Picture of the Day: Gruesome Billboard-Hajis Beware

Posted on December 7, 2006
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, Photo of the Day
94 Comments
Total Views: 56725

Adil Najam

Here is a rather gruesome ad from the Punjab Anti-Narcotics Force, warning prospective pilgrims going for Hajj to Saudi Arabia of the dangers of drug trafficking.

The painted bill board ad makes the point, rather graphically and quite clearly that anyone caught bringing drugs into Saudi Arabia will face death. One wonders, however, if that point is being made a little more graphically than necessary.

The wording on the billboard (seemingly quite large and on an outdoor public location) says:

Don’t unknowingly invite death.
By taking someone’s else luggage or unnecessary foreign or local medications do not put your own life at risk.
Taking narcotics or addictive elements to Saudi Arabia will result in a certain death penalty.
Anti-Narcotics Force (Punjab).

How, I wonder, does a parent explain to a child who sees this billboard why the Arab-looking man is beheading the Pakistani-looking man with such gusto.

One wonders who it is that really gives Muslims a ‘bad name’? The message for the prospective drug smuggler to Saudi Arabia is quite clear. But, what is the message for the rest of us? And the rest of the world?

94 responses to “Picture of the Day: Gruesome Billboard-Hajis Beware”

  1. mahvesh says:

    you know perhaps we are all losing site of a very basic factor here…this is not about the west or the east, this is not about this gruesome billboard and heroin and women or even religion…this is about where do we stand as a civilisation today? Are we any better or any worse? Have we changed at all? let’s face it, in ever century horrible atrocities were commited in every shape and form. Religion was used in every era as a means to control the masses, brutality was used as a means to suppress the people…but today, if we have all this understanding in so many fields of sciences and human behavious, are we really anymore different? This is not about criticism but about looking into ourselves and ask have we really improved as human beings?

  2. Baber says:

    Sajid you are right but only in some countries. In US and UK girls can still were Hijabs in Schools. There is full religious freedom here in this country, its a fact.

  3. Akif Nizam says:

    [quote comment=”15316″]Akif, have you guys recently got Internet in “Cholistan”?

    …actually Adnan, we have had it for a while now but in all my years of internet browsing from Cholistan, I didn’t come across any news from Abu Gharib where someone was buried in a dry well up to his/her waist and then people stone him to death, all the time taking care not to use large stones so as to put an early end to his misery. Neither did I see any evidence of mass beheadings, mutilations or public lashings. If you ask me, I would rather have a rabid dog in my face causing me to soil my pants, than to have my pants soiled by the blood from the hole in my head. But that’s just me.

  4. Akif Nizam says:

    Every society aims to have a low crime rate; the question only is what are they willing to sacrifice to achieve it. The reason why Saudis have a low crime rate is because they are willing to sacrifice their personal freedoms for safety. The flip side is that your security is guaranteed.

    It’s like owning a shiny new car but only to be able to drive it in your driveway; you will be safe (if that’s all you want from life), however, you will not be able to get very far.

  5. Anwar says:

    Here is an interesting article about modern Saudi Arabia;
    http://www.rakemag.com/stories/section_detail.aspx  ?itemID=23669&catID=282&SelectCatID=282

    Indeed, woman in the West is abused like any other place. However, if she files a complaint, or if authorities find out about her predicament, then law gets on her side with full force. In our country, unfortunately, law enforcers are the biggest hurdle towards justice. Additional hurdles are due to social taboos..

    Finally, the European right-wing movement against Hijab is largely a reaction to new dynamics – afterall, Hijab was never an issue prior to 9/11.

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