Amina
Lawal � stata assolta dall'accusa di adulterio.
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25/09/2003
AMINA LAWAL ASSOLTA.
SODDISFAZIONE DELLA COMUNITA' DI SANT'EGIDIO.
LA CAMPAGNA PER L'ABOLIZIONE DELLA PENA DI MORTE CONTINUA
In
Nigeria � stata prosciolta Amina Lawal dall'accusa di adulterio per avere
generato fuori dal matrimonio la piccola Wasila.
La
Comunit� di Sant'Egidio � estremamente soddisfatta della fine di un
incubo che rischiava di togliere la vita a una donna vittima di violenza
sessuale. Tutto ci� grazie al lavoro di avvocati come la giurista indiana
Sona Kahn in collegamento con la Comunit� di Sant'Egidio, e di Hauwa
Ibrahim che ha svolto in loco la difesa di Amina. Le loro argomentazioni
sono state accolte dalla Corte che ha ribaltato la condanna capitale
emessa un anno fa, permettendo ad Amina Lawal di ritrattare la confessione
resa inizialmente sotto le pressioni sociali e senza nessuna tutela
legale, di fronte alla prima Corte islamica che aveva esaminato il caso.
Fin
dal giorno della condanna, la Comunit� di Sant'Egidio si � mobilitata
con altri, in particolare Amnesty International, per fermare questa
esecuzione capitale che rilanciava un orrore appena evitato per Safiya
Husseini, la donna nigeriana il cui caso era stato portato all'attenzione
internazionale proprio dalla Comunit� di Sant'Egidio e che
successivamente aveva visto una mobilitazione crescente, prima in Italia e
poi nel mondo.
Purtroppo
anche oggi, mentre apprendiamo con gioia di questa vittoria della legge e
del buon senso, la notizia dell'assoluzione di Amina Lawal si accompagna a
una nuova sentenza capitale nello stato di Bauchi, nel Nord della Nigeria.
La condanna a morte per lapidazione � stata emessa Marted� scorso ai
danni di un uomo, il giovane Jibrin Babaji, con l'accusa di avere dormito
con tre ragazzi.
L'assoluzione
di Amina Lawal � un passo importante, ma � solo un primo passo: la lotta
contro la pena di morte continua con la grande mobilitazione in vista
della Giornata mondiale contro la pena di morte, e la Giornata
internazionale "Citt� per la vita - Citt� contro la pena di
morte" del 30 novembre 2003, che collegher� 80 citt� del mondo,
da Roma a Buenos Aires, da Santiago del Cile a New York.
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25/09/2003
ACQUITTAL FOR AMINA LAWAL:
THE COMMUNITY OF SANT�EGIDIO EXPRESSES SATISFACTION
THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE DEATH PENALTY GOES ON
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In
Nigeria Amina Lawal was acquitted from accuses of adultery for having
given birth to little Wasila outside marriage.
The
Community of Sant'Egidio states its satisfaction for the end of a
nightmare which could have deprived a victim of sexual violence of her
life. Acquittal was achieved thanks to the work of lawyers like Indian
jurist Sona Kahn, connected to the Community of Sant'Egidio, and Hauwa
Ibrahim who assumed defence on the spot. Their reasons were heard by the
court which overturned the capital punishment sentence delivered a year
ago, and Amina Lawal was allowed to retract the confession given under
social pressure and stripped of any legal assistance, to the first Islamic
Court reviewing the case.
Since
the day she was condemned, the Community of Sant'Egidio has rallied
together with others, Amnesty International especially, in order to stop
this capital execution reminiscent of the horrors averted in the case of
Safiya Husseini, the Nigerian woman whose case was brought to
international attention by the Community of Sant'Egidio with a large
mobilisation first in Italy, then in the rest of the world.
