Gay Saudi Royal prince Saud Abdulaziz bin Nasser al Saud has been convicted in the U.K. of murdering his manservant, which carries a life sentence. In Saudi Arabia, however, he’d be executed for being homosexual, so the Saudi royal prince is leaning from extradition. The 34-year-old Saudi prince and 32-year-old servant Bandar Abdulaziz had shared a suite at London’s Landmark Hotel, where the murder occurred. Alcoholic beverages and intense torture of a sexual nature were reportedly involved within the deadly confrontation. Witnesses attested to the Saudi prince’s abusive treatment of his slave, when video and physical evidence attested to the apparent sexual gratification the Saudi price derived from humiliating Bandar Abdulaziz. And until the really end, Bandar Abdulaziz took the beatings and uttered not one safe word to end the domination. Article source – Saudi prince faces life or execution for murdering servanty by Newsytype.com.
Diplomatic defense didn’t save the Saudi royal prince
Playboy and grandson of Saudi Arabia’s king makes him the Saudi Royal prince Saud Abdulaziz bin Nasser al Saud had been wrong when he thought diplomatic immunity would save him from British justice. Eventually, he confessed to murder, although his defense had argued manslaughter. The Old Bailey court gave the Saudi prince the sentence of prison for life for murder. Of course, since homosexuality is a capital offense in Saudi Arabia, he encounters execution at home. Photographic and physical evidence proved “beyond the shadow of a doubt” that Saud Abdulaziz bin Nasser al Saud subjected Bandar Abdulaziz to “sadistic” sexual torture, said prosecutor Jonathan Laidlaw.
Is the Saudi prince’s activity towards his servant authorized by the Quran?
Many think that the Saudi royal prince had been within another law. It had been within the Sharia law allegedly. Some people think that the Prophet Mohammad abused servants. This had been only when they were doing something wrong though. The Quran doesn’t advocate physical abuse. This is what Muslim Access says:
“As to those women on whose part you fear disloyalty and ill-conduct, admonish them (first), (next), refuse to share their beds, (and last) beat them (lightly); but if they return to obedience, seek not against them means (of annoyance)” – An-Nisa’: 34-35
dharban ghayra mubarrih is what beating had been translated from. It means using a siwak, or toothbrush, to give “a light tap that leaves no mark”. In the case of the guilty Saudi prince, perhaps he ought to have brushed up on how not to seek means of annoyance against servants. The royal family won’t be able to help him out no matter what. He is going to be on the chopping block still either way.
Info from
Daily mail
dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1321860/Saudi-prince-guilt-sadistic-murder-servant.html?ito=feeds-newsxml
Muslim Access
muslimaccess.com/articles/Women/wife_beating.asp
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