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Tuesday, 24 April, 2001, 16:07 GMT 17:07 UK Egyptian feminist
writer faces apostasy trial The prosecutor-general in Egypt has ruled that a case against the feminist writer, Nawal el-Saadawi, on charges of apostasy will be heard in court. The case is being brought by a conservative lawyer , Nabih el-Wahsh, who's also called for Dr el-Saadawi's husband to divorce her on the grounds that she's deserted Islam. The
charges relate to an interview by Dr el-Saadawi in which she was
quoted as calling the annual Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca , the Haj, a
vestige of paganism. She was also quoted as calling for the abolition
of an Islamic inheritance law in Egypt that gives female heirs half
what men receive. Her husband said they'd not been informed of the
decision, but -- if true -- it'd be a licence to kill her. Islamists
initially won a similar case against a university professor in 1995,
ordering him to divorce his wife on the grounds of apostasy, but
subsequently lost the case on appeal.
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