Unfortunately,
our joy of today as we learn of this victory of law and common sense with
Amina Lawal's acquittal, is accompanied by a new sentence to death in the
state of Bauchi, in North Nigeria. The sentence to death by stoning was
delivered last Tuesday to a man, young Jibrin Babaji, for having slept
with three young men.
Amina
Lawal's acquittal is an important step, but only the first: the struggle
against death penalty goes on with the great mobilisation for the World
Day against the Death Penalty, and the International Day "Cities
for Life � Cities against the Death Penalty", on November 30th,
2003, bound to connect 80 cities around the world: from Rome to Buenos
Aires, from Santiago of Chile to New York.
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La
donna era stata condannata in base alla legge islamica
per aver avuto una figlia fuori dal matrimonio.
Nigeria,
Amina vince l'appello non sar� lapidata per adulterio
KATSINA
- Amina � salva. La donna nigeriana, condannata alla lapidazione perch�
colpevole di adulterio, � stata assolta oggi dalla corte d'appello islamica di
Katsina.
Amina
Lawal, 31 anni, analfabeta e disoccupata, dopo il divorzio dall'uomo che le
aveva dato due figli, aveva avuto rapporti con un altro uomo che aveva promesso
di sposarla, l'aveva messa incinta, e poi non aveva mantenuto la promessa. Nel
marzo del 2002, la donna era stata giudicata colpevole per aver concepito la
figlia Wasila al di fuori del matrimonio. E in base alla Sharia, la legge
islamica, introdotta in Nigeria nel 1999 e in vigore in alcuni Stati del nord
del paese, il tribunale islamico di Bakori l'aveva condannata alla lapidazione.
La condanna era stata confermata un anno fa anche da un altro tribunale.
Amina
aveva poi presentato ricorso alla Corte d'Appello. Ma l'udienza era stata
rimandata tre volte e tali rinvii avevano dato vigore al movimento
internazionale che rivendicava l'assoluzione della donna. Migliaia di lettere ed
e-mail avevano tempestato le autorit� nigeriane, come era avvenuto per Safiya -
la donna protagonista di un caso simile e poi graziata.
Fin dalle
prime ore del mattino, la corte d'appello � stata circondata da una trentina di
poliziotti armati e presa d'assedio dai giornalisti e da un gruppo di attivisti
impegnati nella difesa dei diritti umani, che hanno atteso pazientemente
l'arrivo della condannata.
Amina si � presentata Con il capo coperto dal tradizionale velo islamico,
tenendo Wasila, la figlioletta della "colpa" con una mano e Aliyu Musa
Yawuri, l'avvocato, con l'altra .
Il
verdetto di oggi ha dato ragione al presidente nigeriano Olusegun Obasanjo (che
� cristiano) che aveva assicurato che "Amina non sarebbe mai stata
giustiziata". I legali hanno argomentato l'appello sostenendo che la Sharia
non � applicabile in questo caso perch� Amina ha commesso il
"crimine" prima che la legge islamica venisse introdotta nello stato
di Katsina.
I cinque
componenti del tribunale si sono espressi a maggioranza per la revoca della
condanna inflitta all'imputata, madre di quattro figli. Nella sentenza, letta
dal presidente Ibrahim Maiangwa, viene sottolineato che la Corte d'Appello ha
giudicato "assolutamente sbagliata" la decisione dell'Alta Corte della
Sharia.
Se la
condanna fosse stata definitiva, Amina sarebbe stata la prima persona a essere
lapidata dal 2000, quando la Sharia � stata introdotta in 12 Stati a
maggioranza musulmana del nord della Nigeria. In base a questa legge, perch� un
uomo sia condannato per adulterio occorrono almeno quattro testimonianze
oculari. Ma per una donna una gravidanza fuori del matrimonio � considerata una
prova sufficiente.
Subito
dopo la notizia dell'assoluzione di Amina � stata resa pubblica la condanna a
morte, emessa marted�, di Jibrin Babaji, 20 anni, riconosciuto colpevole di
rapporti sessuali con tre ragazzi.
