200 lashes for a Saudi rape victim???

RIYADH (AFP) — Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah has pardoned a teenage girl sentenced to six months in jail and 200 lashes after being gang raped, Al Jazirah newspaper reported on Monday.

The ruling against the 19-year-old girl in the ultra-conservative Muslim kingdom had attracted widespread international condemnation, including from human rights groups and the White House.

The Arabic language daily said it had been informed of the royal pardon from its own, unidentified, sources.

But in the same article, the kingdom’s Justice Minister Abdullah bin Mohammad bin Ibrahim Al Shaikh told the paper the king had the “right to overrule court judgements if he considered it benefiting the greater good.”

The minister added that the king, who is viewed by many as a cautious reformer, was concerned with “the needs of the people and the court judgments that are made against them.”

Got that? Pardoned. By the King. Who is viewed as a cautious reformer.

I hope Kristof and Farrow have let their friends know…

**

So the Examiner writer whose work Kristof and others are quoting has:

  • picked up a nasty story from Saudia Arabia almost six years ago,
  • that actually didn’t end in a girl being given 200 lashes for being raped
  • but resulted in the King personally pardoning her,
  • thus moving Saudi jurisprudence in a very welcome new direction
  • — and posted it without any of the redeeming parts, with attribution to a group that’s not exactly friendly to the House of Saud, and getting the date wrong by almost six years in the process… And then well-meaning, generous people — Nick Kristoff and some of my friends among them — circulate this ugly and incomplete story, without first checking to see what truth there is to it.

    I quoted a source without checking its veracity only the other day [1, 2, 3], so I’m in no position to go around blaming people who don’t check their sources. But seeing this particular story of the 200 lashes go viral makes me sad — because repeating it only stirs up righteous anger, disgust and hatred.

    Rape is terrible. A penal code that sentences people to 200 lashes is way, way beyond my sense of justice. But I don’t believe stirring up hatred between nations or against religions is the path we want to choose…

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    1. Suzanne Schroeder:

      When I saw that the Clarion Project was quoted, that was enough, all the red flags were raised. (I’m not sure though that CAIR “cancels” Clarion out. But then, I don’t regard CAIR as a defender of extremism, but rather addressing predjudice and hysteria.) 
      I have no sympathy for Kristof in this matter, he’s smart enough to perform some basic fact-checking.
       

    2. zen:

      CAIR is still listed as an unindicted co- conspirator in a Federal terrorism case involving fundraising for Islamist terrorist groups. That is not fighting prejudice or hysteria but fueling it. That does not excuse others for putting out anti- Muslim disinformation but I would not trust anyone from CAIR further than I could throw them.

    3. morgan:

      I wouldn’t rust Kristof as far as I could throw him.

    4. Charles Cameron:

      Heh, Morgan, I hardly ever read him, so I don’t have much of an opinion, but some of the people I know who work on poverty and urban medical issues around the world seem to like him.
      .
      Zen, I think both CAIR and Clarion are trying to reinvent themselves. I have reservations about both, so we’ll see how that goes in each case. There’s definitely a face-off.
      .
      Suzanne, I agree it woulod have been good for Kristof to have done some fact checking, but the fact is (ie: unchecked, but certainly my impression) that fact-checkers used to do that, at least for major print media, and seem to have evaporated over recent years.

    5. Patricia Cain:

      Thank you for this…I posted something about this and shared on my Facebook timeline.   The article and photo of the “200 lashes victim” is going viral again, and propagating even  more hate.  So sad.

    6. Sarah Rowlands:

      I am a big supporter of Kristof – I think he has done some fairly fantastic things in terms of up to the moment reporting on gender and poverty issues. His writing on sexual trafficking is important and I hate to see him criticized.

      That said, he really dropped the ball on this one. The story popped up for me on a news feed. It made me feel physically ill. We’ll have to agree to disagree on the pardoning being a cause for praise. It should never have been passed down as a sentence in the first place. Do you think she would have received that pardon if not for international outcry? It’s like saying in an abuse situation “yeah, the father threatens to kill the kid, but hey, mom bought some candy for him and calmed dad down, so it’s fine” (an example I’ve heard in real life). The kid may not have ACTUALLY been physically harmed, someone intervened, but do we really think that the home is a stable place for the child or that damage hasn’t been called. The problem is not THIS case but a legal and social system in which it could be handed out it the first place… yes, she was pardoned (candy) but the threat remains for someone else down the line who maybe doesn’t have international focus (mom) stepping in. Anyway, I digress. And I think we (broadly) agree on the horrific nature of the sentence anyway.

      My main point is that Kristof should have checked his facts. No matter how angry I felt when I read the story, no matter how sickened, I still took five minutes to surf around before passing it on through Facebook to friends. It only took five minutes to spot that this was a story from 2007. I am just passing it to friends, he passes it to the world… fact checking should have happened. Because you are right, rehashing is not the way to create change. People will simply feel lied to when they discover the truth and possibly miss the very real troubles which DO exist.