Yahoo – AFP,
16 Jan 2015
Dubai (AFP)
- Saudi Arabia postponed until next week Friday's flogging of a blogger jailed
for insulting Islam, citing medical reasons, a week after he received the first
50 of 1,000-lash sentence, his wife said.
Raef Badawi
received the first whipping in public outside a mosque in the Red Sea city of
Jeddah, sparking an international outcry and a campaign by Amnesty
International and others for him to be freed.
Badawi is
expected to undergo 20 more weekly beatings until his punishment is complete.
"The
prison doctor saw (Raef) Badawi's health does not allow his flogging
today," his wife, Ensaf Haidar said, speaking to AFP by telephone from
Canada, where she has sought asylum with her three children.
Haidar said
Friday's flogging was postponed because her husband's wounds had not yet
healed, an explanation also given by Amnesty.
"But
it will probably still take place next Friday," she said.
Earlier,
Amnesty also spoke of Badawi's unhealed wounds, terming the punishment as
"macabre and outrageous."
During a
medical exam ahead of the flogging, "the doctor concluded that the wounds
had not yet healed properly and that (Badawi) would not be able to withstand
another round of lashes at this time," a statement said.
It added
that the doctor recommended the flogging be postponed until next week.
"Not
only does this postponement... expose the utter brutality of this punishment,
it underlines its outrageous inhumanity. The notion that Raef Badawi must be
allowed to heal so that he can suffer this cruel punishment again and again is
macabre and outrageous," said Said Boumedouha, Amnesty's Middle East and
North Africa deputy director.
In
September, a Saudi court upheld a jail sentence of 10 years and 1,000 lashes
for Badawi, who has been behind bars since June 2012.
Badawi is
the co-founder of the now-banned Saudi Liberal Network along with women's
rights campaigner Suad al-Shammari, who was also accused of insulting Islam and
arrested last October.
Shammari
has said the charges against Badawi were brought after the Saudi Liberal
Network criticised clerics and the kingdom's notorious religious police, who
have been accused of a heavy-handed enforcement of Islamic sharia law.
In July
2013, a court initially sentenced Badawi to more than seven years and 600 lashes,
but an appeals court overturned the ruling, sending the case back for a retrial
that resulted in a harsher sentence.
Rights
groups repeatedly criticise Saudi Arabia, an absolute monarchy, for regularly
beheading convicts under its strict version of sharia.
Rape,
apostasy, murder, armed robbery and drug trafficking are all punishable by
death.
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