KATSINA
(NIGERIA), 25 SET - Amina Lawal aveva presentato ricorso alla Corte d'Appello
contro la sentenza, rilasciata in prima istanza, del tribunale islamico di
Bakori che l'ha condannata a morte, tramite lapidazione, per adulterio nel marzo
del 2002.
Con
il capo coperto dal tradizionale velo islamico - tenendo Wasila, la figlioletta
della 'colpa' con una mano e Aliyu Musa Yawuri, l'avvocato, con l'altra - Amina
si era presentata cosi', questa mattina, nell'aula del tribunale.
La
corte, fin dalle prime ore del mattino, era stata circondata da una trentina di
poliziotti armati e presa d'assedio dai giornalisti e da un gruppo di attivisti
impegnati nella difesa dei diritti umani che hanno atteso pazientemente l'arrivo
della condannata.
Amina,
donna di campagna di 31 anni analfabeta e disoccupata, dopo il divorzio
dall'uomo che le aveva dato due figli, aveva avuto rapporti con un altro uomo
che aveva promesso di sposarla, l'aveva messa incinta, e poi non aveva mantenuto
la promessa.
L'udienza
di appello era stata rimandata tre volte e tali rinvii hanno dato vigore al
movimento internazionale che rivendicava l'assoluzione della donna.
Migliaia
di lettere ed e-mail hanno tempestato le autorita' nigeriane, come era avvenuto
per Safiya - la donna protagonista di un caso simile e poi graziata.
Il
verdetto di oggi ha dato ragione al presidente nigeriano Olusegun Obasanjo (che
e' cristiano) che aveva assicurato che ''Amina non sarebbe mai stata
giustiziata''.
Se
la condanna fosse stata definitiva, Amina Lawal sarebbe stata la prima persona a
essere lapidata dall'introduzione della sharia (legge islamica) nel 2000 in 12
Stati a maggioranza musulmana del nord della Nigeria.
In
base alla sharia, perche' un uomo sia condannato per adulterio occorrono almeno
quattro testimonianze oculari, ma per una donna una gravidanza fuori del
matrimonio e' considerata di per se' una prova sufficiente.
Nigerian
spared death by stoning
A
northern Nigerian woman sentenced to death by stoning for committing adultery
has won her appeal against the verdict on a majority decision.
Four out
of five judges rejected her conviction, saying she was not given "ample
opportunity to defend herself".
Thirty-one-year-old
Amina Lawal was convicted last year in Katsina state.
She had
been found guilty under the Sharia (Islamic criminal law) which has been
introduced into 12 northern states over the last three years.
The
verdict, which had been expected says the BBC's Anna Borzello in Katsina, was
read out to a packed courtroom in the appeal court in the northern town of
Katsina.
The
panel of judges said the decision to acquit Ms Lawal was based on procedural
errors at her original trial and the fact that her adultery was not proved
beyond doubt.
Ms Lawal
sat throughout the verdict in the corner of the courtroom, her face hidden by a
shawl and her child on her lap.
A
village woman, she had been convicted of adultery in March last year soon after
giving birth to her daughter, Wasila.
This was
the second time she had appealed against her sentence of death by stoning, with
the help of two Nigeria women's rights groups which took up her case.
While
Thursday's ruling means Ms Lawal can go home a free woman, the issue of Sharia
and in particular Sharia punishments like flogging for fornication and
amputation for theft has not gone away, our correspondent says.
Shortly
after the verdict, reports were coming in of a Nigerian man being sentenced to
death by stoning for sodomy after he allegedly slept with three boys in the
northern Bauchi state.
The
introduction of Sharia punishment has been highly controversial, provoking
international concern abroad and sparking religious violence within Nigeria.
Woman
sentenced to stoning freed
From
Jeff Koinange
CNN
Thursday, September 25, 2003 Posted: 1353 GMT (
9:53 PM HKT)
KATSINA, Nigeria (CNN) -- An appeals court has freed a Nigerian
mother sentenced to death by stoning for adultery.
