KHARTOUM, Sudan(AP)
A Sudanese judge convicted a woman journalist for violating the
public indecency law by wearing trousers outdoors and fined her
$200, but did not impose a feared flogging penalty.
Lubna Hussein was among 13 women arrested July 3 in a raid by
the public order police in Khartoum. Ten of the women were fined
and flogged two days later. But Hussein and two others decided to
go to trial.
"I will not pay a penny," she told the Associated
Press while still in court custody.
Hussein said Friday she would rather go to jail than pay any
fine.
"I won't pay, as a matter of principle," she said.
"I would spend a month in jail. It is a chance to explore the
conditions of jail."
The case has made headlines in Sudan and around the world and
Hussein used it to rally world opinion against the country's
strict morality laws based a conservative interpretations of
Islam.
Ahead of the trial, police rounded up dozens of female
demonstrators, many of them wearing trousers, outside the
courtroom.
The London-based Amnesty International called on the Sudanese
government to withdraw the charges against Hussein and repeal the
law which justifies "abhorrent" penalties.
Human rights and political groups in Sudan say the law is in
violation of the 2005 constitution drafted after a peace deal ended
two decades of war between the predominantly Muslim north and the
Christian and animist south Sudan.
Hussein, who was released on bail during the hearings, has
sought to draw international attention to her case and battle the
law she has described as un-Islamic and oppressive to women.
The Amnesty statement issued Friday said Sudan had been urged to
amend the law which permits flogging, on the grounds that it is
state-sanctioned torture, after eight women were flogged in public
in 2003 with plastic and metal whips leaving permanent scars on the
women, Amnesty reported. The women had been picnicking with male
friends.
As a U.N. staffer, Hussein should have immunity from prosecution
but she has opted to resign to stand trial in any case.
In a column published in the British daily the Guardian Friday,
Hussein said her case is not an isolated one, but is a showcase of
repressive laws in a country with a long history of civil
conflicts.
"When I think of my trial, I pray that my daughters will
never live in fear of these police ... We will only be secure once
the police protect us and these laws are repealed," she
wrote.
Hussein said earlier she would take the issue all the way to
Sudan's ConstitutionalCif necessary, but that if the court
rules against her and orders the flogging, she's ready "to
receive (even) 40,000 lashes" if that what it takes to abolish
the law.
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El Deeb reported from Khartoum.
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