Why no mention in the MSM? SAUDI CLERIC CONFESSES TO MURDERING 5-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER OV

username999

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http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/03/saudi-cleric-confesses-to-murdering-5-year-old-daughter-over-virginity-concerns-gets-a-fine-brief-jail-time/

SAUDI CLERIC CONFESSES TO MURDERING 5-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER OVER VIRGINITY CONCERNS — GETS A FINE & BRIEF JAIL TIME

A prominent Saudi cleric has received a light prison sentence after confessing to beating his 5-year-old daughter to death over concerns about her virginity.

Saudi media reports say Fayhan al-Ghamdi, a frequent guest on Islamic television programs, also raped his daughter before being charged with murder in November.

Gulf News has some of the horrifying details:

[5-year-old] Lama Al Ghamdi was admitted to hospital on December 25, 2011 with multiple injuries, including a crushed skull, broken ribs and left arm, extensive bruising and burns, the activists said. She died last October 22.
Fayhan Al Gamdi, an Islamic preacher and regular guest on Muslim television networks, confessed to having used cables and a cane to inflict the injuries, the activists from the group “Women to Drive” said in a statement.
They said the father had doubted Lama’s virginity and had her checked up by a medic.
Randa Al Kaleeb, a social worker from the hospital where Lama was admitted, said the girl’s back was broken and that she had been raped “everywhere”, according to the group. [Emphasis added]

This photo circulating on social media sites claims to show Lama Ghamdi before she was killed. (Photo: YouTube via Russia Today)
But the cleric was freed last week after serving a short prison term and agreeing to pay $50,000 in “blood money” to the family of the girl’s mother. According to the BBC, it is roughly half of what he would have had to pay had the murdered child been male.


Gulf News reports that the ruling is based on national law that men cannot be executed for killing their children or their wives.

But the backlash has been fierce in Saudi Arabia. A social media campaign gaining momentum Sunday is the latest attempt to use the Internet to pressure the kingdom’s ultraconservative rulers to hand down a harsher punishment.

Countless Twitter users are using the hashtag #AnaLama, Arabic for “I am Lama,” in association with the story.

The news comes soon after Al-Arabiya publicized another Saudi cleric’s call to have female babies wear the burka, so there is less chance they will be sexually molested.
 

MYSITEONLY

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F..King retards those people are to question the virginity of a 5 year old, He deserves to be beaten to a pulp. No mercy for asswhole like that.
 

FAST

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Not his fault

Suffers from some mysterious yet to be defined illness !!!

FAST
 

mrsCALoki

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F..King retards those people are to question the virginity of a 5 year old, He deserves to be beaten to a pulp. No mercy for asswhole like that.
Gee, but she was not a virgin, after he raped her. << sarcasm
 

rld

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I am quite pleased that the article reports that the backlash has been quite fierce in Saudi. Our close relationship with them is a continuing disappointment.
 

username999

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I am quite pleased that the article reports that the backlash has been quite fierce in Saudi. Our close relationship with them is a continuing disappointment.
Yes among the women but the Saudi dictators are desperately trying to control Twitter, Facebook et all to contain this.
 

username999

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There is no doubt that Saudi is long overdue for a regime change.
http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=287190


Saudi: Corruption, dictators the enemy, not Israel
By ILENE PRUSHER
10/10/2012
Saudi journalist says that the ‘real enemies of Arab world’ are corruption and dictators, not the Jewish state.

An article by a Saudi journalist challenging the conventional wisdom in the Arab world – in particular the view of Israel as the root of the region’s problems – is enjoying skyrocketing popularity online and sparking debate about the Arab Spring.

Under the headline “Arab Spring and the Israeli enemy,” the writer used the occasion of the Yom Kippur War in 1973 to wonder aloud about the resources spent on war, in particular the War of Independence in 1948 and the Six Day War in 1967.

“What was the real cost for not recognizing Israel in 1948 and why didn’t the Arab states spend their assets on education, health care and the infrastructures instead of wars?” asked Abdulateef al-Mulhim in the Arab News, a Saudi Arabian newspaper in English whose website “gets hundreds of thousands of hits every day” from around the world, according to the paper’s site.

“But, the hardest question that no Arab national wants to hear is whether Israel is the real enemy of the Arab world and the Arab people,” wrote al-Mulhim.

“I decided to write this article after I saw photos and reports about a starving child in Yemen, a burned ancient Aleppo souk in Syria, the underdeveloped Sinai in Egypt, car bombs in Iraq and the destroyed buildings in Libya. The photos and the reports were shown on the Al-Arabiya network, which is the most watched and respected news outlet in the Middle East,” he wrote.

“The common thing among all what I saw is that the destruction and the atrocities are not done by an outside enemy. The starvation, the killings and the destruction in these Arab countries are done by the same hands that are supposed to protect and build the unity of these countries and safeguard the people of these countries. So, the question now is that who is the real enemy of the Arab world?” he asked.

