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Warning: Graphic images. This video shows a girl being flogged in the Swat Valley, an area in northwest Pakistan under Taliban control. The clip was broadcast on Pakistani TV. Video courtesy of Geo News.
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November 16, 2017 / 6:45 PM
/ CBS News

When Demetris Payne saw a missed call from her son's junior high school, she knew something was wrong.
With a sigh, the single mom of four from Shreveport, Louisiana, called back. A school official said her 13-year-old son Jadarien was suspended for three days for talking back to his teacher. She was told to pick him up right away.
"Three days seems kind of harsh -- why not do in-school suspension?" Payne asked.
But since Jadarien had been in trouble once before, they said he had to leave.
As soon as the pair got home, Payne took away her son's cellphone and video games. She left him with her 70-year-old father who lives with them.
"When I got home from work he's eating strawberries and having fun with my dad," Payne told CBS News. "I was like, 'Oh no.' It was like a vacation."
Payne knew she needed to do more to discipline him.
So she handed him a rake and asked him to start cleaning up the yard. When he was finished, she told him he'd be volunteering his lawn care services free of charge for people in need during the remainder of his suspension.
"He didn't believe it," Payne said. "I can be soft on him and baby him sometimes."
But Payne was serious. She posted a photo of Jadarien on Facebook with the heading, "Yard service - FREE," explaining that he got suspended from school and would mow lawns, pick up trash or wash cars for members of the community over the next three days.
Within hours, Payne got requests from several residents taking her up on the offer.
So she drove Jadarien from house to house. She stood by the car and watched him work. He mowed lawns, picked up pine needles and raked leaves.
"He didn't complain the whole time," Payne said.
Jadarien spent about two hours cleaning up the yards. He ended up hitting at least eight different homes. When he was finished, Payne took him to the library, where he spent the rest of the day reading and completing homework assignments.
"We explained to him that these chores weren't to punish, punish, punish, but to teach him a lesson and teach him about discipline," Payne said. "No matter if the teacher is right or wrong -- always respect your teachers, respect adults."
On Tuesday, Jadarien was happy to finally head back to school.
Look who's back at school. Meeting with all his teachers and set up a plan so we can make sure he stays on track....
The eighth-grader's classmates and teachers said they saw him on Facebook.
"He just laughed it off," Payne said. "Some people say he was 'shamed.' He wasn't shamed at all. He's not that type of kid. He really isn't."
Payne sat down with Jadarien's teachers to help come up with a plan to keep him on track. However, she's confident Jadarien learned his lesson.
Hundreds of people have shared Payne's Facebook post over the past week, many praising her for her unique approach to discipline.
"Beautiful idea! Parenting done right," one Facebook user commented.
"Raising your child to learn consequences for unacceptable behavior falls under good parenting 101," another wrote.
Payne said she hopes her other kids -- ages 3, 8 and 17 -- also learned something from Jadarien's experience. But if she has to do it all over again, she will.
"Single parents, do not give up. Keep encouraging your child. When one avenue doesn't work try another avenue. Get to the root of the problem," she advised.

