Saudi Arabia Beheads Young Sri Lankan Maid
A young Sri Lankan housemaid has been beheaded in Saudi Arabia for
killing a baby who was in her care. Rizana Nafeek had denied strangling the
4-month-old baby in 2005 and the execution came despite global appeals to call
it off because she was only 17 at the time. Rights groups said the death
sentence was a violation of international codes governing the rights of minors.
Appeals by the Sri Lankan government were also rejected and Nafeek was executed
in the town of Dawadmy, near the capital Riyadh, on Wednesday morning.
In a statement the Saudi interior ministry said the maid had been found
guilty of smothering the infant to death after an argument with the child's
mother, her employer. Sri Lanka's president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, had made a
series of personal appeals to try to stop the execution and grant a pardon to
the maid. Afterwards, the president said he and his government
"deplored" the beheading. Saudi households are highly dependent on
housemaids from African and South Asian countries. There have been reported
cases of domestic abuse in which families mistreat their maids, who have then
attacked the children of their employers.
Condemning the execution, Human Rights Watch senior women's
rights researcher Nisha Varia said: "Saudi Arabia is one of just three
countries that executes people for crimes they committed as children. "In executing Rizana Nafeek, Saudi authorities demonstrated callous
disregard for basic humanity as well as Saudi Arabia's international legal
obligations." Saudi is an absolute monarchy that follows the strict
Wahhabi school of Islam and applies Sharia (Islamic) law. Judges base decisions
on their own interpretation of Sharia rather than on a written legal code or on
precedent. Amnesty International, in a statement before the execution,
said that it appeared Nafeek had no access to lawyers either during her
pre-trial interrogation or at her trial in 2007. This is the second execution
of the year in Saudi Arabia after a Syrian was beheaded on Tuesday for drug
trafficking.
Source: Yahoo news
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