Saudi Rape Victim 'Crushed Human Being,' Husband Says

Blames judge, not system, for sentence
By Jane Yager,  Newser Staff
Posted Nov 21, 2007 9:41 AM CST
Saudi Rape Victim 'Crushed Human Being,' Husband Says
A woman gets in a taxi in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, Monday, Sept. 17, 2007. The Saudi Arabian rape victim given jail time and 200 lashes was unfairly punished because one of the judges had a personal vendetta, says her husband. (AP Photo/Omar al-Abdullah)   (Associated Press)

The husband of the Saudi gang-rape victim sentenced to 200 lashes and 6 months in jail blamed one judge's vendetta—and not the Saudi judicial system itself—for her treatment "as a guilty person who committed a crime." He told CNN his wife has been a severely depressed, ill, "crushed human being" since the attack in 2006, when they were engaged. She's given up her education, and is too fragile to speak publicly.

The 24-year-old husband said her trial was a spectacle; the attackers were allowed to make offensive gestures and threaten his wife. "She was not given any chance to prove her innocence or describe how she was a victim of multiple brutal rapes." One judge, he said, was harsh throughout the case; he was hostile to, and finally dismissed, her lawyer, "who's a known human rights activist."  (More Saudi Arabia stories.)

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