Mother, 21, faces firing squadBy Daniel McGrory
Leaders plead for a woman who denies murder and says a rapist prison guard fathered her son
EUROPEAN leaders are making desperate pleas to spare the life of a 21-year-old mother who is expected to face a firing squad in Yemen on Monday.
The lawyer for Amina Ali Abduladif will visit her in prison today to break the news that her execution is imminent.
Mrs Abduladif was spared two years ago when she was facing her executioners and told them she was pregnant after being raped by a prison guard. But her lawyer, Shada Nasir, told The Times: “Now that her son has reached his second birthday the law here says the death sentence should be carried out.
“I don’t know how I am going to tell her.”
Mrs Nasir said the authorities had also told her to remove the boy from the Sanaa women’s prison as his mother was due to be taken back to her home village to face execution.
International pressure is mounting on Yemen to halt what Amnesty International has called “a barbaric sentence”. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office said: “We are well aware of this case and the EU is urgently discussing the matter with a number of ministers in Yemen.”
Mrs Abduladif was convicted of murdering her husband when she was 16 and the mother of two daughters. There was no forensic science or other evidence and prosecutors in her home town, Mahaweet, relied on her confession which she says was tortured out of her.
Until now she has refused to identify the guard who raped her for fear of reprisals.
“She is in a terrible state after spending five years in prison with a death sentence hanging over her, and now I have to take her son away from her and cannot accompany her on her last journey which she will travel alone,” Mrs Nasir said.
Her parents will not be allowed to see her.
Witnesses say her husband was killed by his cousin in a land dispute in January 1998 but their evidence was not presented to the court during Mrs Abduladif’s trial in May 1999.
She gave birth to her son in jail but Amnesty and other human rights groups have complained that she has been allowed to see little of her other children. The youngest girl was killed recently in a car crash.
Her lawyers say none of her family are willing to look after her son because of the shame of her being raped.
“I will have to take the boy to a safe house in Sanaa while we argue for a last-minute act of clemency,” Mrs Nasir said.
Only the direct intervention of Ali Abdullah Saleh, the Yemen President, can spare Mrs Abduladif.
Yemen has become a close ally of the White House in the War on Terror, and British companies are among those that are being urged to invest in the country.
British ministers have joined politicians from European capitals urging clemency.
Kate Allen, Amnesty Inter0national’s British director, said that “with Amina the case for commuting the death penalty is stronger than ever”.
This is what happens when religious extremism replaces the rule of law.
What the piece doesn't tell you is Yemeni laws states that the death penalty is not permitted for anyone who was under the age of 18, but her execution was upheld by the courts and their chief executive anyway.
-The Oklahoma Hippy
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