Thursday, October 13, 2016

Saudi Teen Innocently Flirts Online With California Girl: Promptly Arrested By Islamic Police For Violating Sharia Law

weaselzippers


Same regime that has donated millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation.
CAIRO – It seemed like an innocent, if goofy, flirtation.
Abu Sin, a young man in Saudi Arabia, met Christina Crockett, a 21-year-old in California, on YouNow, an online community forum that allows people to chat publicly in real time.
He spoke bits and pieces of English. She spoke no Arabic. Yet over weeks of chats they found an often hilarious way to bridge their linguistic and cultural divides. Their conversations soon attracted hundreds of thousands of viewers in Saudi Arabia and around the world.
In one video exchange, Abu Sin — a nickname that means “the toothless one” because he had crooked front teeth — is wearing a black baseball hat flipped sideways. Blond-haired Christina is wearing a gray tank top. (Police told local media that Abu Sin is 19, but some have questioned that.)
“Christina, I love you,” says Abu Sin in broken English.
“I love you, too,” she replies, smiling.
Then he asks her, jokingly, to marry him. She tells him to wait, and draws a wedding band on her finger. “I want to marry you, too,” she says.
“Yes, yes,” says Abu Sin. “Thank you very much.”
Then, Saudi Arabia’s morality authorities found out about Abu Sin’s cyber romance.
In the conservative Sunni Muslim kingdom, there are strict rules separating the genders. Virtually all public spaces are segregated, and most women wear head-to-toe black abayas as well as veils covering their face and hair. Unmarried men and women who mingle romantically often face harassment, heavy fines, even arrest at the hands of the religious police. If caught, women in particular face social stigma and punishment by their families.
Nevertheless, Saudi authorities arrested him late last month for “unethical behavior” because of the chats, according to Saudi media outlets. His exchanges with Christina, according to lawyers, could violate the nation’s cybercrime law that bans creating online material that goes against morals and religious values, as well as its rigid interpretation of Islamic law.

Thank You Zip. 

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