Thursday, October 4, 2012

Religious Police Reform

From Yahoo:
"Saudi religious police losing some powers"
 
The director of Saudi Arabia's powerful religious police says his forces are losing some of their key powers, including arrests, investigations and raiding houses. Abdul-Latif al-Sheikh was quoted Wednesday by the Saudi pan-Arab online newspaper Al-Hayat as saying some powers will be reassigned to regular police or to judicial authorities. He admitted that there have been complaints about his force's behavior. The religious police enforce a ban on mingling by unrelated men and women, and they patrol public places to ensure women are dressed modestly and that men go to mosques for prayers. Saudi authorities instructed the religious police, run by the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, to draw up guidelines to keep individual officers from imposing their personal interpretations of Islamic rules.
 
 
^ I don't think any country or religion needs religious police and from what I have read over many years Saudi Arabia has been plagued with corrupt religious police. It seems that now they are at least doing something smart about it (I would use the word intelligent, but that will only be used when/if Saudi Arabia disbands the religious police completely. ^

http://news.yahoo.com/saudi-religious-police-losing-powers-

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