Posted by: formyfreedom | April 2, 2008

Morality or Barbarity : Who Will Stop Bearded Dinosaurs?

A man and a woman have been stoned to death by militants inPakistan’s north-west border region after an Islamic ‘qazi’ court found them guilty of adultery. A qazi court is an Islamic court, parallel to the Pakistani judicial system. This is the first incident of stoning carried out in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas on the border of Afghanistan. In the past, couples found guilty of adultery by militants or tribesmen were executed by firing squads.

The woman, identified as Shano, had allegedly eloped with Daulat Khan Malikdeenkhel on 15 March. Quoting Dr. Asad, a spokesman for the militants, Sources said that Shano was a married woman living in Peshawar’s Deen Bahar colony. He said a complaint had been received from her family that she had been abducted by Daulat Khan. But later it was reported that she had ran away with him.

He said that some members of the Taliban captured them when they were returning from Karachi. He said the qazi court found the couple guilty of adultery and sentenced them to death by stoning and the sentence was carried out on Monday in Khwaezai-Baezai, 40 kilometres west of the Mohmand Agency’s headquarters Ghalanai. The body of the woman was laid to rest in the same area by local people. The man’s body was taken to the hospital and handed over to his relatives.


Responses

  1. Barbarity is this writers verdict! These people who carry out such killings are so far removed from real morals they cannot see.

  2. formyfreedom,

    I applaud your efforts to bring news like this out of places like Pakistan. The world needs to see Islam and its followers for the for the brutal things they are.
    Keep up the good work,
    sfcmac
    The Foxhole
    http://www.sfcmac.wordpress.com

  3. I like your blog!

    This is par for the course with the Islamists. Gosh, I really hate to say it because in my heart I would rather that it weren’t true, but I fear that just running the Taliban out of Afghanistan and urging democracy in Pakistan is just a whole hell of a lot easier in theory than in practice. I feel this is not because the Americans lack the effort–clearly, they go above and beyond their duty every day struggling for freedom in these places–but what I fear is that Islamic culture is too unmoveable. We have Pakistan claiming to agree to democracy, but then they have Islamic courts that are practicing Sharia! Same with Afghanistan. The Americans ran the Taliban out, began to progress the Afghans toward democracy and the government was going to put a man to death for converting to Christianity! Can’t have it both ways. The only way for democracy and freedom to advance in these places is for Islam to go. And I don’t know how that can happen. The Muslims themselves have to want it. They simply need to choose another religion so that their lives can be whole.

  4. Having lived both in Pakistan and Europe, I have come appreciate arguments from both sides.

    The fact is that people in Pakistan spend a lot of their efforts blaming their problems on ‘outside powers’ when in fact it is they who have gone wrong somewhere on the journey to enlightenment.

    However the continous interference of the West in the internal affairs of the country is only inflaming the matter. The US sincerely seems to think what it is doing is making matter better, when in fact the reverse is true.

    About leaving Islam, religion in Pakistan is not the problem. Now I know many who read this will laugh. Of course there are the mad firebrand mullahs. But you must appreciate that at the heart of the Pakistan problem is not the mullahs, poverty or even the lack of liberty. It is educations. The literacy rate in the country is depressingly low and I find that many people here
    in Europe really fail to comprehend this into the equation when studying the region.

    I repeat this has nothing to do with religion or Islam. Anyways in Pakistan the support for religious parties has been traditionally a low 3%. Only under Musharraf’s dictatorship did they become popular in the country’s border areas with Afghanistan.


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