Qatar Tribune
First Page Gulf / Middle East World
United States South Asia India
Europe Pakistan  
  
United Kingdom Philippines /SE Asia  
Home About Us Advertising Archives Subscribe Site Map Contact Us
 
 
Thursday, June 20 2013
Can Brazil Stop Iran
BRAZIL, the saying used to go, is the land of the future and always will be. But when Brazil's president, Dilma Rousseff, visits the White House next week, she will come as the leader of a country whose future has arrived.
A MIDDLE EAST PEACE PLAN
THERE is so much going on in the Middle East today, it's impossible to capture it all with one opinion. So here are two for the price of one.
Al Watan - Arabic Newspaper
Jamila - Monthly Women Magazine
Nation Business Sports Chill Out
25 Indonesian maids on death row in Saudi: Report

AFP

RIYADH TWENTY-FIVE Indonesian maids are on death row in Saudi Arabia and 22 others have been pardoned and sent home, local media reported on Friday, adding that Jakarta will send a delegation for talks on the issue.

“Twenty-two death row Indonesian inmates in the Kingdom have been exonerated and repatriated back to Indonesia, while 25 maids are still facing death sentences in Saudi Arabia for various offenses,” the English-language daily Arab News reported.

“Six housemaids are on death row in Riyadh province alone, whereas about 19 female workers have been handed death sentences in the Western region,” it quoted the Indonesian embassy’s spokesman, Hendrar Pramutyo, as saying.

Jakarta will send “a 14- member presidential task force to the Kingdom on April 7 to talk to Saudi officials and to intensify efforts in cooperation with its embassy to rescue the maids,” the daily quoted Pramutyo as saying.

“We have also asked permission from the host government to allow our presidential task force delegation to visit Saudi jails” where a total of 1,700 Indonesians are serving prison terms, he added.

Indonesian anger over the treatment of its manual labourers in the oil-rich Gulf monarchy has grown since last year, after a spate of cases of abuse and killings.

Last June, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono denounced the beheading in Saudi Arabia of an Indonesian maid and accused Riyadh of breaking the “norms and manners” of international relations.

Ruyati binti Sapubi, 54, was beheaded on June 18, 2011, after she was convicted of killing her Saudi employer, prompting Indonesia to recall its ambassador in Saudi Arabia for “consultations.”

Page Number 1 2


Over hundred militants killed in two days in Yemen
Somali PM says he was target of suicide bomber
Iran seeks to promote spiritual leadership of Iraq’s Shiites

  About Us Advertising Subscribe Careers Contact Us