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Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Sudan woman in Legal Limbo over Refusal to Cover Hair
A Sudanese woman accused of "indecent" attire
because she refused to cover her hair remains in
legal limbo after a court appearance on Monday.
Amira Osman Hamed faces a possible whipping if
convicted of violating Sudan's laws governing
morality, which took effect after the 1989
Islamist-backed coup by President Omar al-Bashir.
The defence asked in September that the charge
be withdrawn but the prosecution is still weighing
how to proceed, Hamed and one of her lawyers
said after Monday's hearing in Jebel Aulia, just
outside Khartoum.
The court is waiting for the prosecutor to either
send the file back to court for additional hearings,
or to quash the case, Hamed said.
No new date has been set for a further hearing,
but one of her lawyers,Kamal Omar, said that
"this does not mean the case is finished".
Hamed said she thought that her case would not
be quashed immediately.
"I think they will keep it (active) for a while," she
said. "If they want to use it any time they will. I'm
not free."
Under Sudanese law all women are supposed to
cover their hair with a "hijab" but Hamed refuses,
saying authorities "want us to be like Taliban
women."
Her case has attracted international publicity and
drawn support from rights activists.
She said she was charged after refusing a
policeman's order to cover her head while visiting
a government office in Jebel Aulia in late August.
In 2009, the case of journalist Lubna Ahmed al-
Hussein led to a global outcry and spotlighted
women's rights in Sudan.
Hussein was fined for wearing slacks in public but
she refused to pay. She spent one day behind
bars but others rounded up with her in a
restaurant were flogged.
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