The
Shariah Court of Appeal ruled on Thursday that Amina Lawal's conviction
was invalid because she was already pregnant when harsh Islamic Shariah
law was implemented in her home province.
After
the hearing, she told CNN, "I am happy. God is great and he has made
this possible. All I want is to go home, get married and live a normal
life."
The
31-year-old, who was in court with her baby, Wassila, has been appealing
the death sentence for two years.
"It
is the view of this court that the judgment of the Upper Shariah Court,
Funtua, was very wrong and the appeal of Amina Lawal is hereby discharged
and acquitted," judge Ibrahim Maiangwa said.
Shariah
law, based on the teachings in the Quran, Islam's holy book, is practiced
in 12 of Nigeria's 36 states.
Lawal's
case had become the focus of human rights groups around the world who were
outraged at the sentence that Lawal should be buried up to her neck and
then have stones thrown at her head until she was dead.
Lawal's
lawyer, Hauwa Ibrahim, said: "This a great victory for justice. The
law of justice has prevailed over the law of man. Amina is free to go, to
do what she wants."
But
not all the spectators who attended the hearing were pleased by the result.
One man who had come to hear to court's ruling said: "I would have
preferred Amina to be stoned to death. She deserves it."
Had
the court not overturned the verdict, Lawal would still have had two
appeals left, one to a Nigerian federal court and a final appeal to
Nigeria's Supreme Court. Neither of those courts is governed by Shariah
law.
Nigerian
President Olusegun Obasanjo had said if Lawal's case reached the Supreme
Court, he would make sure it was overturned.
Lawal
was convicted and sentenced in March 2002 after giving birth to a baby
girl more than nine months after divorcing. Under the strict Shariah law,
pregnancy outside marriage constitutes sufficient evidence for a woman to
be convicted of adultery.
A
court stayed her execution for two years to allow her to care for her
baby.
"This
is all I have to live for right now," Lawal said before the hearing.
"My child means everything to me."
Lawal
lives with her father, his two wives and their numerous children in the
tiny village of Kurami, deep in Nigeria's Islamic north. The village is so
small that it does not appear on a map.
She
insists she did nothing wrong and that the man who fathered her child made
a promise to marry her. He did not, leaving her pregnant and with no
support.
The
man said he was not the father, and three male witnesses testified he did
not have a sexual relationship with Lawal. The witnesses constituted
adequate corroboration of his story under Shariah law, and he was freed.
Lawal
is the second woman to be sentenced to death after bearing a child out of
marriage since 2000, when more than a dozen states in the predominantly
Islamic northern Nigeria adopted strict Islamic Shariah law.
In
March 2002, an appeals court reversed a similar sentence on Safiya
Hussaini Tungar-Tudu after worldwide pleas for clemency and a warning from
Obasanjo that Nigeria faced international isolation over the case.
The
adoption of Shariah, which includes amputation as a possible punishment
for convicted thieves, has stoked violence between Muslims and Christians
in Africa's most populous state. More than 3,000 people have been killed.
Nigerian
Islamic court clears Amina Lawal of adultery in stoning case
KATSINA, Nigeria - Nigerian
single mother Amina Lawal was cleared of adultery by an Islamic court, releasing
her from a sentence that she be stoned to death.
Lawal's supporters hailed
the majority ruling, which split a panel of Katsina State's top Islamic lawyers
four to one, as a vital step forward in ensuring the legal rights of Nigeria's
more than 60 million Muslims.
"It's a victory for
law, it's a victory for justice. Today we are celebrating the victory of law
over the rule of man," said Lawal's friend and lawyer, Hauwa Ibrahim.
"Amina is free. Amina
has been discharged. Amina can have her life back," she told reporters
outside the court, as Lawal and her baby daughter Wasila were whisked away in a
police vehicle with a heavily armed escort.
