ABUJA, Nigeria – A court in northern Nigeria has sentenced two women to death by stoning for allegedly committing adultery, and both will soon appeal the sentences, a human rights group said Friday.
The sentences, passed down in Nigeria’s Bauchi state in September and early this month, are the first of their kind in over a year in the mainly Muslim north, where 12 states have introduced controversial Islamic Shariah criminal codes since 1999.
One of the women, 18-year-old Hajara Ibrahim, was sentenced Oct. 5. She is due to appeal the ruling on Monday, said Bunmi Dipo-Salami of Baobab, a group of human rights lawyers that is funding lawyers for her defense.
Ibrahim, who is about seven-months pregnant, was convicted of adultery. But Dipo-Salami said the case was being appealed on the basis that Ibrahim was technically never married.
Under the code, sex outside wedlock is considered adultery if one of the partners is or has ever been married. If neither partner was ever married, then sex outside wedlock is condemned as “fornication,” punishable by whipping.
Dipo-Salami said Ibrahim was promised in matrimony to a man while still a minor, lived with him for only a short time, and the marriage was never consummated.
Ibrahim was impregnated by another man, Dipo-Salami said.
The other woman, 25-year-old Daso Adamu, was sentenced to death by stoning on Sept. 15. She says she was made pregnant by one of her two ex-husbands and is appealing on the basis that the sentence was “unfair and unjust,” said a Baobab official, who gave no further details.
Adamu was initially imprisoned along with her baby of less than six months. She was released on bail on Wednesday after her first appeal hearing. The case was adjourned until Nov. 3.
Under Shariah law, men can only be convicted of adultery on the basis of witness statements, while pregnancy is considered sufficient evidence to convict women. In all but one case, men have been cleared, as Shariah courts found there was insufficient evidence to prove they had sex with the women. Tests to determine children’s paternity have not been conducted by the courts.
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