Somali adulterer stoned to death

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Codrus

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Islamists in southern Somalia have stoned a man to death for adultery but spared his pregnant girlfriend until she gives birth.
Abas Hussein Abdirahman, 33, was killed in front of a crowd of some 300 people in the port town of Merka.
An official from the al-Shabab group said the woman would be killed after she has had her baby.
Islamist groups run much of southern Somalia, while the UN-backed government only control parts of the capital.
This is the third time Islamists have stoned a person to death for adultery in the past year.
Al-Shabab official Sheikh Suldan Aala Mohamed said Mr Abdirahman had confessed to adultery before an Islamic court.
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President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed

"He was screaming and blood was pouring from his head during the stoning. After seven minutes he stopped moving," an eyewitness told the BBC.
The BBC's Mohammed Olad Hassan in Mogadishu says that if the woman is also killed, her baby would be given to relatives to look after.
Meanwhile, President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed has accused al-Shabab of spoiling the image of Islam by killing people and harassing women.
"Their actions have nothing to do with Islam," said the moderate Islamist during a ceremony at which he nominated a new administration for the capital, Mogadishu.
"They are forcing women to wear very heavy clothes, saying they want them to properly cover their bodies but we know they have economic interests behind - they sell these kinds of clothes and want to force people to buy them."
Last month, two men were stoned to death in the same town after being accused of spying.
A 13-year-old girl was stoned to death for adultery in the southern town of Kismayo last year.
Human rights groups said she had been raped.
Another man has also been punished in this way in the Lower Shabelle region.
Mr Sharif, a former rebel leader, was sworn in as president after UN-brokered peace talks in January.
Although he says he also wants to implement Sharia, al-Shabab says his version of Islamic law would be too lenient.
The country has not had a functioning national government for 18 years.









they are going to wait to stone his girlfriend until AFTER she gives birth....so its torture ...then death




and they wonder why we think they are screwed up
 
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Ryder

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I am glad I don't live there to be honest. You hear all this horrible stuff going on there.
 

Tree Fingers

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Yet people say we need to protect these cultures...
We need to take over whiskey, fags and ps3s.
Lets get em out of the bronze age and into ours!
 

Guyzerr

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they are going to wait to stone his girlfriend until AFTER she gives birth....so its torture ...then death




and they wonder why we think they are screwed up

Kinda like a death sentence anywhere else in the world don't ya think?
 

Guyzerr

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Rule through fear - isn't that the very ESSENCE of religion?
Religion doesn't necessarily have to play a part in that type of gov't. Russia was pretty well religion free for many years and they did the exact same thing. It's still going on in many other regions in the world. North Korea comes to mind right off the bat. Ain't no God in North Korea.
 

Tangerine

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Religion doesn't necessarily have to play a part in that type of gov't. Russia was pretty well religion free for many years and they did the exact same thing. It's still going on in many other regions in the world. North Korea comes to mind right off the bat. Ain't no God in North Korea.

My comment had nothing to do with Government.
 

Tangerine

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Really ?

This is what you said and what I responded to....




Considering organized religion isn't a ruling entity what beside some form of gov't would rule?

Organized religion is absoutely a ruling entity. They have for centuries used fear, intimidation and death to influence people on how to act, behave and follow the "leaders" they annoint. All while staying outside of the confines and accountability of "government" or "rulers."

The Pope would be a pretty elementary example to cite.
 

Guyzerr

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Organized religion is absoutely a ruling entity. They have for centuries used fear, intimidation and death to influence people on how to act, behave and follow the "leaders" they annoint. All while staying outside of the confines and accountability of "government" or "rulers."

The Pope would be a pretty elementary example to cite.
They do have the power to convince, brainwash and intimidate but they do not have the authority to enact laws as they did in days of old, the Pope included. Qualifier: in a civilized world.
 

Tangerine

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They do have the power to convince, brainwash and intimidate but they do not have the authority to enact laws as they did in days of old, the Pope included. Qualifier: in a civilized world.

You're clinging to your definition of "ruling" as being about enacting laws and such. In my definition "ruling" means the desire or ability to control people. Hence "Ruling through fear - isn't that the very ESSENCE of religion?"
 
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