First published on November 16, 2017 / 6:45 PM


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CASTRATION and stoning are among the most extreme forms of punishment carried out in parts of the world. WARNING: Graphic.
THE most severe penalty in Australia is life without parole.
But in comparison with the punishments dished out for lesser or similar crimes in other countries, life without parole is arguably the pick of the bunch.
Hanging, beheading, stoning, electrocution and shooting by firing squad are favoured punishments in many parts of the world, according to Amnesty International.
Executions are often undertaken in an extremely public manner, with public hangings in Iran or live broadcasts of lethal injections in other countries. According to UN human rights experts, executions in public serve no legitimate purpose and only increase the cruel, inhumane and degrading nature of this punishment.
“All executions violate the right to life. Those carried out publicly are a gross affront to human dignity which cannot be tolerated,” Amnesty International’s deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui said.
Apart from drug-related offences, people were executed for crimes such as adultery, blasphemy, corruption, kidnapping and “questioning the leader’s policies”.
The death penalty is legal in 58 countries. The five top executioners in 2015 were China, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and the USA.
Limb amputations, caning, castrations and other forms of torture are also served as punishments for various crimes — including gambling and contact between an unmarried couple — in some countries.
The Indonesian parliament last week passed a new law allowing for tougher punishments for child sex offenders, including provisions for the death penalty, chemical castrations and electronic tracking of released convicts. The amendment was adopted despite rejection by half the legislature as well as ethical objections raised by medical associations.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo introduced the series of tough punishments for child sex offenders in May through an emergency decree, following an outcry over the fatal gang-rape of a 14-year-old schoolgirl.
But the move has been heavily criticised from international humanitarian groups who have deemed the practice of chemical castration “inhumane”.
Chemical castration involves administering medication — via injection or tablets — to take away sexual interest and make it impossible for a person to perform sexual acts. The effects are reversible, after the person stops taking the drug.
Widodo said chemical castration will bring down sex crimes, wiping them out completely with time. He also warned if doctors refuse to carry out castration, legal authorities may turn to military doctors for the procedure.
The process of chemical castration has been used in various forms, either forcibly as a sentence or as a way for offenders to reduce their jail time in several countries.
Western Australia and Victoria courts already have the discretion to impose chemical castration as a condition of release for high-risk paedophile offenders.
In New South Wales, offenders can volunteer for the treatment.
Here are some other forms of severe and controversial punishments that are legal in various countries:
Countries: Singapore, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia and some African countries
Caning can be ordered in some countries for anyone who has committed a range of offences including kidnapping, robbery, drug abuse, vandalism, rioting, sexual abuse, possession of weapons and for foreigners who overstay their visa by more than 90 days.
Medically-supervised caning is used regularly in Singapore and other countries. The wide cane is soaked in water to prevent it from splitting during use. The offender is ordered to strip naked, examined by a doctor and then whacked on the bare bottom at full force. The amount of strokes is dependant on the crime and the caning officer leaves intervals of 10 to 15 seconds between each.
The pain has been described as “beyond excruciating”, with the amount of blood “like a bleeding nose”. The wound can take up to a month to heal and sometimes can scar the offender.
Last year a young woman was viciously caned in public as a punishment for being in “proximity” to a man who wasn’t her spouse.
The 20-year-old Acehnese woman, Nur Elita, was said to commit the offence of “kwalwat” — talking or being in “proximity” to a man other than her husband or relative — under the Islamic sharia law in Banda Aceh, Indonesia on December 28, 2015.
Aceh is the only province of Indonesia enforcing the Islamic sharia law which sees offenders punished by public caning.
Countries: Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Pakistan, Iran, Yemen, Somalia, Sudan, United Arab Emirates, Nigeria
Stoning is a form of execution by torture where the individual who throws the deadly stone cannot be identified.
In some countries, those sentenced to stoning, or “lapidation” as it is also called, are buried in a hole and covered with soil (men up to their waists; women to a line above their breasts), according to Article 102 of the Islamic Penal Code.
A selected group then executes the alleged adulterers using rocks and sticks. Those able to escape the hole during stoning can be freed, according to Islamic law, a feat that is much more difficult for women than for men because so much more of their body is covered during lapidation.
Stoning is considered a form of community justice and has its fair share of critics both among human rights groups and Islamic clerics.
In Somalia, a 13-year-old girl was buried up to her neck and stoned to death by 50 men in a stadium with 1000 spectators. After her death it was revealed she had been raped by three men and she was arrested after trying to report the rape to militants who controlled the city.
Countries: Iran, Pakistan, USA, Egypt, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Botswana, India, Belize, Brunei, Cameroon, Gambia, Antigua and Barbuda, Iraq, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Kuwait, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liberia, Malawi, Malaysia, Myanmar, Eritrea, Nigeria, Oman, the Palestinian Authority in Gaza, South Sudan and Sudan, Sierra Leone, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Syria, Tanzania, Tonga, Tunisia, Uganda, Democratic Republic of Congo, Papua New Guinea, Qatar, Zambia, Zimbabwe.
Execution by hanging is the most common method of capital punishment.
Iran — where 369 people were reported executed in 2013 — leads the world in hangings.
On April 26, an Iranian prisoner was publicly hanged after being convicted of rape. Another Iranian, convicted of murder for killing a youth with a knife in a street fight in 2007, was hanged on April 15.
Countries: Iran, Iraq, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, India, China, North Korea, Taiwan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Nigeria, Oman, Yemen, South Korea, United Arab Emirates, Belarus, Gambia, Somalia, Eritrea, Benin, Qatar, Sierra Leone, Syria, Uganda, USA.
The United Arab Emirates uses firing squads for all executions, but death penalty sentences are rarely carried out. Somalia generally uses firing squads to carry out its death sentences.
It’s believed Belarus has carried out less than 10 executions in the past decade. Execution in Belarus is done by shooting the prisoner in the back of the head, but the death penalty’s use is shrouded in secrecy. Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, part of the ‘Bali Nine’, were convicted of drug smuggling and trafficking in Indonesia. They were executed by firing squad last year.
Countries: Saudi Arabia, Benin, Yemen, Qatar
In Saudi Arabia, the usual method of execution is beheading by a swordsman.
It was this week revealed that a Saudi prince was executed in Riyadh after a court found him guilty of shooting dead a fellow Saudi in a rare example of a ruling family member subjected to the death penalty.
Prince Turki bin Saud al-Kabir had pleaded guilty to shooting Adel al-Mohaimeed after a brawl, the ministry of interior said in a statement on state news agency SPA.
It did not say how the prince was killed on Tuesday.
Most people executed in the kingdom are beheaded with a sword. Members of Saudi Arabia’s ruling family are only rarely known to have been executed. One of the most prominent cases was Faisal bin Musaid al Saud, who assassinated his uncle, King Faisal, in 1975.
The family is estimated to number several thousand.
While members receive monthly stipends, and the most senior princes command great wealth and political power, only a few in the family hold nationally important government posts.
“The government is keen to keep order, stabilise security and bring about justice through implementing the rules prescribed by Allah,” a ministry statement read.
In 2013, a firing squad was used in the execution of seven men convicted of looting and armed robbery. Press reports at the time suggested it was because a swordsman was not available.
The USA is understood to be the on
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