Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Kuwaiti court adjourns blasphemy appeal


Hamad Al Naqi reportedly used the Twitter microblog to post remarks deemed offensive to the prophet, his companions Abu Baker, Omar and Othman, and his wife Ayesha.

File photo: KUWAIT: Police hold back people protesting against
blasphemous postings by a tweeter outside the state security
department in Salmiya (Kuwait Times)
Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | Int'l Desk
Source/Credit: Al Nisr / Gulf News
By Habib Toumi | February 12, 2013

Blasphemy charges faced by youths in Bahrain and Kuwait

Manama: Kuwait’s court of appeals has adjourned until March 11 the trial of a Kuwaiti blogger sentenced last year to 10 years in jail on charges of insulting Prophet Mohammad (PBUH).

Hamad Al Naqi reportedly used the Twitter microblog to post remarks deemed offensive to the prophet, his companions Abu Baker, Omar and Othman, and his wife Ayesha.

According to prosecutors, the remarks were likely to result in “creating discord within the society and lead to the fragmentation of its members on sectarian lines, according to their religious beliefs”.

They added that Al Naqi also posted tweets targeting the leaders of two Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and charged that they “could harm the national interests of Kuwait”.

In Bahrain, two Bahrainis on Monday were sentenced to six months in prison for undermining the status of the Second Caliph, Omar Bin Al Khattab.

According to the court case, the two men walked into an empty mosque in the Seef area in the outskirts of the capital Manama when no worshippers were present.

One of the two men walked up the minbar, the platform from which sermons or speeches are given, and mocked the caliph while the second suspect filmed him.

However, their act was interrupted by a man who walked into the mosque and upon seeing their behaviour informed the police who rushed to the mosque and arrested the pair as they were making their way out.

During the search, the police discovered that the two men had filmed a similar act inside a mosque in Arad in the northeast of the country.

They were held and then tried on charges of insulting an iconic figure revered by a large segment of the society.

Their lawyer disputed the charges, saying that the iconic figure was not venerated by all Muslims.



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