Corpun file 21421
Philippine Star, Manila, 21 June 2009
60 lashes for OFWs in Saudi 'gay show'
By Pia Lee Brago
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MANILA, Philippines - The Philippine embassy in Riyadh
yesterday reported that the 67 Filipino workers who were arrested
during a raid for holding a "gay show" last week may
face 50-60 lashes and at least three months imprisonment after
they were charged with "imitating women" and
"display of homosexuality."
In an interview on the weekly radio program "Para Sa Iyo
Bayan" of Vice President Noli de Castro, also presidential
adviser on overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), Rousell Reyes, third
secretary and vice consul of the Philippine embassy in Riyadh,
said the offense carries the punishment of lashing and
imprisonment.
The OFWs were celebrating Philippine Independence Day.
Reyes said the embassy has no information on the identities
and work of the 67 Filipinos who were charged and released
because no one reported the incident to the diplomatic post.
An embassy case officer was sent to the police station on
Wednesday after receiving reports that Filipinos were arrested
during a raid last June 13 on a compound in an eastern Riyadh
neighborhood.
Police confirmed to the embassy that 67 Filipino workers, not
69 as earlier reported, were arrested and detained.
"Some of those arrested were reportedly wearing gowns and
wigs and drinking liquor. It seems that there was a party,"
Reyes said.
Not all of those arrested were homosexuals, but they were at
the party with their Filipino partners who were also arrested and
detained.
Reyes said the embassy has to give a diplomatic note to the
Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs to be able to get the names of
those arrested.
He said the filing of charges against the 67 OFWs have been
reported to Saudi immigration authorities to prevent them from
leaving the country.
Reyes said two similar cases happened last year in the eastern
part of Saudi Arabia, where Filipinos held a beauty pageant that
was raided.
In a report to De Castro, Philippine Ambassador to Riyadh
Antonio Villamor said the Filipinos were released after their
respective sponsors guaranteed and paid for the corresponding
fees.
Only sponsors can bail out foreign workers who are jailed,
with their assurance that the accused would attend court trial.
Saudi Arabia's laws strictly prohibit open display of
homosexual behavior, with penalties including fines, imprisonment
or whipping.
Corpun file 21419
Arab News, Riyadh, 28 June 2009
Couple sentenced to jail, lashes for child abduction
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RIYADH: A court in Riyadh has sentenced a couple who kidnapped a newborn baby from a Riyadh hospital last year.
The man was convicted of kidnapping the infant girl, named
Shahad, from the National Guard Hospital in February 2008 and
sentenced to 15 years in jail and 13,000 lashes. His wife
received three years in jail and 1,500 lashes for abetting the
crime.
Shahad was just one-day old when she was taken from the
hospital. The ruling was delivered after a trial that lasted
seven months.
Shahad was found nine months after she went missing, according
to the Shams newspaper. The child's father had offered a SR1
million reward to anyone who could provide information about his
missing daughter.
A witness had testified that he saw a woman in white shoes and
abaya running away from the hospital with a baby in a suspicious
manner. Although the information was minimal, it helped
investigators zero in on the clue and look for the woman.
The investigations led to a couple living in the north of
Riyadh with a baby. On searching their home, police were able to
find a pair of white shoes. Subsequent DNA tests confirmed that
the girl was Shahad.
During investigations, the man claimed he and his wife found
the baby and he had contacted police six months later to report
he had found her. The general prosecutor, however, contradicted
the man's statement by proving he had not contacted police.
The court heard that when the couple was confronted with
evidence, the man shouted and cursed his wife. When questioned
individually, the woman initially denied kidnapping the child.
She later said her husband brought the baby home saying it was
his friend's baby and that he had asked him to look after
her for a few days as the friend and his wife were having
difficulties.
When confronted with the witness statement placing a woman in
abaya and white shoes at the hospital, the woman denied it was
her. She was then asked to don her abaya and white shoes, and the
witness was brought to identify her, which he did. In spite of
this, the woman stood by her previous statement.
The general prosecutor called for the harshest punishment for
the couple, saying their crime caused the girl's family
immense pain.
In court, the man changed his statement. He said he and his
wife found the baby in a push chair with no sign of her parents
while out shopping. He said they took the infant with them and he
did not inform the police, as he was wanted over a case relating
to money.
He said he was subsequently arrested in connection with the
financial case and spent six months in jail. On his release, he
reported the infant to the police but was arrested again.
The woman stuck to her original story that the child was
brought home by her husband. She said every time she pushed him
to report the baby to police, her husband would say he was taking
care of everything. She said when her husband was released from
prison, she insisted that he return the baby to her parents. She
said she did not inform the police, as she was scared of her
husband.
Copyright:
Arab News © 2003 All rights reserved.
Corpun file 21420
Saudi Gazette, Riyadh, 29 June 2009
Saudi appeals lashes for ex-wife messages
By Majed Al-Marshad
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BURAIDAH -- A Saudi national, sentenced to 70 lashes of the
whip for sending written communications to his ex-wife, has
appealed the verdict at the Court of Cassation.
The District Court in Buraidah made the ruling after the man
sent 181 communications to the mother of his seven children who
had divorced him through the pre-nuptial agreed stipulation
called "khula", after which he was also prohibited from
having contact with his children without obtaining prior official
permission.
The defendant claimed in court that the 181 messages were an
attempt to win back his former wife and reunite his family after
a separation of 14 years.
-- Okaz/SG
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