Lawal, a 31-year-old old
village housewife, was last year convicted of adultery under the strict Sharia
legal code, and faced becoming the first person to be stoned to death since its
controversial reintroduction in Nigeria, mainly in the northern, predominantly
Muslim states.
She appeared before Katsina
Sharia Appeal Court in a peach-coloured embroidered veil, cradling Wasila, who
has grown a thick head of curls since making her first public appearance at her
mother's trial in March last year, when she was only a few months old.
Since then, photographs of
mother and child sitting meekly in front of panels of robed judges have flashed
around the world, and the case has become the centre of an international dispute
over Sharia's harsh punishments.
Legal rights campaigners
said that her acquittal was a step forward, but that it must be seen as a first
step in ensuring that due process be followed in future Sharia cases.
"Amina's struggle is
the struggle of one person, one highly mediatised combat. But there are other
such struggles around this country," said Catherine-Danielle Mabille of the
French-based group Doctors Without Borders.
Even as the Katsina court
was sitting, in a small one-storey courtroom painted in Sharia's traditional
sky-blue, officials in nearby Bauchi State announced that a young man had been
sentenced to be stoned to death for sodomy.
Ibrahim told reporters that
she hoped that Lawal's victory would serve as a useful but non-binding precedent
that could be cited in appeal cases in other states. Each of Nigeria's 36 states
has an independent judicial system.
The court ruled that Lawal
should have been allowed to retract her alleged original "confession",
which was taken by a village court after fundamentalist vigilantes raided her
home at night shortly after Wasila's birth.
Any defendant has the right
to withdraw a confession, which should be made at least four times before a
panel of judges, rather than just once before one judge as in Lawal's case,
judge Ibrahim Mai-Ungawa said.
Nigeria's federal police
should not have pressed charges in the case, he added, unless they had four
witnesses to the alleged adultery.
"I'm very happy with
the ruling," said Ibrahim.
Katsina State prosecutors
said after the hearing that they had three months to decide whether to appeal
the verdict to a federal court.
Since Nigeria's return to
civilian rule in 1999, a dozen northern states have begun to reintroduce Sharia
law into their penal codes, despite opposition from the federal government and
the region's Christian minority. One state in the south, Oyo, has also
reintroduced the strict legal code.
One murderer has been
executed under the code and at least 15 people have been charged with adultery,
a crime which carries the death penalty. Dozens of thieves have been jailed and
are awaiting the amputation of their hands.
Three alleged adulterers
had already been cleared when Lawal came to court, but several more -- including
a young couple of former lovers -- are awaiting trial or appeal hearings.
Sharia bans adultery,
fornication, stealing, gambling, drunkenness and dancing in public, among other
acts.
Lawal's acquittal will come
as a great relief to President Olusegun Obasanjo's secular federal government,
which has been embarrassed by the international outcry over the young mother's
treatment.
The Christian president has
so far refused to challenge Sharia in the Supreme Court, despite claims that it
is unconstitutional, for fear of offending Muslims, half the population of
Africa's most populous country.
Nigerian
Islamic court clears Amina Lawal of adultery
KATSINA,
Nigeria - A Nigerian Islamic appeal court cleared single mother Amina
Lawal of adultery, for which she had been sentenced to be stoned to death.
In
a split verdict a panel of five judges at the Sharia Appeal Court in the
northern city of Katsina, found in favour of the 31-year-old mother of four at
her second bid to get the sentence lifted.
Donnerstag
25. September 2003, 15:16 Uhr
Nigerianerin
Amina Lawal wird nicht gesteinigt
Bild
vergr��ern
Katsina
Die
wegen Ehebruchs zum Tod durch Steinigung verurteilte Nigerianerin Amina Lawal
ist in der Berufungsinstanz freigesprochen worden. Anderthalb Jahre nach ihrer
Verurteilung entlastete das Berufungsgericht in der nordnigerianischen Stadt
Katsina die 31-J�hrige vom Vorwurf des Ehebruchs. Ein islamisches
Scharia-Gericht hatte die geschiedene Mutter im M�rz vergangenen Jahres zum Tod
durch Steinigung verurteilt, weil sie eine uneheliche Tochter zur Welt gebracht
hatte.
