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Nigeria: Woman Sentenced to Death Under Sharia |
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Human Rights Watch
October 23, 2001
New York. Human Rights Watch today condemned
a recent ruling by an Islamic court in Northern Nigeria that
sentenced Safiya Hussaini Tungar-Tudu to death by stoning. The
court issued the death sentence after finding her guilty of having
pre-marital sex.
"Women have a basic right to control their
sexual autonomy," said LaShawn R. Jefferson, executive director of
the Women's Rights Division of Human Rights Watch. "When a woman
is punished so severely for having pre-marital sex, her right to
make free decisions regarding her body is violated."
The Islamic court in Gwadabawa, Sokoto State, in northern
Nigeria sentenced Ms. Tungar-Tudu to death after finding her
guilty of having pre-marital sex, a punishable offense under
Sharia law. Ms. Tungar-Tudu, who is pregnant, has until November 8
to file an appeal. The court's ruling is pending approval by the
governor of Sokoto State after which a date to mete out the
punishment will be fixed. The man she allegedly had sex with was
set free by the same court after concluding that it lacked
sufficient evidence to prosecute him for the alleged adultery.
Human Rights Watch opposes the death penalty in all
circumstances because of its inherent cruelty. Additionally,
international law strictly prohibits the imposition of capital
punishment on a pregnant woman.
In recent years, several states in Muslim-dominated northern
Nigeria have extended the application of Sharia law to criminal
offenses, imposing Sharia punishments for theft and other crimes,
and criminalizing acts such as pre-marital sex and alcohol
consumption.
Ms. Tungar-Tudu's conviction for pre-marital sex is the second
one to be reported in northern Nigeria. In September 2000, an
Islamic court in the northern state of Zamfara, sentenced Bariya
Ibrahim Magazu, a teenage girl, to 180 lashes for pre-marital sex
and bringing false charges against men with whom she allegedly had
sex. Despite protests by international and Nigerian human rights
groups against her sentence, officials authorized the flogging of
Ms. Magazu. Even though her appeal remained pending, the sentence
was carried out; she was lashed one hundred times on January 19,
2001.
In another case, a Sharia court found a fifteen-year-old boy
guilty of stealing money. He was sentenced to the amputation of
his hand. Amputation is an extreme form of corporal punishment,
which is expressly prohibited by the Convention on the Rights of
the Child. Human Rights Watch wrote to the governor of Kebbi State
on October 12, 2001, expressing its concern over the case.
Human Rights Watch called on the Nigerian government to protect
Ms. Tungar-Tudu from the arbitrary meting out of a harsh and
unacceptable punishment, and to ensure that the courts operate in
accordance with international human rights law and the bill of
rights in Nigeria's own constitution.
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