked outrage among human rights groups.

“Barring the lawyer from representing the victim in court is almost equivalent to the rape crime itself,” said Fawzeyah al-Oyouni, founding member of the newly formed Saudi Association for the Defense of Women’s Rights.

“This is not just about the girl, it’s about every woman in Saudi Arabia,” she said. “We’re fearing for our lives and the lives of our sisters and our daughters and every Saudi woman out there. We’re afraid of going out in the streets.”

Human Rights Watch said it has called on Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah “to immediately void the verdict and drop all charges against the rape victim and to order the court to end its harassment of her lawyer.”

The woman, who is married, and an unrelated man were abducted and she was raped by a group of seven men more than a year ago, the lawyer said. The male victim was also given an increased sentence of 200 lashes and six months in prison, al-Lahim said.

The man and woman were attacked after they met so she could retrieve an old photograph of herself from him, according to al-Lahim. Citing phone records from the police investigation, al-Lahim said the man was trying to blackmail his client. He noted the photo she was trying to retrieve was harmless and did not show his client in any compromising position.

Al-Lahim said the man tried to blame his client for insisting on meeting him that day. It is illegal for a woman to meet with an unrelated male under Saudi’s Islamic law.

Al-Lahim has been ordered to attend a disciplinary hearing at the Ministry of Justice next month, where he faces a possible three-year suspension and disbarment, according to Human Rights Watch.

He told CNN he has appealed to the Ministry of Justice to reinstate his law license and plans to meet with Justice Minister Abdullah bin Muhammad bin Ibrahim Al Al-Sheikh.

“Currently she doesn’t have a lawyer, and I feel they’re doing this to isolate her and deprive her from her basic rights,” he said. “We will not accept this judgment and I’ll do my best to continue representing her because justice needs to take place.”

He said the handling of the case is a direct contradiction of judicial reforms announced by the Saudi king earlier this month.

“The Ministry of Justice needs to have a very clear standing regarding this case because I consider this decision to be judiciary mutiny against the reform that King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz started and against Saudi women who are being victimized because of such decisions,” he said.

Saudi Arabia’s Islamic law or sharia is not written and, therefore, subject to a wide array of interpretations. Human Rights Watch points out that a judge in Jeddah threw out a lawyer simply because he was a member of the Ismaili faith, a branch of Shia Islam.

Under Saudi law, women are subject to numerous restrictions, including a strict dress code, a prohibition against driving and a requirement that they get a man’s permission to travel or have surgery. Women are also not allowed to testify in court unless it is about a private matter that was not observed by a man, and they are not allowed to vote.

The Saudi government recently has taken some steps toward bettering the situation of women in the kingdom, including the establishment earlier this year of special courts to handle domestic abuse cases, adoption of a new labor law that addresses working women’s rights and creation of a human rights commission.

Christoph Wilcke of Human Rights Watch praised the female rape victim and her attorney for speaking out about the case, which he said may be indicative of “many injustices that we still don’t know about.”

“It’s not only one court, it is the Saudi government that is fully behind punishing a woman who’s been raped [and] punishing the lawyer who’s trying to help her and doing that both because they’ve spoken to the media,” Wilcke told CNN. “And if they hadn’t spoken to the media, we wouldn’t know about it.”

Shying away from criticism of key ally, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack called the case and the punishment “surprising” and “astonishing.”

“While this is a judicial procedure — part of a judicial procedure — overseas in courts outside of our country, still while it is very difficult to offer any detailed comment about this situation, I think most people would be quite astonished by the situation, ” McCormack said.

“I can’t get involved in specific court cases in Saudi Arabia dealing with its own citizens. But most people here would be quite surprised to learn of the circumstances and then the punishment meted out,” he said.

CNN’s Saad Abedine and Mohammed Jamjoom contributed to this report

13 Comments

  • Bleugh, makes me sick. I haven’t even bothered reading it, even though it is pasted across most newspapers, blogs etc.

    A counter-read to your post is this…
    http://peacefulmuslimah.wordpress.com/2007/11/19/one-face-of-justice-are-there-more-out-there/

    Not everyone sits back and does nothing!

  • “The woman — who was initially sentenced in October 2006 to 90 lashes — had her sentenced increased to 200 lashes and was ordered to serve six months in prison under Saudi Arabia’s strict Islamic law”

    What “strict Islamic law” ??????????

  • Where in Islamic law does it say that ?

  • THAT IS MESSED UP SAUDIA ARABIA FOR YOU ! you can not even tell where their shariah is , just mixed up with so much arabic culture CRAP!

    I GET SOOOOOOOOOOOOO ANGRY WHENEVER I HEAR ABOUT SUADI ARABIA and its pathetic culture and law rules which they say it is islam . ekkk

    sorry honey have not been blogging :D hopefully will visit more .

    by the way even if she met with a non mahram man , that does mean she gets lashs , zina is for that, rather she would be ordered to make tawbah . They probably gave her that because they blame her for the rape . Which to some extent the responsibility is on her not to have done that especially in suadi arabia were men their, have heart issues just by looking at a woman !

  • ~Smee: Thanks for that link…it was nice to read a more positive twist on this (if that’s possible).

    ~rz: That’s my question too…where in Islamic law does it say that?? It’s such a shame that they portray Islam like this. No wonder the world thinks we’re barbarians.

    ~amal: I know..it’s like no matter what the woman does, whether she wears hijab, jilbaab, niqaab, or those Afghani burqas, the blame always ends up on her. She is always the cause of fitnah. Why aren’t men held responsible for their actions??? It’s so hypocritical and unfair. Islam does NOT teach this!

  • Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said, “People, beware of injustice, for injustice shall be darkness on the Day of Judgment.”

    Saheeh Al-Bukhari, #2447, Mosnad Ahmad, #5798

    Need I say more?

  • yes sillybachi your right , their is a responsibility on the man , she may have made a mistake in meeting up with the non mahram man , but that does not mean to say that the men were not wrong in their evil actions , they saw a oppurtunity and took advantage of it . Which in my opinion is evil .

  • doing a drive by… reviewing great sites

  • ~Jahandost: If only people were aware of these warnings…the world wouldn’t be such a mess today :(

    ~Amal: Totally agree with you. Those men’s actions were evil and they should be punished accordingly.

    ~Photomagazine: Thanks for the comment :)

  • by the way people
    the guy is getting lashed too

    not that she should be getting lashed

  • [...] Let’s Punish the Victim!Under Saudi law, women are subject to numerous restrictions, including a strict dress code, a prohibition against driving and a requirement that they get a man’s permission to travel or have surgery. Women are also not allowed to … [...]

  • assalamu’aliakum

    I cant believe it!

    the ‘islamic laws’ they (KSA) have sound almost nothing like islam!

    If the woman does zinah, it between her and Allah (SWT). Simply nothing to do with the court!

    I am disgusted. In non-muslim countris, a rape victim is to be taken care of, mental status is checked and if needed they go to a rehab and the the rapist is given capital punishment9 I dont agree with this, cos rapists just ASK/deserve to die!)…so now compare the two….its outragous! How could they do such a thing? The poor woman, she’s probably half -mad after that experience….
    somehow, somewhere, someone’s gotta do something about it..somehing effective, inshallah.

    w/salam

  • I have been against discriminatory laws in Pakistan and have written on the subject too. The case of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, however, proves that punishing the victim might not be conditional to the existence of regressive religious laws only.


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