Al-Mulhim continued later in the column: “The real enemies of the Arab world are corruption, lack of good education, lack of good health care, lack of freedom, lack of respect for the human lives and finally, the Arab world had many dictators who used the Arab-Israeli conflict to suppress their own people.”

“These dictators’ atrocities against their own people are far worse than all the full-scale Arab- Israeli wars,” he added, pointing out the mistreatment of Palestinians by Israeli soldiers, but delineating equally outrageous events in the region, from the devastating war in Syria to the upheaval in Iraq, the corruption in Tunisia that allowed the former president “to steal $13 billion from the poor Tunisians.”

Al-Mulhim then called on Arab countries to stop blaming Israel for their woes and concluded, “Now, it is time to stop the wars and start to create better living conditions for the future Arab generations.”

The article has been shared widely around social media websites such as Facebook and Twitter, and has been republished in several other newspapers since it was published on the Arab News website on October 6. Tim Marshall, a British journalist with Sky News, shared the link in his Twitter Feed and added: “If there were more like this guy – fewer people would die.”

Al-Mulhim, who also writes columns for the al-Saudia al-Yawm newspaper, has written several columns recently that seemed aimed at fomenting debate. In one, he castigated Saudis for complaining about the surplus of expatriates in the kingdom but relying on them to keep the workforce going.

In another, he called on Michelle Obama, the wife of US President Barack Obama, to explain why American women have only managed to be first ladies – or to be appointed secretary of state – but have never been elected president.

The article on the paper’s website has garnered close to 300 comments, some of them in praise of al-Mulhim’s “brave” words, and others bashing his portrayal of events, particularly his suggestion that Palestinians are “better off” than many other Arabs.

Wrote Hassan, who described himself as a West Bank Palestinian: “All of what the writer said is rubbish.

I was treated like an animal from the IDF, suffered when traveling, I can’t go to Jerusalem to pray and Israel took my grandfather’s lands. Also the West Bank is being controlled with idiots (Palestinian Authority).”

The author did not reply to an email request for further comment.
 

Aardvark154

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There is no doubt that Saudi is long overdue for a regime change.
It isn't so much the House of Saud that needs changing as it is the Wahabist religious structure.

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A thoroughly depressing and tragic story!
 

Rockslinger

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There is no doubt that Saudi is long overdue for a regime change.
New very recent Egyptian proverb: "Be careful what you ask for, you might get worse."
Old Iranian proverb: "Be careful what you ask for, you might get a bunch of murderous Islamic mullahs."
 

mrsCALoki

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It isn't so much the House of Saud that needs changing as it is the Wahabist religious structure.

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A thoroughly depressing and tragic story!

If you keep injecting reality and knowledge into these conversations many may have to put you on ignore. Just saying ......


^ more or less a joke.
 

rld

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It isn't so much the House of Saud that needs changing as it is the Wahabist religious structure.

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A thoroughly depressing and tragic story!
Decapitation is much easier and more practical.

Anyways the House of Saud is thoroughly invested in the current repressive structure. Would be happy to see them go.
 

rld

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New very recent Egyptian proverb: "Be careful what you ask for, you might get worse."
Old Iranian proverb: "Be careful what you ask for, you might get a bunch of murderous Islamic mullahs."
And that would be different how? ;-)
 

Aardvark154

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I am seeing progress. Slow but sure. Can't produce utopia in a week.
Sorry, but I don't see it at all.

How has post 1958 Iraq been better? Certainly Egypt post 1952 has been a true oasis likewise Iran post 1978.

How has Turkey been better post 1922, in a way that it otherwise couldn't have been?
 

rld

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Sorry, but I don't see it at all.

How has post 1958 Iraq been better? Certainly Egypt post 1952 has been a true oasis likewise Iran post 1978.

How has Turkey been better post 1922, in a way that it otherwise couldn't have been?
I thought you were referring to more recent events.

I think Iran 1978 was a movement forward. On a moral basis I believe a home grown dictator is better than a foreign imposed one. And Iran is now isolated in the world and being starved into progress, something that could not have happened but for the removal of American support for the regime.

I think Egypt's long period of peace with Israel, was an accomplishment and I expect even better things in the future.

Turkey I think is doing rather well these days. They have made a fine NATO ally and the country functions very well as an effectively secular nation.

Self-determination is a goal in and of itself.
 

Celticman

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How has Turkey been better post 1922, in a way that it otherwise couldn't have been?
I suspect that post 1922 they would not repeat the Armenian Genocide of 1915.
 

Aardvark154

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I suspect that post 1922 they would not repeat the Armenian Genocide of 1915.
Except for the fact that it was the "Young Turks" who where principally responsible. So was it merely growing older that would have made them less likely to repeat it?
 
Ashley Madison
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