Amnesty slams death penalty for raped Sudanese teenager

Noura Hussein Hammad was handed a death sentence by a Sudanese court for killing the man who raped her

The court is full. People gathered to support Noura for her last trial. PHOTO COURTESY: TWITTER @Sodfadaaji

KHARTOUM:
Rights group Amnesty International on Thursday slammed a Sudanese court's sentencing of a teenager to death for killing her rapist husband in self-defence.

19-year-old, Noura Hussein Hammad was handed a death sentence by a Sudanese court for killing the man her father forced her to marry, the rights group said in a statement.

"Noura Hussein is a victim and the sentence against her is an intolerable act of cruelty," Amnesty International's deputy regional director Seif Magango said in the statement.

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"The Sudanese authorities must quash this grossly unfair sentence and ensure that Noura gets a fair retrial that takes into account her mitigating circumstances."

Hammad was married against her wish to Abdulrahman Hammad at the age of 16, with the first marriage ceremony involving the signing of a marriage contract between her father and her husband, Amnesty International said.

In April 2017 the second part of the marriage ceremony took place when she was forced to move to her husband's home after completing high school.

Sudanese law allows children over the age of 10 to marry. When she refused to consumate the marriage, her husband invited two of his brothers and a male cousin to help him rape her, the rights group said.


"On 2 May 2017, the three men held Noura Hussein down while Abdulrahman raped her," Amnesty International said.

"The next morning he tried to rape her again but she managed to escape to the kitchen where she grabbed a knife. In the ensuing scuffle, Abdulrahman sustained fatal knife wounds."

Hussein fled to her family home after the incident but her father handed her to the police, Amnesty International said.

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During her trial in July 2017, the court found her guilty of "intentional murder" after applying an outdated law that does not recognise marital rape, it added.

"The death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment and to apply it to a victim only highlights the failure of the Sudanese authorities to acknowledge the violence she endured," Magango said.

Hammad, whose dream had been to become a teacher, has been held in a women's prison since May 2017.

In recent years, women and children's rights activists have increasingly campaigned against forced marriages of girls and marriage of underage girls, a widespread phenomenon in Sudan given that Sudanese law allows children over the age of 10 to marry.
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