Note the usual insistence that sharia law itself is just, but isn’t being carried out properly. Part of that hinges on widely divergent views of what constitutes justice in the first place, but it is also worth noting how readily sharia lends itself to further abuses on top of those enshrined in the letter of the law. The lack of real accountability of an Islamic government to its citizens, alongside the government’s claiming license to mete out divine wrath on sharia’s terms creates a particularly flexible atmosphere for additional brutality.
“Stoned woman ‘screamed for her life’,” from Reuters, October 29:
Kismayu – Relatives of a Somali woman who was publicly stoned to death by Islamists have reacted with fury.
Asha Ibrahim Dhuhulow, 23, was stoned to death after being accused of adultery, witnesses said. It was the first such public killing by the militants for about two years.
“The stoning was totally irreligious and illogical,” said Dhuhulow’s sister, who asked not to be named.
“Islam does not execute a woman for adultery unless four witnesses and the man with whom she committed sex are brought forward publicly,” she said.
Dhuhulow was placed in a hole up to her neck for the execution late on Monday in front of hundreds of people in a square of this southern port, which the Islamist insurgents captured in August.
“A woman in a green veil and black mask was brought in a car as we waited to watch the merciless act of stoning,” one resident, Abdullahi Aden, said.
“We were told she submitted herself to be punished, yet we could see her screaming as she was forcibly bound, legs and hands. A relative of hers ran towards her, but the Islamists opened fire and killed a child.”
Stones were hurled at Dhuhulow’s head, and the woman was brought out of the hole three times to see if she had died.
The Islamists last carried out public executions when they ruled Mogadishu and most of south Somalia for half of 2006. Allied Ethiopian and Somali government forces toppled them at the end of that year
The Islamists controlling this port provide security, but impose fundamentalist practices such as banning entertainment seen as anti-Islamic.
Islamist leaders at the execution said the woman had breached Islamic law. They promised to punish the guard who shot the child.