http://news.yahoo.com/syria-adultress-survives-jihadist-stoning-monitor-164429118.html
Is this what they mean by Muslim tolerance?
Warning Very Graphic.
Woman publicly beheaded in Saudi Arabia.
You have to wonder. Politicians on both sides of the isle call this country a friend. As the saying goes with friends like this who needs enemies.
Woman publicly beheaded in Saudi Arabia.
You have to wonder. Politicians on both sides of the isle call this country a friend. As the saying goes with friends like this who needs enemies.
Man Who Filmed Woman's Public Beheading in Saudi Arabia Reportedly Arrested
A man who filmed the gruesome video of a public beheading
of a woman in Saudi Arabia, which sparked international outrage from
human rights activists, has been arrested and is expected to face
prosecution, local media has reported.Circulating on social media
last week, the rare footage from January 12 shows Lalia Bint Abdul
Muttalib Basim, a woman from Myanmar who was convicted under Sharia law
of sexually abusing and murdering her stepdaughter, being dragged
through a street before being pinned down and beheaded by a swordsman.Filming executions is barred in the Gulf kingdom. According to Gulf News,
the arrested individual has not been named, but is expected to face
charges in Saudi Arabia's Sharia and military courts. Charges against
the man have not been confirmed, but the offense may qualify under Saudi
Arabia's cybercrimes laws, a spokesman with the Interior Ministry said,
according to theNew York Times. Despite
the uproar over the footage, last week the Interior Ministry defended
its use of the death penalty in the case, saying the "enormity of the
crime" warranted the punishment, which was done in order to "restore
security" and "realize justice.""[The punishment] implements the
rulings of God against all those who attack innocents and spill their
blood. The government warns all those who are seduced into committing a
similar crimes that the rightful punishment is their fate," the
statement said.After the video was released, the National Society
for Human Rights (NSHR), based in the city of Mecca, where Basim was
put to death, called on the person who filmed the beheading to be
punished."Those who disseminated the clip are not less guilty
than those who filmed the execution," NSHR member Mohammad Al Sahli told
Gulf News, with the organization claiming the act violated privacy.
https://news.vice.com/article/man-who-filmed-womans-public-beheading-in-saudi-arabia-reportedly-arrested
of a woman in Saudi Arabia, which sparked international outrage from
human rights activists, has been arrested and is expected to face
prosecution, local media has reported.Circulating on social media
last week, the rare footage from January 12 shows Lalia Bint Abdul
Muttalib Basim, a woman from Myanmar who was convicted under Sharia law
of sexually abusing and murdering her stepdaughter, being dragged
through a street before being pinned down and beheaded by a swordsman.Filming executions is barred in the Gulf kingdom. According to Gulf News,
the arrested individual has not been named, but is expected to face
charges in Saudi Arabia's Sharia and military courts. Charges against
the man have not been confirmed, but the offense may qualify under Saudi
Arabia's cybercrimes laws, a spokesman with the Interior Ministry said,
according to theNew York Times. Despite
the uproar over the footage, last week the Interior Ministry defended
its use of the death penalty in the case, saying the "enormity of the
crime" warranted the punishment, which was done in order to "restore
security" and "realize justice.""[The punishment] implements the
rulings of God against all those who attack innocents and spill their
blood. The government warns all those who are seduced into committing a
similar crimes that the rightful punishment is their fate," the
statement said.After the video was released, the National Society
for Human Rights (NSHR), based in the city of Mecca, where Basim was
put to death, called on the person who filmed the beheading to be
punished."Those who disseminated the clip are not less guilty
than those who filmed the execution," NSHR member Mohammad Al Sahli told
Gulf News, with the organization claiming the act violated privacy.
https://news.vice.com/article/man-who-filmed-womans-public-beheading-in-saudi-arabia-reportedly-arrested
Read more at http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=b61_1421715236#AjsuYM39uHufDo5Z.99
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