@Kanyefeast123 the amount of women killed in Somalia because of Sharia law, which they have to follow but the men? They are mostly allowed to do what they want to do! They are allowed to be skanky good for nothing drug addicts.
The
stoning of Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow was a public execution carried out by the
Al-Shabaabmilitant group on October 27, 2008 in the southern port town of
Kismayo,
Somalia. Initial reports stated that the victim, Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow, was a 23-year-old woman found guilty of
adultery. However, Duhulow's father and aunt stated that she was 13 years old, under the age of marriage eligibility, and that she was arrested and
stoned to death after trying to report that she had been raped. The execution took place in a public stadium attended by about 1,000 bystanders, several of whom attempted to intervene but were shot by the militants.
[1][2][3]
According to witnesses, nurses were then instructed to verify whether Duhulow was still alive.
[12][14]After ten minutes, she was dug out of the hole and two nurses confirmed that she was still alive, after which point Duhulow was put back in the hole and the stoning resumed. Although many witnesses to the event were too afraid of the armed militants to intervene, several bystanders attempted to save her. The insurgents responded by opening fire on them, in the process killing an eight-year-old boy.
[2][12] An Al-Shabaab spokesman later apologized for the child's death, and pledged that the shooter would be punished.
[2]
“Ruqiya Farah Yarow was killed outside her hut near the southern Somali town of Hosingow by gunmen belonging to the al-Shabab group, they say.
The militants had ordered her to put on a veil, and then killed her after returning and finding she was still not wearing one, the relatives said.”
“The release of a Somali man on death row for the rape and murder of a 12-year-old girl after he paid 75 camels undermines a landmark law to curb gender violence and promotes a culture of impunity in the east African nation, women's rights groups said.”
Somalia has extremely high rates of
maternal mortality, rape, cases of female genital mutilation, violence against women and child marriage. Women's access to justice is restricted both within the formal, clan based and sharia-based judicial systems. Women face limited access to economic resources and assets.