In
der zweiten Berufungsentscheidung erkl�rten es die Richter in Katsina f�r
rechtens, dass Lawal ihr Ehebruchgest�ndnis widerruft. Die junge Mutter habe
zun�chst keinerlei Rechtsbeistand gehabt; zudem habe sie die in Arabisch
abgefasste Anklage nicht verstehen k�nnen, weil sei eine andere Muttersprache
habe. Insgesamt sei sie nicht richtig �ber die Anklage und m�gliche Folgen
ihrer �u�erungen aufgekl�rt worden. In der ersten Berufungsinstanz ANZEIGE
war
das Todesurteil trotz dieser Einw�nde best�tigt worden.
Lawal
hatte im vergangenen Jahr ihre uneheliche Tochter Wasila zur Welt gebracht und
war daraufhin von Dorfbewohnern angezeigt worden. Obwohl sie zu dem Zeitpunkt
bereits zwei Jahre geschieden war, wurde sie gem�� den Gesetzen der Scharia
des Ehebruchs f�r schuldig befunden. Die Scharia war im Jahr 2000 unter
Missachtung der nigerianischen Verfassung in zw�lf von 36 Bundesstaaten wieder
eingef�hrt worden, was insbesondere im Ausland zu Protesten gef�hrt hatte.
Im
ersten Verfahren hatte Lawal angegeben, ihr Freund Yahaya Mahmud habe sie mit
einem Heiratsantrag zum Geschlechtsverkehr verf�hrt. Mahmud war freigesprochen
worden, nachdem er auf den Koran geschworen hatte, nicht der Vater des Kindes zu
sein. Lawal widerrief sp�ter ihr Gest�ndnis und erkl�rte, das Kind sei noch w�hrend
der Ehe gezeugt worden, aber erst zwei Jahre sp�ter zur Welt gekommen: Im
islamischen Rechtssystem ist das Ph�nomen des "schlafenden Embryos"
allgemein anerkannt.
Im
Vorfeld des Verfahrens hatte der nigerianische Pr�sident Olusegun Obasanjo eine
Urteilsaufhebung durch ein Bundesgericht f�r den Fall angek�ndigt, dass Lawal
erneut f�r schuldig befunden werde. Seine Regierung war durch den Fall Lawal
auch international in Bedr�ngnis geraten.
KATSINA
- La Cour d'appel islamique de Katsina, dans le nord du Nigeria, a acquitt�
jeudi Amina Lawal, condamn�e � mort par lapidation, en premi�re instance,
pour adult�re.
M�re
de quatre enfants Amina Lawal avait �t� condamn�e en mars � la peine de mort
par lapidation par un tribunal islamique nig�rian pour avoir eu un enfant hors
mariage. Ses partisans l'ont accompagn�e � Katsina, distante de 180 km de son
village natal de Kurami, et l'ont mise au secret.
Cette
affaire, qui a provoqu� peu d'�moi parmi la population majoritairement
musulmane de cette ville du nord nig�rian, a en revanche attir� l'attention de
nombreux militants et d�fenseurs des droits de l'Homme au Nigeria et � l'�tranger.
Les
m�dias internationaux ont converg� dans ce p�le r�gional situ� aux portes
du Sahel, en m�me temps que des militants fran�ais et des manifestants
nig�rians en gr�ve de la faim. Jusqu'� pr�sent, Olusegun Obasanjole chef d'Etat
chr�tien n'a pas encore directement d�nonc� la charia, par peur de
m�contenter les quelque 63 millions de musulmans nig�rians, soit la moiti� de
la population du pays le plus peupl� d'Afrique.
