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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Sudanese woman to fight dress code

Mohamed Osman Associated Press

KHARTOUM, Sudan – A Sudanese female journalist facing 40 lashes for wearing trousers in public in violation of the country’s strict Islamic laws told a packed Khartoum courtroom Wednesday she is resigning from a U.N. job that grants her immunity so she can challenge the law on women’s public dress code.

Lubna Hussein was among 13 women arrested July 3 in a raid by members of the public order police force on a popular Khartoum cafe for wearing trousers, considered indecent by the strict interpretation of Islamic law adopted by Sudan’s Islamic regime. All but three of the women were flogged at a police station two days later.

But Hussein and two other women decided they wanted to go to trial and Hussein invited human rights workers, Western diplomats and fellow journalists to Wednesday’s hearing.

Some of her women friends showed up in court Wednesday wearing trousers in a show of support.

“This is not a case about me wearing pants,” said Hussein, who works in the media department of the U.N. Mission in Sudan and contributes opinion pieces to a left-leaning Khartoum newspaper.

Judge Mudathir Rashid adjourned the hearing until Aug. 4 to give Hussein time to quit her job.