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View Full Version : (08.04.09): "Protests at Sudan woman's trial" (BBC News) Video @ link


Laura Cereta
08-04-2009, 12:17 PM
Police have fired tear gas at supporters of a Sudanese woman charged with wearing "indecent clothing", shortly after her trial was postponed.
Lubna Ahmed Hussein says she was arrested for wearing trousers.

She has adopted a defiant attitude, urging authorities to try her although she faces up to 40 lashes in public.

Earlier, she told the BBC she was not afraid, saying: "Flogging is not pain, flogging is an insult to humans, women and religions."

Ms Hussein has resigned from a UN job that would have given her immunity to take on the case - indicating she wants it to become a test case for women's rights in Sudan.

"If the court's decision is that I be flogged, I want this flogging in public," she told the BBC's Today programme.

But Ms Hussein's trial in the capital, Khartoum, was delayed for a month after the judge said he needed to verify if she was immune from prosecution because of her former position at the UN.

After her hearing was adjourned, Ms Hussein said the authorities wanted to delay her trial until the fuss around it went away.

Scores of women protested outside the court, some holding up banners saying "No return to the dark ages".

Then the riot police drove them away, reports the BBC's James Copnall in Sudan.

First they marched up the road, banging their batons against their plastic shields, and later they fired tear gas and charged the protesters.

Ms Hussein was arrested in a restaurant in the capital with other women earlier this month for wearing clothing deemed "indecent" under Khartoum's Sharia law.
She said 10 of the women arrested with her, including non-Muslims, each received 10 lashes and a fine.

"Before police caught me, there are maybe 20,000 girls and women getting flogged for dress reasons," she said.

If this could happen in a restaurant in Khartoum, imagine what the situation must be for women in Darfur, Ms Hussein said.



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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8182658.stm

foxyladi
08-04-2009, 12:19 PM
i applaud her bravery.:thumbsup:

Laura Cereta
08-04-2009, 03:47 PM
Ms Hussein has resigned from a UN job that would have given her immunity to take on the case - indicating she wants it to become a test case for women's rights in Sudan.


Sometimes great sacrifices like this have to be made in order to change the system. The best way an individual can change the legal system (without running for office) is to fight the legal system.

RE:
08-05-2009, 09:00 AM
I was hoping that HRC timed her trip to Africa for this and will be able to voice her concerns.

It really does take a Clinton.;)

Laura Cereta
08-05-2009, 09:29 AM
I was hoping that HRC timed her trip to Africa for this and will be able to voice her concerns.

It really does take a Clinton.;)

Good point. I hadn't even thought about that.

foxyladi
08-05-2009, 11:27 AM
Sometimes great sacrifices like this have to be made in order to change the system. The best way an individual can change the legal system (without running for office) is to fight the legal system.

this is for her and for all women:thumbsup:

devildog
08-05-2009, 11:39 AM
I applaud her bravery as well.