Sanaa, Yemen – Jews Hold Protest Demanding Execution of Killer

    7

    Yemen's Justice Minister Ghazi al-Aghbari (L) listens to Yemeni Jew Yaeesh bin Yehiya al-Nahari in Sanaa June 28, 2010. Members of the Yemen's Jewish minority staged a sit-in protest outside the Justice Ministry on Monday against the delay in executing a death sentence on a Muslim man convicted of murdering al-Nahari's son, Moshe, in the north-western town of Raida in December 2008. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah Sanaa, Yemen – A small group of Yemeni Jews demonstrated today in Sanaa demanding a final ruling against a Yemeni man sentenced to death last year for killing a Jewish father-of-nine in 2008.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    An appeals court in Amran, north of the capital, had in June last year sentenced Abdel Aziz Yahia al-Abdi, 39, to death by firing squad for the murder of Masha Yaish Nahari, a member of Yemen’s tiny Jewish community, in the town of Raydah, but the sentence must be confirmed by the supreme court.

    Around 20 demonstrators gathered outside the supreme court and the ministry of justice demanding the speeding up of the court process, a media correspondent reported.

    Justice minister Ghazi al-Aghbari told representatives of the demonstrators that the process was taking time due to the high number of cases being revised by the supreme court.

    The appeals court had turned over a lower court verdict that ordered Abdi to only pay 27,500 dollars in blood money in lieu of execution after medical reports found he was “mentally abnormal.”

    Abdi killed his wife five years ago but was spared prison at the time when he was ruled to be mentally unstable.

    Yemen’s remaining Jewish community is made of around 400 people, most of whom live in the Amran area.

    In 1948, the country’s Jewish community numbered some 60,000. But in the three years following the creation of Israel that year, more than 48,000 emigrated to there.

    The community continued to dwindle in subsequent decades and by the early 1990s it numbered only around 1,000 people.


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    7 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    PUNCH
    PUNCH
    13 years ago

    nebech on these poor jews who are the target of the taliban. i can’t understand how they aren’t afraid to protest in a country where the government has no control over terorists. i wish them the best but i don’t think they have any future there.

    Obamanation
    Obamanation
    13 years ago

    i understand there pain, but why are they putting them selves in danger??

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I wonder if anyone here has a problem with 50,000 Yemenites petitioning the government not to kill him, since he’s mentally unstable and all.

    nudnick
    nudnick
    13 years ago

    They still have Jews there – life must be great for them