Thursday 28 July 2016

British-Born Woman Held Captive in Saudi Arabia.

"Men are the maintainers of women because Allah has made some of them to excel others & because they spend out of their property; the good women are therefore obedient, guarding the unseen as Allah has guarded; & (as to) those on whose part you fear desertion, admonish them, & leave them alone in the sleeping-places & beat them; then if they obey you, do not seek a way against them; surely Allah is High, Great." So Allah tells his backward believers, in verse 4:34 of his risible tome of trash, the Koran.

Women are property in the Islamic world. A girl is considered the property of her father to start with & then passed onto another man of his choosing with an arranged marriage. And it cannot be argued that only the poor ignorant Muslims adhere to this, as can be seen from the story of the Saudi man with NINE children, who was in receipt of state benefits in Swansea, yet managed to land a university job in Jeddah where he keeps his daughter in a cage, aided by the Saudi government which does not recognise her UK citizenship, as reported by MSN News yesterday:

Welsh schoolgirl was 'kept prisoner in a cage, starved and abused because of her un-Islamic lifestyle'

A Welsh schoolgirl was starved, physically abused and kept in a cage during a series of alleged offences by her father who disagreed with her un-Islamic lifestyle, a court heard.

Amina Al-Jeffrey, 21, was born in Swansea but moved to Saudia Arabia aged 16 as her father objected to her western lifestyle. She has been held captive in her academic father's home ever since, the family division of the High Court was told yesterday.

Saudi authorities would not recognise Miss Al-Jeffery's British citizenship, the forced marriage unit of the Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO) said, adding that "steps need to be taken to ensure Amina is returned to the UK where her safety can be guaranteed".

According to The Times, her father, Mohammed al-Jeffrey, 62, works at the Abdulaziz University in Jeddah and is reportedly receiving funding from the Saudi Arabian government to contest the court order to return his daughter to Britain.

The High Court.

Mr Al-Jeffrey is believed to have moved to Wales before his daughter's birth and has eight other children. The family are said to have received benefits and educated their children at British schools and universities.

Miss Al-Jeffery was taken to Saudi Arabia because her father disapproved of her "relationships and conduct", Henry Setright, QC, representing Miss Al-Jeffery, said.

Mr Setright added that the father believed his daughter was "someone he has a duty to control, including her freedom of movement".

Over the course of more than four years, the young woman has reportedly been physically abused, deprived of food and water, kept in a cage when her father leaves their home in Jeddah and is not allowed to marry the man of her choice, the court was told.

Mr Al-Jeffery was ordered by the High Court to bring his daughter to the British consulate in Jeddah on July 25 for a confidential discussion with her lawyers but he refused, allegedly demanding a guarantee from the FCO that his daughter would not be granted "sanctuary".

Mr Al-Jeffery "could not bring himself" to follow the court's order and attend the consulate, Marcus Scott-Manderson, QC, representing the father, said.

He had, however, allowed his daughter to attend a previous meeting with consular staff, under the supervision of someone employed by her father. During the meeting at a hotel, Miss Al-Jeffrey slipped a note under the table to express fears about her future to a member of embassy staff, the court was told.

Anne-Marie Hutchinson, a British lawyer, said that she had spoken to Miss Al-Jeffery when she briefly escaped from her father's home.

"She is a normal Welsh girl and still has her Welsh accent," she said. "She wants to return home so she can have control of her own life and make her own choices."

Mr Justice Holman said that the jurisdiction of the British courts was unclear because Miss Al-Jeffery was now an adult with dual Saudi and UK citizenship. He said: "We have to be careful about asserting the supremacy our cultural standards."

The hearing continues.

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