US court blocks execution of Muslim inmate who requested imam

This undated handout photograph obtained February 4, 2019 courtesy of the Alabama Department of Corrections shows Dominique Ray, a Muslim death row inmate in the conservative southern US state of Alabama. (AFP / Alabama Department of Corrections handout)
Updated 07 February 2019
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US court blocks execution of Muslim inmate who requested imam

  • The 11th US ircuit Court of Appeals said on Wednesday it had granted an indefinite stay for Dominique Ray
  • Ray was convicted in the fatal stabbing of 15-year-old Tiffany Harville Alabama in about July 1995

NEW YORK: A US federal court blocked Thursday’s scheduled execution of a Muslim inmate in Alabama on grounds the state may be violating his religious rights by refusing to allow an imam to be present at his death.
The 11th US ircuit Court of Appeals said on Wednesday it had granted an indefinite stay for Dominique Ray, 42, a day before he was scheduled to be executed by lethal injection for the killing of a 15-year-old girl more than 23 years ago.
A three-judge panel wrote that it appeared Alabama might be in violation of the Establishment Clause of the US Constitution’s First Amendment, which deals with religious rights.
The state on Wednesday appealed the stay of execution.
The Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC) denied Ray’s request to have his imam at his execution, saying that only ADOC employees could be present in the execution chamber, the state said in a court document.
A prison chaplain employed by the department is allowed to be present at executions but other spiritual advisers must witness executions from a viewing room, according to the state.
Ray was convicted in the fatal stabbing of 15-year-old Tiffany Harville, who disappeared from her home in Selma, Alabama, in July 1995. Her body was found in a field a month later.

 

 

 


End of US-Russia nuclear pact a ‘grave moment’: UN chief

Updated 6 sec ago
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End of US-Russia nuclear pact a ‘grave moment’: UN chief

  • Guterres urged Washington and Moscow “to return to the negotiating table without delay and to agree upon a successor framework”

UNITED NATIONS, United States: UN chief Antonio Guterres on Wednesday urged the United States and Russia to quickly sign a new nuclear deal, as the existing treaty was set to expire in a “grave moment for international peace and security.”
The New START agreement will end Thursday, formally releasing both Moscow and Washington from a raft of restrictions on their nuclear arsenals.
“For the first time in more than half a century, we face a world without any binding limits on the strategic nuclear arsenals of the Russian Federation and the United States of America,” Guterres said in a statement.
The UN secretary-general added that New START and other arms control treaties had “drastically improved the security of all peoples.”
“This dissolution of decades of achievement could not come at a worse time — the risk of a nuclear weapon being used is the highest in decades,” he said, without giving more details.
Guterres urged Washington and Moscow “to return to the negotiating table without delay and to agree upon a successor framework.”
Russia and the United States together control more than 80 percent of the world’s nuclear warheads but arms agreements have been withering away.
New START, first signed in 2010, limited each side’s nuclear arsenal to 1,550 deployed strategic warheads — a reduction of nearly 30 percent from the previous limit set in 2002.
It also allowed each side to conduct on-site inspections of the other’s nuclear arsenal, although these were suspended during the Covid-19 pandemic and have not resumed since.