- MECCA - Saudi Arabia's religious
police are reported to have forced schoolgirls back into a blazing building
because they were not wearing Islamic headscarves and black robes.
-
- Saudi newspapers said scuffles broke out between firemen
and members of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention
of Vice who tried to keep the girls inside a burning school in Mecca.
-
- Fifteen girls were killed as they stampeded to escape
from the blazing building in the Muslim holy city. Saudi media and families
of the victims have been angry over the deaths of the girls in the fire
that gutted the school.
-
- The resulting public criticism of the religious police,
or mutaween, is highly unusual.
-
- The English-language Saudi Gazette, in a front-page report
yesterday quoted witnesses as saying that members of the religious police
stopped men who tried to help the girls escape from the building, saying:
"It is sinful to approach them."
-
- A civil defence officer told an Arabic-language newspaper,
al-Eqtisadiah, that he saw three members of the religious police "beating
young girls to prevent them from leaving the school because they were not
wearing the abaya".
-
- He added: "We told them that the situation was very
critical and did not allow for such behaviour. But they shouted at us and
refused to move away from the gates."
-
- The father of one of the dead girls alleged that the
school watchman refused to open the gate to let the girls out.
-
- "Lives could have been saved had they not been stopped
by members of the Commission for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of
Vice," the Saudi Gazette said.
-
- The much-feared mutaween roam the streets of the conservative
kingdom wielding sticks to enforce dress codes and sex segregation and
to ensure that Islamic prayers are performed on time.
-
- Those who refuse to obey the orders of the religious
police are usually beaten and sometimes jailed.
|