Indonesian maid’s pardon raises new hope for Rizana [July 16 2011]

RIYADH: In the wake of the pardon given to an Indonesian housemaid who was sentenced to death on murder charges, the Sri Lankan government and social service organizations on Friday renewed their appeal for clemency for Rizana Nafeek, who is currently awaiting execution in the Kingdom.

Darsem binti Dawud Tawar, an Indonesian maid who was convicted of murdering her employer, returned to Jakarta on Wednesday following a pardon given by the kin of her victim.

The maid from Subang, West Java, was convicted in May 2009 and sentenced to death despite her plea that she killed the victim in self-defense during attempted rape. The Indonesian government paid $534,884 in blood money to secure the pardon.

“President Mahinda Rajapaksa is deeply concerned about Nafeek’s case,” Sri Lanka Parliamentarian Abdul Hameed Mohammed Azwer told Arab News on Friday from Colombo.

“While we express our regret to the parents over the death of the baby in Nafeek’s care, we also wish to make an appeal to them and the government of Saudi Arabia to take into consideration the circumstances surrounding her employment as a housemaid in Saudi Arabia,” Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference, and the Rev. Norbert M. Andradi, the group’s secretary-general, said in a joint statement issued in Colombo.

Nafeek was 17 when a recruiter in Sri Lankan forged her identity to make her appear old enough to work in Saudi Arabia. Because she was underage, the person responsible committed human trafficking for facilitating the transfer of a minor across international boundaries. Nafeek arrived in the Kingdom to work as a maid, but she was also assigned nanny duties without any formal training in post-natal care.

Nafeek claims the four-month-old infant choked during bottle feeding, but the family said she murdered the baby. The courts found Nafeek guilty and sentenced her to death based on a hadd ruling — a hadd ruling is one specifically prescribed in the Qur’an: decapitation if the next of kin of the victim does not forgive the crime and accept blood money.

The state cannot force a pardon, as it is a private right and therefore the family must pardon Nafeek or come to a blood-money settlement through reconciliation efforts.

“It is with great sense of gladness that I read in Arab News of the pardoning of Darsem binti Dawud Tawar,” said Lankan Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Ahmed A. Jawad. “This gracious act symbolizes the generous nature of the Saudi people. I am optimistic that Rizana Nafeek too would similarly be given her freedom by the parents of the infant.” (Arab News)