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Sudan summons Canada’s top diplomat to protest FM statements on amputation ruling

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March 7, 2013 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudanese foreign ministry on Thursday summoned the Canadian charge d’affaires in Khartoum Dominique Rossetti to protest a statement by Ottawa which condemned the ruling against a man convicted of a 2006 highway robbery.

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Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird (Getty Images)

Last month 30-year old Adam al-Muthna was subjected to amputation of his right hand and left foot by doctors at al-Ribat hospital after the constitutional court affirmed the sentence imposed by judges in lower courts.

The Canadian foreign minister John Baird issued a statement this month calling the sentence "a barbaric expression of Shar’ia law, as cruel and inhumane punishments that are completely at odds with international norms".

“Sudan, a country with a terrible human rights record, has sunk to new depths of cruelty, having carried out amputations on a man convicted of a criminal offence" he said.

According to Sudan’s official news agency (SUNA) the foreign ministry told Rossetti that this statement is a blatant and unacceptable interference in the country’s internal affairs and its judicial rulings.

The Sudanese Penal Code provides cross amputation as a penalty for armed robbery when it results in grievous injury or involves theft of property with a value exceeding SDG 1,500 or about $340.

However there have been very few cases in Sudan’s history when this form of punishment was actually implemented.

France and several human right groups lambasted the court order and called for reforming Sudanese laws.

(ST)

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  • 8 March 11:27, by Axios

    I don’t see how Sudan’s youth condone such atrocities. To cripple a man for life over $340 is shameful and shows serious lack of judgement. They could have easily made him work till such debt was repaid. Now all they’ve done is further besmirched their image and added another liability to their populace.

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    • 8 March 15:52, by zulu

      I agree. Canada is a developed nation and has a right to criticize this act of barbarism. The world is progressing while the Sudanese elite abuse the rights of the marginalized. A government cannot impose any kind of punish since it is the job of the courts to find what type of punishment best suits a crime. It is lofty I agree with Canada’s foreign affairs minister.

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  • 8 March 21:11, by Born-to-Rule

    Sudan is cesspool and their human feces, and are all killing people of Darfur, Blue N, and Kordofan. The butcher (Bashir) of Khartoum and his inbreed are amputated the man’s hand and foot for stealing $340 dollars how pathetic. Islam is peace loving religion ... I think not!.. it’s a feces religion. Their religion leader Mohammed is burning in hell, murderer, womanizer and child molester.

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  • 8 March 23:16, by cbuongdit cholkua

    Mr.minister, keep digging for more Sudan has this history of inhumanism. Question why these five men were only black people and not even a single Arab to make people think that was a really law acting that way if nothing behind it? I totall believe they were high ranking in their communities, and they simply became victims because they were trying to claim the rights of their people from the Govt

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