Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
International

Blogger Raif Badawi Spared Flogging Friday In Saudi Arabia

The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2015 11:22 AM
  • Blogger Raif Badawi Spared Flogging Friday In Saudi Arabia
MONTREAL — The Quebec government said it would accelerate immigration procedures for Raif Badawi, the blogger in Saudi Arabia who has been sentenced to 1,000 lashes but was spared Friday.
 
It was feared his punishment would resume after the Supreme Court of Saudi Arabia upheld the sentence imposed on the blogger, but the Amnesty International office in Paris said it had received confirmation the punishment was postponed.
 
Badawi is not a Canadian citizen, although his wife and children fled Saudi Arabia in 2012 and settled in Sherbrooke, Que., in 2013.
 
Ensaf Haidar, Badawi's wife, took to Twitter on Friday to repeat her plea for an end her husband's punishment.
 
"I repeat my appeal to his majesty King Salman to pardon my husband ... and stop his flogging," she wrote.
 
Quebec Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil told reporters Friday the province would offer Badawi an immigration selection certificate on humanitarian grounds, which would speed up the process to allow him to reunite with his family in Quebec.
 
Badawi's detention and sentence have stirred up worldwide condemnation and Quebec politicians unanimously adopted a motion in February calling for his immediate release.
 
Weil was accompanied by members of all other provincial parties in announcing the measure.
 
"I think it just shows that we're all of one mind," Weil said. "It means that we believe that his treatment is outrageous, how he's being treated and for what he has done, and it's beyond limiting freedom of expression — it's cruel and unusual punishment, it's absolutely horrendous."
 
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has also spoken out against Badawi's treatment, but has said Ottawa's influence is limited by the fact he is not a Canadian citizen.
 
International Relations Minister Christine St-Pierre said she spoke with Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson on the Badawi case earlier this week about Canada applying political pressure.
 
Edouard Delaplace, director of judicial affairs with Lawyers Without Borders Canada, says the Saudi king could ask the high court to intervene again, but a political intervention might be more realistic at this point.
 
"It's quite likely that it's more the political channel that has to be explored," Delaplace said. "Maybe with the beginning of Ramadan next week, there is an opportunity for the king to give his pardon and release Raif Badawi."
 
Badawi has been imprisoned since 2012 for criticisms in his blog that promotes human rights and democracy in his country.
 
The Saudi court had sentenced the 31-year-old man to 10 years in prison and 1,000 lashes for criticizing Saudi Arabian clerics.
 
However, after a first session of 50 lashes in January, all others were postponed, apparently due to health concerns and undisclosed reasons.
 
Weil said she spoke with Badawi's family on Thursday evening.
 
"I knew, in the tone of her (Haidar's) voice last night, every Thursday night is agony, agony for her, and every Friday is agony until she gets the news," Weil said.

MORE International ARTICLES

Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi Be Freed, India Protests

Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi Be Freed, India Protests
The Islamabad High Court Monday ordered conditional release of Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, the alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attack, drawing strong protests from India, which summoned the Pakistani envoy to "convey concern" over the development.

Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi Be Freed, India Protests

No Trace Of Airasia Plane, Second Day's Search Futile

No Trace Of Airasia Plane, Second Day's Search Futile
No significant sign has been found after the second day's search for the missing AirAsia flight QZ8501 Monday, a senior official of Indonesia's seacrh and rescue agency said while another official dismally said the plane might well be at the bottom of the sea.

No Trace Of Airasia Plane, Second Day's Search Futile

IS Executes Own Fighters Fleeing Jihad

IS Executes Own Fighters Fleeing Jihad
Once a person joins the jihad, there is no turning back. That is the fact of life the Islamic State (IS) seems to be enforcing by executing up to 200 of its own fighters who had sought to return home.

IS Executes Own Fighters Fleeing Jihad

British Flight Lands Safely At Gatwick Airport After Technical Snag

British Flight Lands Safely At Gatwick Airport After Technical Snag
A Las Vegas-bound passenger plane of British airline Virgin Atlantic has landed safely back at Gatwick Airport following a technical issue with one of the landing gears, the airline said Monday.

British Flight Lands Safely At Gatwick Airport After Technical Snag

AirAsia Flight QZ8501 From Indonesia To Singapore Missing

AirAsia Flight QZ8501 From Indonesia To Singapore Missing
 An AirAsia flight bound for Singapore from the Indonesian city of Surabaya lost contact with the air traffic control Sunday, media reported.

AirAsia Flight QZ8501 From Indonesia To Singapore Missing

Ancient Buddhist Sculptures Discovered In Pakistan

Ancient Buddhist Sculptures Discovered In Pakistan
Ancient Buddhist sculptures have been found in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province during an excavation work, a media report said Saturday.

Ancient Buddhist Sculptures Discovered In Pakistan