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Saudi lawyer to appeal in morals squad death case
A Saudi lawyer said on Sunday he had filed an appeal against two members of the religious police over the death of a Saudi man last year.
Riyadh: A Saudi lawyer said on Sunday he had filed an appeal against two members of the religious police over the death of a Saudi man last year.
A court last November acquitted two employees of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice of killing Salman Al Huraisy last year after the morality squad raided his home and seized some alcohol.
The same court this month upheld the ruling but the case will go to appeal, said Abdul Rahman Al Lahem, a leading human rights lawyer.
Lahem said the appeal would rest on the United Nations Convention Against Torture, signed by Saudi Arabia in 1997.
He also questioned the reasoning used by the judges in their definition of murder, which was based on their reading of Islamic sharia law.
"The verdict was based on the jurisprudential argument that [a blow to] the head cannot cause death and that the hand is not an instrument that can cause death, therefore it cannot be premeditated murder," he wrote in a statement.
Some of Huraisy's family say they saw him badly beaten by two men and an autopsy report said severe head injuries were the cause of death.
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