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Saudi women beat the living crap out of trolling religious cop

GolaniB

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It was a scene Saudi women’s rights activists have dreamt of for years.

When a Saudi religious policeman sauntered about an amusement park in the eastern Saudi Arabian city of Al-Mubarraz looking for unmarried couples illegally socializing, he probably wasn’t expecting much opposition.

But when he approached a young, 20-something couple meandering through the park together, he received an unprecedented whooping.

A member of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, the Saudi religious police known locally as the Hai’a, asked the couple to confirm their identities and relationship to one another, as it is a crime in Saudi Arabia for unmarried men and women to mix.

For unknown reasons, the young man collapsed upon being questioned by the cop.

According to the Saudi daily Okaz, the woman then allegedly laid into the religious policeman, punching him repeatedly, and leaving him to be taken to the hospital with bruises across his body and face.

“To see resistance from a woman means a lot,” Wajiha Al-Huwaidar, a Saudi women’s rights activist, told The Media Line news agency. “People are fed up with these religious police, and now they have to pay the price for the humiliation they put people through for years and years. This is just the beginning and there will be more resistance.”

“The media and the Internet have given people a lot of power and the freedom to express their anger,” she said. “The Hai’a are like a militia, but now whenever they do something it’s all over the Internet. This gives them a horrible reputation and gives people power to react.”

Neither the religious police nor the Eastern Province police has made a statement on the incident, and both the names of the couple and the date of the incident have not been made public, but on Monday the incident was all over the Saudi media.

Should the woman be charged, she could face a lengthy prison term and lashings for assaulting a representative of a government institution.

Saudi law does not permit women to be in public spaces without a male guardian. Women are not allowed to drive, inherit, divorce or gain custody of children, and cannot socialize with unrelated men.

Officers of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice are tasked with enforcing such laws, but it hasn’t been an easy year for Saudi Arabia’s religious police.

The decision last year by Saudi King Abdullah to open the kingdom’s first co-educational institution, with no religious police on campus, led to a national crises for Saudi Arabia’s conservative religious authorities, with the new university becoming a cultural proxy war for whether or not women and men should be allowed to mix publicly.

A senior Saudi cleric publicly criticized the gender mixing at the university and was summarily fired by the king.

That was followed in December by a surprise announcement from Sheikh Ahmed Al-Ghamdi, head of the Saudi religious police commission in Mecca, who published an article against gender segregation, leading to threats on his life and rumors that he had been or would be fired.


Meanwhile, the Saudi government has gone to great efforts recently to improve the image of the religious police, most notably by firing the national director of the Commission for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice earlier this year. The new director Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Humain then announced a series of training programs and a special unit to handle complaints against the religious police.

Last month, however, members of the religious police in the northern province of Tabuk were charged with assaulting a young woman as she attempted to visit her son, in a move that marked an unprecedented challenge to the religious police’s authority.

"There is some sort of change taking place," Nadya Khalife, the Middle East women’s rights researcher for Human Rights Watch, told The Media Line. "There is clearly a shifting mentality regarding to the male guardianship law and similar issues. More women are speaking out, there are changes within the government, there is a mixed university, the king was photographed with women, they want to allow women to work in the courts and there are changes within the justice ministry. So you can witness some kind of change unfolding but it’s not quite clear what’s happening and it’s not something that’s going to happen overnight."

Saudi woman beats up virtue cop



How great is this? Saudi Arabia is one of the most oppressive country's on the face of this Earth. It practices one of the worst forms of gender apartheid in modern history.

and now women are standing up to their masters....
 
You can here the cries of women who was being harassed from a country a great distance away from irsael, but you cant here the children and women crying for freedom and family deaths in Palestine?

How Pathetic.

Swati nothing to do with the topic. you can have a separate thread for that.
 
You can here the cries of women who was being harassed from a country a great distance away from irsael, but you cant here the children and women crying for freedom and family deaths in Palestine?

How Pathetic.

lol what?

women and children have more rights in israel or "palestine" than pakistan and saudi arabia, that's for sure.

how many women murdered a year in honor killings in pakistan?

10,000 at a minumum..

Ending the silence on 'honour killing' | Society | The Observer

israel/pal conflict has killed 8,000 in the last 25 years.

but, back to women's rights - they dont have them in saudi arabia.

so perhaps you should stop pointing the finger at israel and worry about improving the civil rights in muslim countries?
 
How great is this? Saudi Arabia is one of the most oppressive country's on the face of this Earth. It practices one of the worst forms of gender apartheid in modern history.

and now women are standing up to their masters....

you may be right , but there law and order situation cannot be compared to any other nation on this planet.

