There are parts of the world that are still ignorant, barbaric cesspools that kill people for witchcraft and sorcery. In Saudi Arabia it happens routinely under color of law.
March 7, 2013 - Last month, in the highlands of Papua New Guinea, a 20-year old mother of two was stripped naked and tortured until she confessed to practicing sorcery. Then she was burned alive on the local rubbish dump in front of a crowd of fellow villagers.
Although horrific, this event was not unusual. The Constitutional and Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea has estimated that as many as 150 people accused of sorcery — mostly women — are murdered every year in just one of the country’s 20 provinces. Before they are killed, many suffer prolonged, public and often sexual torture. Two things made last month’s murder exceptional: it led to public outrage, and two alleged perpetrators have been arrested.
September 21, 2011 (LONDON) – A migrant worker from Sudan was beheaded by sword in Medina by the Saudi government for practising occultism on Monday, despite the efforts of international lobbyists.
Execution by beheading, Saudi Arabia (Amnesty International)
Since al-Fakki’s arrest in 2005 and conviction in 2007 the London-based human rights advocacy organisation Amnesty International (AI) have been gravely concerned about his fate.
AI claim al-Fakki was entrapped by a member of the Saudi religious police claiming that he would pay 6,000 Saudi Arabian riyals (US$1,600) for a spell which would make his father divorce his second wife and return to the agent provacateur’s biological mother.
A Saudi woman has been executed for
practising "witchcraft and sorcery", the country's interior ministry says. A statement published by the state news agency said Amina bint Abdul Halim
bin Salem Nasser was beheaded on Monday in the northern province of Jawf. The ministry gave no further details of the charges which the woman
faced. The woman was the second person to be executed for witchcraft in Saudi Arabia
this year. A Sudanese man was executed in September. 'Threat to Islam'
BBC regionalist analyst Sebastian Usher says the interior ministry stated
that the verdict against Ms Nasser was upheld by Saudi Arabia's highest courts,
but it did not give specific details of the charges. The London-based newspaper, al-Hayat, quoted a member of the religious police
as saying that she was in her 60s and had tricked people into giving her money,
claiming that she could cure their illnesses. Our correspondent said she was arrested in April 2009. But the human rights group Amnesty International, which has campaigned for
Saudis previously sentenced to death on sorcery charges, said it had never heard
of her case until now, he adds. A Sudanese man was executed in September on similar charges, despite calls
led by Amnesty for his release. In 2007, an Egyptian national was beheaded for allegedly casting spells to
try to separate a married couple. Last year, a Lebanese man facing the death penalty on charges of sorcery,
relating to a fortune-telling television programme he presented, was freed after
the Saudi Supreme Court decreed that his actions had not harmed anyone.
A Saudi man has been beheaded on
charges of sorcery and witchcraft, the state news agency SPA says. The man, Muree bin Ali bin Issa al-Asiri, was found in possession of books
and talismans, SPA said. He had also admitted adultery with two women, it
said. The execution took place in the southern Najran province, SPA reported. Human rights groups have repeatedly condemned executions for witchcraft in
Saudi Arabia. Last year, there were reports of at least two people being executed for
sorcery. Mr Asiri was beheaded after his sentence was upheld by the country's highest
courts, the Saudi news agency website said. No details were given of what he was found guilty of beyond the charges of
witchcraft and sorcery.
WTF
ReplyDeleteThe background looks like Georgia O-Keefe puked on it.
I wanted something fresh.
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