L'ann�e
derni�re, Amina une villageoise timide avait �t� d�nonc�e aux autorit�s
religieuses par des voisins apr�s la naissance de sa fille, Wasila, plus de
deux ans apr�s avoir rompu avec son mari. Lors du proc�s en appel au mois d'ao�t,
l'avocat de la jeune femme avait ax� sa plaidoirie sur les faits et la
proc�dure pour tenter de d�montrer que la condamnation �tait douteuse.
Me
Yawuri a affirm� que le tribunal qui a jug� Amina en premi�re instance ne lui
avait pas expliqu� correctement son inculpation ni les cons�quences de ses
propos lors du proc�s. Il a aussi avanc� que l'enfant avait �t� con�u avant
l'entr�e en vigueur de la charia dans l'Etat de Katsina et que la grossesse
avait �t� le r�sultat d'un possible "embryon dormant" (ph�nom�ne
reconnu par la loi islamique), f�cond� alors qu'Amina �tait encore mari�e.
M�me
au sein de la communaut� musulmane, on d�nonce l'application de la charia
comme une injustice, visant les Nig�rians pauvres et peu �duqu�s, comme
Amina, plut�t qu'une �lite souvent accus�e de corruption.
Par
ailleurs, un Nig�rian a �t� condamn� � mort par lapidation pour
"sodomie" dans l'Etat de Bauchi (nord), selon un responsable
gouvernemental.
Jibrin
Babaji, 20 ans, a �t� reconnu coupable d'avoir couch� avec trois gar�ons par
un tribunal appliquant la charia, la stricte loi islamique, dans cet Etat, selon
cette source.
Il
a ajout� que Babaji disposait d'un d�lai de 30 jours pour faire appel.
"L'accus�
a le droit de faire appel pendant 30 jours apr�s quoi cela sera au gouverneur
de d�cider s'il doit �tre jug� � nouveau", a ajout� le porte-parole.
Il
a d�clar� que les trois gar�ons impliqu�s dans cette affaire avaient re�u
chacun 50 coups de canne apr�s avoir reconnu leur participation aux faits
reproch�s � Jibrin Babaji.
Douze
Etats � majorit� musulmane du nord du Nigeria ont r�introduit la charia (stricte
loi islamique) depuis le retour d'un r�gime civil en 1999 en d�pit de l'opposition
exprim�e par le gouvernement f�d�ral, les Chr�tiens du pays, et des
organisations de d�fense des droits de l'Homme.
Bild
vergr��ern
Katsina/Nigeria
(AP) Die in Nigeria zum Tod durch Steinigung verurteilte Amina Lawal ist am
Donnerstag in einem Berufungsprozess freigesprochen worden. Ein Gremium von f�nf
islamischen Richtern hob das Urteil vom M�rz vergangenen Jahres mit der Begr�ndung
auf, im Prozess habe es Verfahrensfehler gegeben und Lawal habe nicht
ausreichend Gelegenheit gehabt, sich zu verteidigen.
Nach
mehrst�ndiger Beratung entschieden die Richter mit einer Gegenstimme, das
Urteil zu verwerfen. Lawal habe nicht gen�gend Zeit gehabt, die gegen sie
erhobenen Anschuldigungen zu verstehen, zudem sei w�hrend der Verhandlung nur
einer statt der nach islamischem Recht erforderlichen drei Richter anwesend
gewesen, hie� es in dem Beschluss. Au�erdem sei Lawal nicht w�hrend des
angeblichen Ehebruchs ertappt worden. Die Staatsanwaltschaft erkl�rte, sie
akzeptiere die Entscheidung. Innerhalb von 30 Tagen kann gegen den Beschluss
jedoch noch Berufung eingelegt werden.
