Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Woman says husband tried to sell her to IS, moves court

- Ramesh Babu letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE WOMAN CLAIMED MOHAMED RIYAZ FLEW HER TO SAUDI ARABIA WITH FORGED PAPERS AND WAS PLANNING TO SMUGGLE HER INTO ISCONTROLL­ED AREAS

THIRUVANAN­THAPURAM: Even as the love jihad debate continues to rage in Kerala, a woman approached the state high court on Saturday to seek the nullificat­ion of her marriage with a Muslim man who had “converted” her and was allegedly planning to sell her as a sex slave in Syria.

The woman claimed Mohamed Riyaz, 26, forcibly flew her to Saudi Arabia with forged papers and was planning to smuggle her into Islamic State-controlled territory.

Though the complainan­t was reportedly locked up in a room there, she managed to procure a mobile phone and contacted her parents back home. She was rescued last month with the help of some NRIs, after which she was flown back.

The woman also alleged that her husband — a native of New Mahe in north Kerala — is an active worker of the Popular Front of India, a fundamenta­list outfit suspected of carrying out conversion­s in Kerala. Riyaz, who is still in Saudi Arabia, could not be contacted.

The 23-year-old woman, who hails from Pathanamth­itta in central Kerala, was brought up in Gujarat. It was when she was studying in Bengaluru that she came in contact with Riyaz. She said they had sex on a certain occasion, during which he secretly shot videos of the act and began blackmaili­ng her.

The complainan­t alleged she was later admitted to a madrasa in north Kerala by force, where she was tutored in Islamic tenets.

Their marriage was solemnised by a cleric in May 2016.

The woman said she had even managed to escape from her husband’s clutches on a certain occasion. Riyaz filed a habeus corpus petition in high court, alleging she was illegally confined by her parents, following which she was forced to return to him. He took her to Saudi Arabia on a tourist visa in August.

Interestin­gly, the case has surfaced only a few weeks before the Supreme Court is expected to hear Muslim convert Hadiya Jehan’s testimony on November 27. The case made nationwide headlines after the 24-year-old woman — originally called Akhila Ashokan — converted to Islam and married one Shefin Jehan from Kollam in south Kerala.

Her father approached the Kerala high court in May, claiming that his daughter was forcibly converted after being indoctrina­ted. The judicial body annulled their marriage, following which Shefin moved the apex court.

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