Letters

-

May 5 - 11, 2010
123 views

Dear Stan, AS a fellow Arab and young man, I am appalled by the decision that the Qatari court has taken regarding the custody case involving schoolboy Adam.

Justice appears to have been blinded - the law is supposed to protect the child.

A decision should have been made in his best interests and that seems to have been ignored. The decision is very unfair on Adam's mum. As a Bahraini I urge the Qatari courts to reconsider the decision.

I am disgusted by this ruling and wish Adam's mum all the luck and urge her to stand strong in the face of injustice.

Ali Aamer,

by email.

Dear Stan,

REGARDING Adam Jones, the schoolboy involved in a custody dispute involving his mother and the family of his late father in Qatar.

Now I may not be a father/mother but I understand moral obligations. Please do the right thing, Adam is so loved by Bahrain, bringing him back to Bahrain will give him a very healthy lifestyle, and he will be taken care of.

Imagine what it would be like for him to return to a world where everyone knows him, loves him and feels a part of his life.

The family keeping him may not agree with me, and I understand, but please listen on behalf of Bahrain, please listen as a human, please, bring him back.

Wafeeq Ajouz,

by email.

Dear Stan,

AS a mother of two Arab children, I strongly believe that a child should be with its mother especially when that mother is a kind and nurturing mother who has never done anything but the best for her child.

It is obvious that Rebecca loves Adam and has done everything within her power to protect and care for him. Nobody can love a child more than its mother - a mother would die for her child.

The Qatari court should have put the welfare of the child first. Surely a child has the right to share his life with his mother when the love and care that she gives is the best he will ever know.

Karen Al Awadhi,

by email.

Dear Stan,

RETURN Adam to his friends and family and to all who love him.

Zeinab El Hajj, by email.







More on Letters


Gulf Weekly -