Lawal
wurde vor eineinhalb Jahren zum Tod verurteilt, Anzeige
weil
sie als geschiedene Frau ein nichteheliches Kind zur Welt gebracht hatte. Sie
wurde nach dem islamischen Gesetz, der Scharia, des Ehebruchs f�r schuldig
befunden, obwohl die Scheidung bei der Geburt ihrer Tochter bereits zwei Jahre
zur�cklag. Das Urteil sollte Anfang kommenden Jahres vollstreckt werden, sobald
das Kind abgestillt ist. Der mutma�liche Vater des Kindes bestritt seine
Verantwortung und wurde freigesprochen.
Lawals
Anw�ltin, Hauwa Ibrahim, begr��te den Freispruch als Sieg f�r Gerechtigkeit
W�rde und grundlegende Menschenrechte. Fran�ois Cantier von der franz�sischen
Vereinigung Anw�lte ohne Grenzen, der die Verteidigung unterst�tzte, erkl�rte,
die Todesstrafe f�r Ehebruch widerspreche der nigerianischen Verfassung und
internationalen Vereinbarungen gegen Folter. Ein weiterer Anwalt Lawals hatte
angek�ndigt, bis vor den Obersten Gerichtshof Nigerias zu ziehen, sollte die
allein erziehende Mutter nicht freigesprochen werden.
Menschenrechtsgruppen
und die nigerianischen Regierung hatten wiederholt gefordert, das
Steinigungsurteil au�er Kraft zu setzen. Vergangene Woche bot Brasilien der
Mutter und ihrer knapp zweij�hrigen Tochter Asyl an. Die
Menschenrechtsorganisation Amnesty International (AI) begr��te den Freispruch,
kritisierte jedoch, dass in einigen Staaten Nigerias immer h�ufiger grausame
Strafen wie Steinigung, Auspeitschungen und Amputationen verh�ngt w�rden. Die
Gesellschaft f�r bedrohte V�lker (GfbV) erkl�rte, nur eine Abschaffung der
Scharia werde Steinigungen dauerhaft verhindern.
Im
August 2002 wurde ein erster Berufungsantrag Lawals von einem Gericht im n�rdlichen
Staat Katsina abgelehnt. Sie w�re die erste Frau gewesen, die seit Einf�hrung
der Scharia in zw�lf n�rdlichen Staaten Nigerias vor vier Jahren zu Tode
gesteinigt wird. Zwei andere Todesurteile wurden wieder aufgehoben, zwei weitere
Prozesse laufen noch.
Anulada
la condena a muerte por lapidaci�n contra Amina Lawal
KATSINA,
Nigeria- Un tribunal de Nigeria evit� el jueves que Amina Lawal fuera lapidada
hasta la muerte al anular una condena por adulterio que hab�a decidido una
corte isl�mica.
"Este
tribunal considera que el veredicto del Tribunal Superior de la Sharia (ley
isl�mica), Funtua, estuvo muy equivocado y que Amina Lawal queda por lo tanto
liberada y absuelta", dijo el juez Ibrahim Maingwa, leyendo el veredicto
del tribunal de apelaci�n.
Gobiernos
occidentales liderados por la Uni�n Europea hab�an instado a las autoridades
nigerianas a intervenir ya que Amina, de 31 a�os y analfabeta, fue condenada
por adulterio en marzo de 2002 por haber tenido un ni�o 10 meses despu�s de
divorciarse.
Grupos
de defensa de los derechos humanos indignados por la sentencia isl�mica hab�an
asegurado que incrementar�an las protestas si el Tribunal de Apelaci�n de la
Sharia en el conservador estado de Katsina manten�a el fallo.
La
introducci�n de la ley penal de la 'sharia' por una docena de estados en el
norte de Nigeria, predominantemente isl�mico, ha profundizado los conflictos
�tnicos y religiosos en este pa�s multi-�tnico de m�s de 120 millones de
personas.
El
caso de Lawal tambi�n ha dividido a la opini�n musulmana.
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