Just look at the most un-opperesive country like US, how many rape cases ,robberies and murders are done in just one day, if you look at those figures you would certinly not call that society a normal place to live in ..!!!

SA despite being very expressive is free from very social evils that prevail in a free society.
 
you may be right , but there law and order situation cannot be compared to any other nation on this planet.

Just look at the most un-opperesive country like US, how many rape cases ,robberies and murders are done in just one day, if you look at those figures you would certinly not call that society a normal place to live in ..!!!

SA despite being very expressive is free from very social evils that prevail in a free society.

Wrong...
The most free country in the earth must be Germany. if you look at the culture then even US will be put to shame. But its the safest country I have experienced. No where in the globe you can have better law and order situation. Well as per the survey Luxembourg came as the number one in the list of safe countries but I have never lived there ( though have visited a couple of times), I have spent enough time in Europe and US/Canada and can definitely say that No one can be as safe as Germany. If you say Rape in Germany people will ask, well whats that ?
 
you may be right , but there law and order situation cannot be compared to any other nation on this planet.

Just look at the most un-opperesive country like US, how many rape cases ,robberies and murders are done in just one day, if you look at those figures you would certinly not call that society a normal place to live in ..!!!

SA despite being very expressive is free from very social evils that prevail in a free society.

You don't need to go as far as saudi arabia cutting people's heads off to maintain law and order.

China and Japan have pretty low crime rates and there are nowhere near as many restrictions as saudi arabia.
 
You don't need to go as far as saudi arabia cutting people's heads off to maintain law and order.

China and Japan have pretty low crime rates and there are nowhere near as many restrictions as saudi arabia.

people first need to know that there was crime to calculate the crime rate in case of china. Many of the crimes remain hidden from the people because of the nature of the government to portray themselves as all saints.
 
you may be right , but there law and order situation cannot be compared to any other nation on this planet.

Just look at the most un-opperesive country like US, how many rape cases ,robberies and murders are done in just one day, if you look at those figures you would certinly not call that society a normal place to live in ..!!!

SA despite being very expressive is free from very social evils that prevail in a free society.
Indeed the US is a terrible country. I see daily riots in my neighborhood demanding shariah-type law-and-order in the US...:rolleyes:
 
you may be right , but there law and order situation cannot be compared to any other nation on this planet.

Just look at the most un-opperesive country like US, how many rape cases ,robberies and murders are done in just one day, if you look at those figures you would certinly not call that society a normal place to live in ..!!!

SA despite being very expressive is free from very social evils that prevail in a free society.

in USA, rape, robbery, murder are crimes.

in saudi arabia, rape is legal in marriage. crime is okay as long as you're stealing from christians or immigrants. murder is good as long as its done in the name of "honor."

in a "free" society individuals get to make their own choices and women are free to masturbate and choose their own sex partners without being decapitated by their peace-loving father/brother/son.

would you rather have a saudi-styled government, where religion controls every bit of your life? where women can't even drive?

if i was a pakistani, id hate saudia arabia like hell since it is a premier sponsor of the taliban.

Pakistani soldiers clash with Taliban, 40 dead | Reuters

10 pakistanis killed by saudi-funded taliban.

no outrage?
 
in USA, rape, robbery, murder are crimes.

in saudi arabia, rape is legal in marriage. crime is okay as long as you're stealing from christians or immigrants. murder is good as long as its done in the name of "honor."

in a "free" society individuals get to make their own choices and women are free to masturbate and choose their own sex partners without being decapitated by their peace-loving father/brother/son.

would you rather have a saudi-styled government, where religion controls every bit of your life? where women can't even drive?

if i was a pakistani, id hate saudia arabia like hell since it is a premier sponsor of the taliban.

Pakistani soldiers clash with Taliban, 40 dead | Reuters

10 pakistanis killed by saudi-funded taliban.

no outrage?

Well western ppl are obssesed with SEX.. i dont know but when ever they talk about human rights or women rights.. its obvious there main concern in SEX.. women are not allowed to hv bf... not allowed to have sex with strangers... not allowed to sleep with a gang.. not allowed wear small and tiny clothes... bla bla

cm on man doesnt ur country have all these women rights available.. hv fun there.. get as much booty as u like..

The way i see when you ppl talk abt Women Rights its usually ur insane inner desires you put out... Therkieesss

About Saudi Arabia.. what do you suggest ? An invasion like iraq?
to give freedom to ppl first kill lot of them and continue killing them in the name of freedom.
 

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