Sunday Mirror

FEARS QATAR IS COVERING UP SEX CASES

‘World Cup silence as women are penalised’

- BY AMY SHARPE amy.sharpe@sundaymirr­or.co.uk

HUNDREDS of discrimina­tory sex cases against women have been hushed up in Qatar ahead of the World Cup, it is feared.

Human Rights Watch believes authoritie­s suppressed coverage to improve its image.

Severe “zina” laws classify sex and pregnancy outside of marriage as a crime. Along with adultery, they are punishable by floggings and up to seven years in jail.

Even rape victims can face prosecutio­n if a suspect claims sex was consensual. Human Rights Watch recorded 100 zina conviction­s a year before 2012, but coverage stopped following global criticism.

It has learned of conviction­s from last year and fears many more have been punished since Qatar won its

World Cup bid in 2010. Rothna Begum, the charity’s women’s rights researcher, said: “Prosecutin­g consensual relations and sentencing people to floggings looks bad and breaches internatio­nal standards.

“Just because reporting stopped, it doesn’t mean cases stopped. I met women who reported rape and had been prosecuted for zina.

“Human Rights Watch believes there could be hundreds of cases.”

Some 173,000 female migrant domestic workers in Qatar are “disproport­ionately” affected by zina laws, the charity says.

In one case, a World Cup worker was charged after reporting she had been raped. Mexican Paola

Schieteka had bruises on her arm, shoulder and back. She fled Qatar after being prosecuted under zina when her assailant told police they were in a relationsh­ip. Paola, 28, waived anonymity to speak out.

Baroness Prosser, vice-chair of the All Party Parliament­ary Group on Women, Peace and Security, said: “It’s shameful. Anybody with an ounce of sense and knowledge about how women are treated in Qatar knew it was not a good choice to host the World Cup.”

The claims came amid concern for worker rights in Qatar – and a week after the Mirror told how Nepalese migrant Sanjib Raya, 28, died of heart failure while working long days for £1 an hour.

A Qatari official rejected the charity’s claims, and said “major strides” have been made to safeguard domestic workers. They added: “Women visiting Qatar during the World Cup will be warmly welcomed to one of the safest countries in the world.”

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 ?? ?? VICTIM Paola was working at the World Cup
VICTIM Paola was working at the World Cup

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