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yeah, it most likely won't do a thing. I was unaware of this:
| quote: | Diplomatic remedies are being sought, and maybe if a passingly plausible loophole can be found, that northern court of appeals will overturn Amina's conviction on even the flimiest of pretexts, as another did in the 2001-2002 case of Safiya Hussaini, another Nigerian woman then under sentence to be stoned to death for having committed adultery. Safiya's conviction was overturned in a Muslim appeals court in March 2002 on the grounds that her "adultery" had taken place prior to Sharia's law being enacted in her region.
Those grounds will not work for Amina, though. The judge at the appeals hearing rejected the argument that her conviction for adultery was invalid because, as her lawyers claimed, the child was born before Sharia law took effect in her area. If a loophole is to be found, it will have to be another.
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before i read the snopes article. This is truly sad. I agree that you shouldn't go telling other countries how to make their laws.
However, i believe that inhumane punishment like burying a person up to their neck and stoning them to death is a horrible outrage, nobody should have to suffer that.
if you want to dissuade people from adultery, then put a bullet in her head, if you must, but stoning is inhumane and should not be condoned.
the snopes article has a good point though, this can likely only be stopped by force now, which could plunge the country into civil war, which would be much worse.
This is truly the saddest thing i have heard in a long long time.
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