on โ26-09-2014 10:49 AM
BAGHDAD: Militants with ISIS publicly killed a rights lawyer in the Iraqi city of Mosul after finding her guilty of apostasy in a self-styled Islamic court, the United Nations said Thursday.
Samira Salih al-Nuaimi was seized from her home on Sept. 17 after allegedly posting messages on Facebook that were critical of the militants' destruction of religious sites in Mosul. Her Facebook page appears to have been removed since her death.
According to the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq, Nuaimi was tried in a so-called "Shariah court" for apostasy, after which she was tortured for five days before the militants sentenced her to public execution.
"By torturing and executing a female human rights' lawyer and activist, defending in particular the civil and human rights of her fellow citizens in Mosul, ISIL continues to attest to its infamous nature, combining hatred, nihilism and savagery, as well as its total disregard of human decency," Nickolay Mladenov, the U.N. envoy to Iraq, said in a statement, referring to the group by an alternate acronym.
The militant group captured Iraq's second largest city Mosul during its rapid advance across the country's north and west in June, as Iraqi security forces melted away. The extremists now rule a vast, self-declared caliphate straddling the Syria-Iraq border in which they have imposed a harsh version of Islamic law and beheaded and massacred their opponents.
In the once-diverse city of Mosul the group has forced religious minorities to convert to Islam, pay special taxes or die, causing tens of thousands to flee. The militants have enforced a strict dress code on women, going so far as to veil the faces of female mannequins in store fronts.
In August, the group destroyed a number of historic landmarks in the town, including several mosques and shrines, claiming they promote apostasy.
The Gulf Center for Human Rights said Wednesday that Nuaimi had worked on detainee rights and poverty. The Bahrain-based rights organization said her death "is solely motivated by her peaceful and legitimate human rights work, in particular defending the civil and human rights of her fellow citizens in Mosul."
The militants' rapid advance eventually prompted U.S. airstrikes last month to aid Kurdish forces and protect religious minorities in Iraq. This week a newly formed U.S.-led coalition expanded the aerial campaign into Syria, where ISIS is battling President Bashar Assad's forces as well as Western-backed rebels.
on โ26-09-2014 11:36 AM
And when they say torture over there they don't mean water boarding.
on โ26-09-2014 11:40 AM
All in the name of Islam and peace, yer sure.
on โ26-09-2014 11:44 AM
@the_hawk* wrote:All in the name of Islam and peace, yer sure.
No, not in the name of Islam or Peace. In the name of violence and crime.
on โ26-09-2014 11:52 AM
all in the name of Islam
on โ26-09-2014 11:59 AM
all in the name of Islam
That is THEIR justification, but it is no more the truth of what Islam stands for, than the Westboro Baptist Church's idea of what The Bible and Christianity stand for. They are just excuses to justify hatred.
on โ26-09-2014 12:00 PM
@the_hawk* wrote:all in the name of Islam
No, they've hijacked Islam and are not acting in the name of Islam at all. They are killing the people of Islam.
They are violent, savage criminals who have no rigfht to hijack the religion of anyone.
on โ26-09-2014 12:03 PM
I was waiting for the false moral equivalence to come in.
on โ26-09-2014 02:52 PM
What does the
Religion of Peace
Teach About...
TORTURE
Question:
Is torture sanctioned by Islam?
Summary Answer:
Yes, but only when there is reason for it.
Source http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/Quran/029-torture.htm
โ26-09-2014 03:02 PM - edited โ26-09-2014 03:03 PM
That's a credible source...................... not.
My source says differently.
The vast majority of Muslim countries have signed the United Nations Convention Against Torture which states: Each State Party shall take effective legislative, administrative, judicial or other measures to prevent acts of torture in any territory under its jurisdiction. No exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or a threat of war, internal political instability or any other public emergency, may be invoked as a justification of torture. Source: Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment - See more at: http://www.faithinallah.org/is-it-permissible-in-islam-to-torture-people/#sthash.gynzmSbS.dpuf