Nigerian court postpones appeal in stoning death

? An Islamic court in northern Nigeria on Tuesday postponed the appeal of a woman condemned to death by stoning for sex outside marriage.

Shariah Appeals Court registrar Dalhat Abubakar said Amina Lawal’s case was being deferred until Aug. 27 as two of the panel’s four judges would be unavailable until then.

The 31-year-old single mother was convicted in March 2002 after she had a child — now 2 years old — outside wedlock. She was sentenced to be buried up to her neck in sand and stoned to death.

Lawal looked cheerful and in high spirits Tuesday but said she was keen to see the end of the case. “I’m anxious. Only God knows when this will be over,” she said.

Some observers believed court officials were deliberately delaying the case in an attempt to deflect attention from international rights and women’s groups, which have held protests against the case in European cities.

Mariella Gramaglia, a Rome civic official who was in Katsina to observe the case, said her main concern was to see that Lawal’s human rights are respected.

Extramarital sex “is not such a crime that should attract the death penalty,” she said.