You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Arabia
Saudi boy, 14, faces execution
2005-10-29
A 14-year-old boy is facing execution in Saudi Arabia after being found guilty in a flawed trial of murdering a three-year-old girl, Human Rights Watch said yesterday. The girl, Wala abd al-Badi, was found dead with multiple stab wounds in a park in the eastern city of Dammam last year.

Saudi press reports said the boy, identified only as Ahmad al-D, told police during interrogation that he killed the girl because her father had hit him and he thought she had stolen his toys.
And how else would a man from the Master Race™ respond to a mere womyn?
But Human Rights Watch said: "At every stage of the investigation, detention, trial and sentencing, the Saudi authorities violated Ahmad's due process rights as well as international legal protections for children. He had no legal assistance or representation during interrogation, detention and trial. Press and police accounts also throw into question his psychological stability and his ability to participate in his own defence."

The boy told an online newspaper he confessed to the murder only after police questioned him for a third time because "my strength dwindled and I lacked the capacity to refuse". He said he had been in solitary confinement for three months, awaiting trial. Although he was 13 at the time of the murder, the court treated him as an adult, based on its assessment of the coarseness of his voice and his pubic hair.
There's an exacting legal standard.
Saudi Arabia has ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which prohibits capital punishment for offences committed by young people under 18.
I imagine Sha'ria contains exceptions, all good for the observance of the faith ...
"Executing one child for the killing of another would only compound the tragedy," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. "King Abdullah should uphold Saudi Arabia's international legal obligations by commuting this death sentence."

The families of Ahmad and the murdered girl are Egyptian nationals living in the kingdom. Saudi law allows murder cases to be settled by payment of blood money to the victim's relatives but Wala's parents have turned down offers of compensation. In the meantime, Ahmad remains on death row at a juvenile detention centre in Dammam.

Saudi diplomats in London could not be contacted for comment yesterday.
Posted by:Steve White

#4  the Saudi authorities violated Ahmad's due process rights

There's such a thing in Saudi Arabia?
Posted by: Raj   2005-10-29 10:38  

#3  Hard to believe that for once I kind of agree with Saudi authorities on something. If the kid really did kill the girl (likely), execution seems appropriate to me - and I kind of like their legal standard for treating him as an adult.
So how do they carry out the execution? Remotely detonated car bomb in Iraq?
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-10-29 10:01  

#2  the tot's father was offered the death penalty--blood money--or repeated ass rape of the firmly butt cheeked killer by a gaggle of hashed out phillipino construction workers--he's consulting his iman and the oracle of delphi for the correct pubushment
Posted by: SON OF TOLUI   2005-10-29 04:30  

#1  Certainly HRW can use it's military might to right this injustice. Oh my bad, they are all TRANZI fops and this poor kid has more pubes and balls than the lot of them.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2005-10-29 02:05  

00:00