Arab Times

UAE woman sentenced to death

Court ruling is final, not subject to appeal

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available,” the official said, adding the IAEA had an “institutio­nal responsibi­lity” to explore what the possible military dimensions of Iran’s nuclear programme may have been.

Meanwhile, US Secretary of State John Kerry warned Monday it was too soon to tell if a nuclear deal with Iran is possible as he awaited the return of Iran’s foreign minister from consultati­ons in Tehran.

“We’re just working and it’s too early to make any judgements,” Kerry told reporters in Vienna following a weekend of intense talks with counterpar­ts from five other major powers and Iran.

In a possible sign meanwhile of progress, Russian Foreign Minister Serg1ei Lavrov said that he would arrive on Tuesday, coinciding with the expected return of his Iranian DUBAI, June 29, (Agencies): A United Arab Emirates court on Monday sentenced a UAE woman to death for the Islamistin­spired killing of an American kindergart­en teacher in December, the state news agency WAM said.

The teacher, identified as Romanian-born Ibolya Ryan, a mother of 11-year-old twins, was stabbed to death in a toilet at an Abu Dhabi shopping mall. opposite number Mohammad Javad Zarif.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, speaking in New York, said he would be back in Vienna this week. It was unclear when his British, German or Chinese counterpar­ts might follow suit.

Over the weekend officials from both sides made clear that their Tuesday deadline to nail down a deal was highly unlikely to be met, although they said they would only extend by several days.

Zarif flew back home on Sunday night, as did many of the other ministers. EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini spoke for many late Sunday when she insisted there would be no formal months-long extension, saying “postponeme­nt is not an option”.

The Federal Supreme Court in Abu Dhabi convicted the woman, Ala’a Badr Abdullah alHashemi, 30, of the killing and imposed the death penalty, WAM said.

The court said the crime amounted to “a direct threat to the security and stability of society” and that the case was dealt with an anti-terrorism law passed last year by the UAE, a U.S.allied Gulf state strongly opposed to militant Islam.

The court’s ruling was final and not subject to appeal. However, executions are extremely rare in the UAE and it was not immediatel­y clear when Hashemi might be put to death.

Hours after killing Ryan, Hashemi placed a makeshift bomb outside the front door of an apartment of an EgyptianAm­erican doctor living in the UAE, but the device was safely dismantled, according to evidence submitted at the trial.

Pan-Arab al-Arabiya television said the court proceeded with the trial after medical examinatio­n confirmed the defendant had been aware of her actions and was not suffering from any mental illness.

Police said she had become radicalise­d over the Internet and had not been targeting an American in particular, but was looking for a foreigner to kill at random.

Attacks on Westerners are rare in the UAE, a wealthy oil exporter and tourism hub, but concern has been rising after a spate of Islamist militant attacks in neighbouri­ng Saudi Arabia.

Hashemi was arrested at her home where her car was found with blood on the steering wheel and bomb making materials inside.

The National said that Hashemi “was also found guilty of sending money to Al-Qaeda in Yemen, knowing the funds would be used in terrorist acts”.

The ruling was made by the Federal Supreme Court in Abu Dhabi, which means it cannot be appealed.

The president can, however, decide to overturn the sentence or reduce it.

Hashemi, surrounded by four police officers, “showed no emotion as the verdict and sentence were announced,” the paper said.

“As she was led from court she smiled and waved at her father and brother, who were in court to witness the proceeding­s.”

Internatio­nal media have been denied access to her trial, which began on March 23.

Hashemi had asked the court to provide her with psychologi­cal help, saying she had “unreal visions” and would see “ghostlike people” due to a chronic mental illness.

The court ordered psychiatri­c tests which it said showed she was aware of her actions.

In March, Attorney General Salem Saeed Kubaish said that investigat­ors found she had “listened to lectures by late AlQaeda leaders Osama bin Laden and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, watched video clips of killings and beheadings,” among other similar activities.

 ??  ?? A CCTV image released by Abu Dhabi police on Dec 3, 2014 shows a fully veiled woman (right), walking in a shopping mall in the Emirati capital. The woman is a suspect in the killing of an American teacher stabbed in the Boutik Mall’s toilet. Witnesses...
A CCTV image released by Abu Dhabi police on Dec 3, 2014 shows a fully veiled woman (right), walking in a shopping mall in the Emirati capital. The woman is a suspect in the killing of an American teacher stabbed in the Boutik Mall’s toilet. Witnesses...
 ??  ?? Yemenis prepare Yemeni food called ‘sambusa’ during the Muslim Holy fasting Month of Ramadan in the capital Sanaa on June 28. (AFP)
Yemenis prepare Yemeni food called ‘sambusa’ during the Muslim Holy fasting Month of Ramadan in the capital Sanaa on June 28. (AFP)

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