KATY PERRY IS A COWARD FOR GIVING IN TO MUSLIM CENSORSHIP

Katy Perry has shown the world of music up for waht it really is.

Perry made a video and the video got a massive number of downloads. On the video there was a man who Perry had melted into sand. On the man’s chest was a pendant of Allah.

About this pendant thing, in all the images of this I could not make it out.

Some Muslims then started a petition to ban the video and it got 60,000 votes

Then Perry gave in and removed that part of the video.

The Muslim said thank you mission acomplished

This is where the outcry really should be starting but is not starting because this is another piece of censorship. Why not can be seen int he tone of the following which takes the side totally of Sharia compliance

Katy Perry clearly offended a LOT of people with her Dark Horse video.

After a Muslim viewer pointed out that a man gets melted into sand while wearing an “Allah” pendant, over 60,000 people signed a petition to BAN the music video from YouTube!

In its first week, the video has already gotten over 38 MILLION views, so obvi Katy didn’t want to remove the video entirely. But she proved she didn’t mean any harm by quickly editing out the offending symbol. The guy still gets melted.

Original Muslim petitioner Shazad Iqbal was pleased with the compromise. He wrote:

“Guys I’m thrilled to let you all know the name of Allah has been removed from the ‘Dark Horse’ video we couldn’t have done it without everyone’s support so I thank each and every one of you deeply, our voices have been heard!”

See Katy get her raging goddess on in the controversial video HERE. See the new edited version (below).”

http://perezhilton.com/2014-02-27-katy-perry-dark-horse-video-censored-edited-religious-controversy-muslim-symbol-removed

ABDALLA TO BE STONED TO DEATH IN SUDAN UNDER SHARIA

May 31

 

Reuters report

 

 

KHARTOUM (Reuters) – A Sudanese woman, believed to be around 20, has been sentenced to be stoned to death for adultery, and is being held near Khartoum, shackled in prison with her baby son, rights groups and lawyers said on Thursday.

Campaigners condemned the ruling, saying it violated international standards and raised concerns that Sudan might start applying sharia, or Islamic law, more strictly following the secession of mostly non-Muslim South Sudan last year.

The woman, Intisar Sharif Abdalla, was sentenced by the Ombada criminal court on April 22, court documents seen by Reuters showed.

Two lawyers assigned to her case, who declined to be named, said they were launching an appeal adding Abdalla appeared to be under severe psychological strain.

“She’s in dire need of a psychiatrist because she appears to be in a state of shock from the social and family pressures she’s under,” one lawyer said.

Abdalla was illiterate and did not have a lawyer or interpreter in the courtroom, although Arabic is not her native language, the lawyers and activists added.

Arabic is the main language in the overwhelmingly Muslim nation, though a wide range of smaller languages are also spoken, particularly in tribal areas. It was unclear where Abdalla came from.

Officials in Sudan’s justice and information ministries said they could not immediately comment on the case when Reuters contacted them by phone.

Abdalla’s exact age has not been confirmed, but activists said she was believed to be around 20, although some reports indicated she could be younger.

“The case certainly raises concerns about how judges are interpreting and applying the laws of Sudan,” Jehanne Henry, a senior research at advocacy group Human Rights Watch, said.

ISLAMIC LAW

Floggings are a common punishment in Sudan for crimes like drinking alcohol and adultery. But sentences of stoning are rare.

Following a 1989 coup, Sudan introduced laws that took sharia as their main source and hosted militants including Osama bin Laden.

While the government has since sought to improve its image internationally by distancing itself from radical Islamists, it is still one of only a few countries to list death by stoning in its statutes.

In 2010, Sudan’s President Omar Hassan al-Bashir said the country would adopt a fully Islamic constitution following the secession of the south, agreed under a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war.

Most people in South Sudan are Christian or follow traditional African beliefs.

The Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa (SIHA), a network of civil society groups, said Abdalla was still in danger despite the appeal.

“Although this appeal is in process, Intisar ostensibly remains at risk of being stoned and in real terms, her life is still very much on the line,” it said in a statement.

In 2010, the case of Lubna Hussein, a Sudanese U.N. official, sparked international furor when she was sentenced to flogging for wearing trousers.

Fahima Hashim, a women’s rights activist following Abdalla’s case, said sentences were often inconsistent in Sudan because the legal system gave authority to judges to decide punishments. Previous stoning sentences had not been carried out, she said.

Hashim called for the reform of articles in Sudan’s criminal code which she said harm women’s rights, including one used in Abdalla’s case.

As long as this articles remained unchanged, execution by stoning would not be out of the question, she said. “It’s a threat. It could happen.”