Saudi youths in trouble over MTV reality show
Divisions have emerged within the influential religious establishment, including the religious police body itself, over long-held restrictions that have been enforced in the world's leading oil producing country and key U.S. ally.
An official at the Jeddah court confirmed the filing of the lawsuit for the crime of "openly declaring sin" and said it would take at least one week for the Islamic sharia court to decide whether to proceed with a trial or dismiss the case.
The Saudi judiciary system, based on an austere reading of Islamic sharia law, reserves harsh punishments for such offences that could involve lashes with whip and years of imprisonment. Aired last month, MTV's "True Life - Resist the Power, Saudi Arabia" followed how three Saudi youths and a heavy metal band cope with the strictures they encounter in their daily life in Jeddah, seen as the kingdom's most liberal city (http://www.mtv.com/videos/true-life-resist-the-power-saudi-arabia/1639546/playlist.jhtml).Categories
Newsletter
Get each new article from
New York
Your email:
Latest
Email in your eye? Next-generation video screen glasses could lay messages or GPS over your field of visionFed’s Evans Says US Jobless Rate May RiseDefiant Ahmadinejad wins backing of four LatAm alliesMossad agents posed as CIA in operation: reportRussian Ad Compares Putin Foe to HitlerBank of America told Fed it could sell branches in emergency: sourceStandard & Poor's Cuts Credit Ratings for Nine Euro Zone NationsSource: John Edwards has life-threatening heart conditionWoman says her fake penis got her firedCops Believe North Carolina Inmate Hid 10-Inch Revolver In His Rectum. Luckily, It Was Unloaded.
Tags
Comments
New York, NY |










