StarGazer Posted August 22, 2002 as-Salaam aleykum Wa RahmatuLlah An interesting article on what people are now boiling over in Nigeria: maybe Muslims can resolve the issue, given that many of them (including scholars) are disgusted with the result as well. htp://interestalert.com/brand/siteia.shtml?Story=st/sn/08200000aaa04b69.upi&Sys=zzn&Type=News&Filter=Front%20Page&Fid=FRONTPAGAnalysis: Rescuing a condemned mom By UWE SIEMON-NETTO, UPI Religion Correspondent WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (UPI) -- The hope of a young Nigerian mother sentenced to be stoned to death for alleged adultery may lie with the persuasive powers of top Muslim scholars from around the world, United Press International learned Tuesday. Prominent Islamic, not Christian, sages should undertake the rescue effort on behalf of 30-year-old Amina Lawal, according to Lebanese-born law professor Azizah Y. al-Hibri, who is also the founder and executive director of Karama, a Washington-based organization of Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights. Hibri told UPI she was ready to assemble an international delegation of Muslim savants, male and female, to fly to Funtua in the northern Nigerian state of Katsina, where an Islamic high court rejected Lawal's appeal against her death sentence on Monday. "The only thing we are lacking is funds," said al-Hibri, who teaches law at the University of Richmond in Virginia. She added that she hoped for support from international human rights organizations grasping the efficacy of an intervention by Muslim scholars. "We must work within the culture," meaning the Islamic culture of northern Nigeria. Al-Hibri is an expert on the Shariah, or Muslim religious law. The case involves a poor and uneducated tribal woman, who became pregnant allegedly after her divorce. A lower court that sentenced her to death in March used her baby daughter as evidence for her "crime," but acquitted the child's father, thus violating Islamic code, according to al-Hibri. The high court judges stayed Lawal's execution until she weaned her child from breast-feeding. In January 2004, her relatives must accompany her to the site where she will be stoned to death -- the "ultimate form of torture," as Amnesty International termed it in a statement. The Lawal case is bound to bring to a boil the long-simmering conflict between the Nigerian federal government and the country's 12 northern states over their introduction of the Shariah. On this point there is agreement between scholars and activists such as Paul Marshall of Freedom House, Dutch Islamic studies professor Ruud Peters, and LaShawn Jefferson, executive director of the Women's Rights Division of Human Rights Watch. Jefferson urged the Nigerian government Tuesday to commute Lawal's death sentence and drop the charges against her. The verdict against the young woman violated the democratic Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the country's "international human rights commitments," Jefferson said. Nigeria's democratically elected president, Olusegun Obansanjo, is a Baptist. Of the 126 million Nigerians, 50 percent are Muslim, 40 percent Christian and 10 percent follow indigenous beliefs. The Lawal case is expected to be the first test of the Shariah's constitutionality before the country's Supreme Court. Of the 36 Nigerian states, 12 have so far adopted the Islamic legal code, though not all of them with the severity evidenced in Katsina. Peters, a specialist on Islamic law and a professor at the University of Amsterdam, told UPI, "The Supreme Court could squash parts of the Shari'ah." In some of the northern regions, "courts have ordered amputations as punishment for theft," according to Human Rights Watch. Before Amina Lawal, another Nigerian woman, Safiya Hussaini, had been condemned to die by stoning. But her sentence was overturned in March after heavy pressure, especially from the European Union and a declaration by the European Parliament condemning the verdict. "The EU will act in the Lawal case as well," Peters predicted. But apart from political efforts, the Shariah itself offers hope to Amina Lawal, both Peters and al-Hibri contended. "The Shariah judges in northern Nigeria are not very sophisticated," said Peters who had done research in that region. Azizah al-Hibri insisted that the Shariah, too, knows the concept of due process, which was not applied. "If this was consensual sex, how come the father was acquitted?" she asked. "Furthermore, if the partners weren't married people, their act wasn't a capital crime under Islamic law." The young peasant woman's conviction was based on her confession to "adultery," the Arabic term for which is "zena." But her lawyers argued that she did not even understand this word because she is only conversant in her tribal tongue. Thus the confession to something she did not even understand also violated the Shariah, al-Hibri explained. Ruud Peters said that Islamic law, too, includes the concept of reasonable doubt. "It contains the 'sleeping fetus' notion that pregnancies may take as long as two years to come to term." This implies that the law should allow for the possibility that Amina Lawal's child was fathered by her husband before he divorced her. While this may strike some as sophistry, Azizah al-Hibri stressed that the Shariah is a problem "that must ultimately be addressed theologically." In line with an increasing number of Muslim scholars she asked, "Is Islam properly applied?" Copyright 2002 by United Press International. All rights reserved. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Haashim Posted August 23, 2002 Thanks, sister tamina for this article. we have seen it on the tv's and newspapers but they don't concern this (young) women's life, why they don't be so kind and emotional to the palestinian mothers and children whose houses were destroyed their fathers were killed or in the prison, when they reporting from palestine they are not so kind and enthousiastic, they are very cautious to select words, as one sheikh said (IBAADATU SHCABIN BI AKMALIHI MASA'LATUN FIIHAA NADAR, WA QATLU IMRI'IN KAAFIRIN JARIIMATUN LAA TUQTAFAR) = SHACAB DHAN HADDII LA BAABI'IYO WAA MASA'LO BAARITAAN U BAAHAN (goaa'nka waa inaan lagu degdegin), HADDIISE NIN GAAL AH MEEL LAGU DILO WAA DAMBI AAN LA CAFIYI KARIN). If there is something called HYPOCRISY the western media is an example of that. double standard is their biggest weapon, they can enlarge an event if it's their interest and ignore if it's other's intrest. WALLAHUL MUSTACAAN .............................. LACNADI HA KU DHACDO DAALIMIINTA, LAAKIIN KUWA KA AAMUSAN MAXAAN NIRAAHNAA Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Macalin Posted August 23, 2002 OK..i am confused here. The sharia says anyone who commits adultery should be stoned to death? right? wheres the fine line here?..whats the proof? does the child in question enough? i mean wallahi am confused the LAW is the LAW and should be followed uniformly..on the other hand i see biasness among the community members! i hope someone helps her..i see its better for her to have something be4 allah than something infront of some ppl. again..am confused! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
StarGazer Posted August 23, 2002 Lakkad, you're confused because not all the facts were presented in the article. From my understanding, the woman didn't get a fair trial which is basically all Aziza al-Hibri is trying to convey to everyone. There's a possibility that the judge didn't follow the shariah properly. As far as Zina goes and the repecussions according to sharia, am not too familiar with it (don't want to give out wrong info). Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites