"An investigation was launched into the lashing of a young woman as seen on a website, and the implementation of sanctions that go against what is outlined in the criminal code," the judiciary said in a statement published in the media.
A video posted on YouTube reportedly shows men in powder-blue uniforms as worn by Sudanese police whipping a woman all over her body as she kneels, crying and moaning.
Sections of Sudan's 1991 Criminal Code, imposed two years after President Omar al-Bashir came to power in a military-backed coup, mandate lashings for "indecent" behaviour, adultery or running a brothel.
The Sudan Women's Association had requested over the weekend that the authorities investigate the case, calling it an "insult" to the Sudanese people and a "humiliation" for its women.
Last year Lubna Hussein, a journalist-turned activist, went to court to challenge a ruling that women wearing trousers were being "indecent," a charge under which thousands of people were flogged.
Hussein herself was sentenced to a fine of 200 Sudanese pounds (66 dollars) for wearing pants, but she was not whipped.
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