Next time on Cops: The Religious Police:
(Officer): “You put this uniform on every day, and you never know what you’re gonna come across in the line of duty. I seen it all: A niqab getting caught in the wind, unmarried members of the opposite sex exchanging pleasantries, you name it. A buddy of mine even saw a woman driving.”
(Dispatch radio): “We have a 1031 in progress; repeat, 1031 in progress.”
(Officer): “I’m on it… Hold it… she’s got ‘talismans and products of charlatanism.’ I need backup, NOW!”
(Cue closing music, until tape ripped out and stomped on by religious police)
But seriously, “Maid arrested after Saudi employer “˜bewitched”,” from Agence France-Presse:
RIYADH – Saudi Arabia’s religious police have arrested a domestic worker accused of having put a spell on her employer, the Al Madina newspaper reported on Sunday.
One can’t help but speculate that it may have been a more figurative variety of “spell” — one resulting in a jealous wife, with no, well, earthly course of action to make him stop in Saudi Arabia.
The arrest of the maid, whose nationality was not revealed, followed a complaint by the wife of the employer who she said had been “˜bewitched by the maid”.
The woman said she suspected her husband had been put under a spell because he fiercely defended the maid from criticism every time she neglected her work.
Members of the religious police, known as Mutawas, discovered “˜talismans and products of charlatanism” in a search of the maid’s quarters in the eastern city of Damman, the newspaper added.
The paper said the maid, who is to face trial, “˜admitted she took refuge in sorcery so as to make her employers like her”.
“˜The bewitched husband adored the maid and carried out all her wishes, unbeknownst to his wife,” the newspaper said.
Saudi’s feared religious police are tasked with enforcing respect for public morals. Witchcraft is a capital offence in Saudi Arabia, where Sharia law is strictly applied.
Around two million domestic workers, mostly from Asian countries like Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, are employed in Saudi Arabia.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) says many are sexually exploited and otherwise mistreated by their employers.